Biblia

Saint

Saint

SAINT

A holy person, a friend of God, either on earth or in heaven, Deu 33:2 . It is sometimes used of the pious Israelites, as Psa 16:3 34:9. Nothing is more frequent in Paul than the name of saints given to all Christians, 1Ch 1:7 8:27 12:13 15:25,31 16:2. In this acceptation it continued during the early ages of Christianity; nor was it applied to individuals declared to be saints by any other act of the church than admission to its membership, till various corruptions had depraved the primitive principles. The church of Rome assumes the power of making saints; that is, of announcing certain departed spirits as objects of worship, from whom the faithful may solicit favors-a notion worthy of the dark ages in which it originated.

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Saint

Saint in the NT is the English equivalent of , holy, as applied to the individual. It is important to recall the fundamental idea of holy, which is primarily a religious and not an ethical idea (see article Holiness). The man, thing, or place that is holy belongs to God, and is therefore separate from what is profane or common property. What belongs to God partakes of the Divine character; therefore the ethical content of saint is determined by the character attributed to the Divinity to whom the saint belongs, and by the nature of the existing bond. Everywhere in the NT God is One whose heart, purpose, and power towards men are revealed as redeeming love in Jesus Christ. The saint is a believer () in Christ Jesus (Eph 1:1, Col 1:2), i.e. one who has accepted the gospel of love which constitutes the essential significance of His life, death, and resurrection, along with its corresponding ethical obligations. In other words, saint is the NT equivalent of Christian.

1. The saint is one on whose whole life God has an irresistible claim, which is humbly acknowledged by the individual concerned. This claim receives its most striking admission in such utterances as the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself up for me (Gal 2:20); ye are not your own; for ye were bought with a price (1Co 6:20); beloved of God, called to be saints (Rev 1:7). Under various metaphors, this new and compelling relationship of the saint to God is expressed. Regarded as a criminal on trial, he is justified or acquitted (yet as an act of grace, and not with a verdict of not guilty, Rom 5:8); as an enemy he is reconciled; as a debtor he is forgiven; as a slave he is either redeemed or admitted to the status of son in the household of God (cf. A. Deissmann, St. Paul, Eng. translation , London, 1913, p. 145). In other words, the saint is called by God, in the sense of receiving not an invitation, but rather a royal summons, expressed in the free gift of an overwhelming love. The NT does not look on sainthood as an adventure which may be presumption, a kind of life for which volunteers are asked, a warfare at our own charges, for which some are constitutionally or temperamentally or by virtue of circumstances unfitted. It is not what we are, or feel ourselves to be, or what we have been, that determines our right to call ourselves saints. Our calling rests on the truth of the character and purpose of God revealed in Jesus Christ. The ethical bearings of this claim upon men properly belong to the article Sanctification. It is sufficient to say here that the saint is one who is immediately and obediently responsive to the Spirit of God, the spirit of sonship (Rom 8:15). He is one who is, from the ideal point of view, no longer subject to any external rule or law; from whom no tracts of the worlds life are fenced off by any arbitrary or conventional requirement; whose only constraint is the love of Christ, especially as revealed in His Cross (2Co 5:14); in other words, one who possesses the kingdom (Dan 7:22), accepts the rule of God, and suffers it to bring forth its own fruits in character and moral attitude. The Holy Spirit is the immanent principle of the new life (Rom 8:14 f.).

2. It should be noted that in the Bible the term saint is never applied to individuals as such. The word is always saints. Only twice is it used in the singular, as applied to persons (Php 4:21, Rev 22:11), where, however, the saint is regarded as a member of a community. Jesus alone in the NT is called (e.g. Mar 1:24). This is important as establishing a link between the OT and the NT conceptions. In the OT saints are members of the true Israel, at first of the nation, and latterly of the pious remnant. In the NT church and saints are used interchangeably in the greetings of letters: the former in Thessalonians, Corinthians, Galatians, Philemon; the latter in Ephesians, Philippians, and Colossians. Just as in the OT the covenant is made with the nation, or with Abraham as representing the nation yet to be, so with the NT the Church or community of believers is the recipient of the new covenant in my blood. This is not equivalent to putting the Church first, and the individual experiences of its members last. It simply means that the present experience and future realization of salvation by the individual was to the first Christians or saints inconceivable, except in so far as it involved a mutual relationship with others in the sight of God. Saintliness is an impossibility unless it contains as its essence an experience of Gods love common to all which finds expression in common worship, and certain corresponding mutual obligations of loving thought and ministry towards others. The members of the Church have been individually justified, reconciled, forgiven, and have entered upon a new relationship of trust and freedom with God; but the spirit that has accomplished this can have no free course in the development of individual life and character, except in so far as it expresses itself in a community where Christ is head of every man (1Co 11:3). We, who are many, are one body in Christ, and severally members one of another (Rom 12:5). The saints in the NT as in the OT receive a kingdom (Dan 7:27), a social gift too great for one pair of hands to hold, or for one single mind to conceive. We must comprehend with all saints (Eph 3:18) the dimensions of the love of God. No Christian apart from others can perfectly fulfil the moral and spiritual ideal, or attain to eternal life. A more common description in the NT of the kingdom which is the possession of the saints is inheritance (see article Heir). Christians are heirs of eternal life (Tit 3:7), and also of the kingdom (1Co 6:9-10; 1Co 15:50). The mutual relationship that exists as binding the members of the Church together is increasingly based in the NT on the response to certain moral obligations, which are directly involved in the experience of salvation (Eph 5:5, Col 1:12).

