Saints & Devotions

Catholic Resources

Catholic Saints & Devotions

Holiness, prayer, feast days, and sacred memory.

Study saints through Christ, the Church, liturgy, and the call to holiness.

Apostolic and pre-schism

Shared Ancient Saints

Many early saints are honored across Catholic and Orthodox traditions because they belong to the shared ancient Church before later divisions hardened.
Mary, Mother of GodPeter and PaulIgnatius of AntiochPolycarp

West and global Catholic Church

Catholic Canonized Saints

Catholic canonization is normally a formal act of the Church that recognizes a person as a saint for public veneration throughout the Church.
AugustineBenedictFrancis of AssisiThomas Aquinas

Feasts, patrons, and popular devotion

Local And Devotional Saints

Some saints have universal feasts, while others are especially loved in particular countries, religious orders, cities, or devotional traditions.
Patron saintsMartyrsDoctors of the ChurchMissionary saints
M

Marian Devotion

Catholic devotion to Mary is rooted in Christology: Mary is honored because of her role in the incarnation and her witness of obedient faith.

Rosary

The rosary is a biblical and contemplative prayer centered on the mysteries of Christ's life, death, and resurrection.

Relics And Holy Memory

Catholic veneration of relics is tied to belief in the resurrection, the holiness of the body, and God's work through the saints.

Feast Days

The liturgical calendar teaches the faith through the life of Christ, Mary, martyrs, apostles, pastors, virgins, and holy men and women.

Canonization

Canonization does not make someone holy. It is the Church's formal recognition that a person lived and died in heroic fidelity to Christ and may be publicly venerated.

Veneration And Worship

Catholic teaching distinguishes worship owed to God alone from the honor given to saints. Saints are honored as God's work in human lives, not as rivals to Christ.

Intercession

Prayer with the saints is understood as communion in Christ: the living and departed members of the Body of Christ pray before God.

Catholic And Orthodox Difference

Catholic canonization is normally centralized through papal recognition. Orthodox glorification is more often received through local and synodal life, liturgy, icons, and feast days.

Back to Catholic Resources

Catholic Saints & Devotions

Saints, feast days, Marian devotion, prayer, and canonization.

This hub separates Catholic devotional life from Orthodox glorification while also showing the shared ancient saints honored before the later divisions of Christian history.

Apostolic and pre-schism

Shared Ancient Saints

Many early saints are honored across Catholic and Orthodox traditions because they belong to the shared ancient Church before later divisions hardened.

West and global Catholic Church

Catholic Canonized Saints

Catholic canonization is normally a formal act of the Church that recognizes a person as a saint for public veneration throughout the Church.

Feasts, patrons, and popular devotion

Local And Devotional Saints

Some saints have universal feasts, while others are especially loved in particular countries, religious orders, cities, or devotional traditions.

Marian Devotion

Catholic devotion to Mary is rooted in Christology: Mary is honored because of her role in the incarnation and her witness of obedient faith.

AnnunciationTheotokosMagnificatMaternal intercession

Rosary

The rosary is a biblical and contemplative prayer centered on the mysteries of Christ's life, death, and resurrection.

Joyful mysteriesSorrowful mysteriesGlorious mysteriesLuminous mysteries

Relics And Holy Memory

Catholic veneration of relics is tied to belief in the resurrection, the holiness of the body, and God's work through the saints.

ResurrectionMartyr witnessSacred memoryIntercession

Feast Days

The liturgical calendar teaches the faith through the life of Christ, Mary, martyrs, apostles, pastors, virgins, and holy men and women.

AdventChristmasLentEasterSaints' days