It will thus become readily apparent that with the new conception of God revealed in the Cross of Christ these two aspects of NT sainthood issue in the result that moral obligation in the Christian life is not merely reinforced, but deepened and enriched. The enervating sense of impossibility, and the facile acceptance of a two-fold standard of living, so interwoven with the popular use of the word saint, are really the still persistent product of the monastic ideal, and are seen to be, what they really are, a fundamental denial of the Christian faith, which is essentially the acceptance of a filial relationship to God. The moral activities of the saint are rooted in a patience which obeys the voice of illumined conscience, and humbly believes in Jesus at all costs (Rev 14:12; cf. Col 1:10).

Literature.-H. J. Holtzmann, Lehrbuch der NT Theologie2, 2 vols., Tbingen, 1911 (passim); P. Feine, Theologie des NT, Leipzig, 1910 (passim); article Saint in Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible (5 vols) ; R. Law, The Tests of Life, Edinburgh, 1909, p. 90f.; J. Denney, The Way Everlasting, London, 1911, p. 113ff.; F. Paget, Studies in the Christian Character, do., 1895, p. 55 ff.; H. F. Amiel, Journal Intime5, Geneva, 1887, translation Mrs. Humphry Ward, London, 1898, p. 147; J. H. Newman, Parochial and Plain Sermons (Selection), do., 1868, pp. 260ff., 277 ff.

R. H. Strachan.

Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church

SAINT

A person eminent for godliness. The word is generally applied by us to the apostles and other holy persons mentioned in the Scriptures: but the Romanists make its application much more extensive; as, according to them, all who are cannonized are made saints of a high degree.

See CANONIZATION.

Fuente: Theological Dictionary

saint

(Latin: sanctus, holy)

Name applied in the New Testament to the members of the Christian community generally, as in Colossians 1

To the saints and faithful brethren in Christ Jesus, who are at Colossa….

Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary

Saint

an epithet applied to (1) a person eminent for piety and virtue; (2) a consecrated or sanctified person. There are two words in the Hebrew Scripture used to express the above, both of which are rendered in our translation by the single expression Saint. , chasid (like the Gr. ), denotes a mental quality; its most certain acceptation being pious, just, godly, etc. It is spoken of pious Hebrews (Psa 4:3; Psa 30:4; Psa 31:23; Psa 37:28; Psa 79:2; Psa 97:10; Psa 116:15). On the other hand, , kadosh, and also the Greek word , signifies pure, clean, in reference to physical purity and cleanliness; they are also used of moral purity, holy, hallowed, sacred applied to persons consecrated to the service of God: the priests (Exo 28:41; Exo 29:1; Lev 21:6; 1Sa 7:1; 1 Peter 2, 5); the first-born (Exo 13:2; Luk 2:23; Rom 11:16); and the people of Israel (Exo 19:10; Exo 19:14; Isa 13:3); prophets and apostles (Luk 1:70; Act 3:21; 2Pe 1:21; Eph 3:5); the pious Israelites, the saints (Deu 33:3; Psa 16:3; Psa 34:9; Psa 89:5; Psa 89:7; Zec 14:5; Dan 7:18; Dan 7:21; Dan 7:25; Dan 7:27; Mat 27:52); and the angels (Job 5:1; Job 15:15; Dan 8:13; Mat 25:31; 1Th 3:13). The latter Greek word is also used of those who are purified and sanctified by the Holy Spirit; and as this is assumed of all who profess the Christian name, Christians are called saints (Act 9:13-14; Act 9:32; Act 9:41; Act 26:10; Rom 1:7; Rom 8:27). It may here be observed that the Hebrew word for a consecrated prostitute is , kedeshah, derived from , kadosh, in its signification of separated, dedicated, because such women among idolaters were devoted to the service of the temples of their false deities, particularly those of Venus, and to the ancient priests of Bel, or Belus. Of such female devotees, instances are to be found in the present day attached to the Hindu temples.

The later Jews have their saints as well as the Christian Church; the word they use is , kadosh. Their most celebrated saint is rabbi Judah Hak- kadosh (rabbi Judah the Holy). He lived about one hundred and twenty years after the destruction of the second Temple, and was the author of the Mishna (or text) of the Babylonian Talmud. They have also their devout men ( , chasidim), who devote themselves to a religious life and to the study of their law, visit the dying, perform the rites for the dead, etc. Of such kind were the devout persons with whom Paul disputed (Act 17:17). In the New Test. the word , as above, is used throughout wherever our version has saint, and with the same signification as in the Sept. viz. separated, dedicated, sanctified by consecration because the Christians were then especially dedicated to God’s service, in separation from the Jews and pagans, as the Jews had been before the holy people separated from the Gentiles. SEE HOLINESS.

After the Christian era, the martyrs were considered as dignified saints in the same rank as the apostles i.e. saints by profession and office, as distinguished from the saints, or holy and pious by character and conduct, such as have been eminent for religion and virtue, but not canonized. After some time canonization was extended also to confessors that is, persons who during the persecutions against the Christians had made a resolute avowal and defense of their faith, and had suffered torture, banishment, or confiscation in consequence, but not actual martyrdom (see the monographs cited by Volbeding, Index Programmatum, p. 169). For some centuries there was no regular canonization in the Christian Church. By a tacit consent of the clergy the names of martyrs, etc., were inserted as saints in a kind of ecclesiastical register, called a diptych. It was not till about the 9th century that solemn and formal canonization, with its particular ceremonies, began to be regularly practiced. At present, in the Church of Rome, the ceremony of beatification, or being pronounced blessed by the pope, must precede canonization, and cannot take place till fifty years after death. SEE CANONIZATION. The word is generally applied by us to the apostles and other holy persons mentioned in the Scriptures; but the Romanists make its application much more extensive, as, according to them, all who are canonized are made saints of a high degree. Protestants, in applying this term to the sacred writers, are very inconsistent; for though they say St. John, St. Peter, St. David, they never use St. Isaiah, St. Habakkuk, etc. The practice has even extended to naming churches after certain saints. SEE PATRON SAINTS.

Concerning the bodies of the saints which arose and came out of their graves after the resurrection of Christ (Mat 27:50), it is believed that they were persons who believed in him and waited for him in hope, as old Simeon had done (Luk 2:25), but who had died before his resurrection, and who were thus favored to be an example of the general resurrection, and to whom Christ alluded (Joh 5:25), The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live; and of whom Paul speaks, Now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept, because his resurrection was the signal for theirs. It appears that these persons must have been deceased during the then present generation; for they went into Jerusalem, and appeared unto many, who could not have recognized them had they been much longer dead. We may here observe that when the word saint or saints (, ) is used in the New Test. relative to persons deceased, it is to be understood of the spirits of the just (without any distinction of office or character) made perfect. SEE RESURRECTION.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Saint

one separated from the world and consecrated to God; one holy by profession and by covenant; a believer in Christ (Ps. 16:3; Rom. 1:7; 8:27; Phil. 1:1; Heb. 6:10).

The “saints” spoken of in Jude 1:14 are probably not the disciples of Christ, but the “innumerable company of angels” (Heb. 12:22; Ps. 68:17), with reference to Deut. 33:2.

This word is also used of the holy dead (Matt. 27:52; Rev. 18:24). It was not used as a distinctive title of the apostles and evangelists and of a “spiritual nobility” till the fourth century. In that sense it is not a scriptural title.

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Saint

See Saints

Fuente: The Poor Mans Concordance and Dictionary to the Sacred Scriptures

Saint

Two words are employed in the Hebrew.

1. chasid, ‘pious toward God,’ also translated ‘holy’ and ‘godly.’ The word occurs frequently in the Psalms, where God speaks of His saints. Psa 31:23; Psa 50:5; Psa 116:15; Psa 149:1; Psa 149:5; Psa 149:9; etc.

2. qadosh, ‘consecrated, set apart, holy.’ Deu 33:3; Job 15:15; Psa 16:3; Psa 34:9; Psa 89:5; Psa 89:7; Dan 7:18-27; Dan 8:13; Hos 11:12; Zec 14:5. Aaron is called ‘the saint of Jehovah.’ Psa 106:16.

In the N.T. the word used is , which means ‘holy one.’ A saint is one set apart for God; he is such by calling (not ‘called to be a saint’). Rom 1:7; 1Co 1:2; cf. Heb 3:1. Saints are thus a distinct, recognised class of persons belonging to God – His saints. Act 9:13; Col 1:26; 1Th 3:13; Jud 1:14. All Christians are embraced in this class, so that the apostle could speak of ‘all saints.’ Eph 1:15; Eph 3:18; Col 1:4; Phm 1:5. Christians therefore need not shrink from acknowledging the designation by which God has been pleased to distinguish them, and should ever remember that there is a line of conduct that ‘becometh saints.’ Rom 16:2; Eph 5:3. The word corresponds with the Hebrew qadosh. The word chasid corresponds more with , translated ‘holy’ in 1Ti 2:8; Tit 1:8; Heb 7:26; Rev 15:4; and ‘Holy One’ in Act 2:27; Act 13:35.

As there were many saints on the earth in O.T. times, so we read in the Revelation that there will be saints on the earth after the church has been taken to heaven. Ignorance of this has often led to a mistaken application of the prophecies to the church. Rev 13:10; Rev 14:12; Rev 18:24; Rev 20:9; etc.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary