Saints Behaving Badly: The Cutthroats, Crooks, Trollops, Con Men, and Devil-Worshippers Who Became Saints

by Thomas J. Craughwell

Hardcover, 2006

Barcode

2557

Call number

922.22 STS

Status

Available

Call number

922.22 STS

Pages

190

Description

From thieves and extortionists to mass murderers and warmongers, up-close and embarrassingly personal snapshots of those sanctified people with the most unsaintly pasts in the history of Christianity. Saints are not born, they are made. And many, as Saints Behaving Badly reveals, were made of very rough materials indeed. The first book to lay bare the less than saintly behavior of thirty-two venerated holy men and women, it presents the scandalous, spicy, and sleazy detours they took on the road to sainthood.In nineteenth- and twentieth-century writings about the lives of the saints, authors tended to go out of their way to sanitize their stories, often glossing over the more embarrassing cases with phrases such as, "he/she was once a great sinner." In the early centuries of the Church and throughout the Middle Ages, however, writers took a more candid and spirited approach to portraying the saints. Exploring sources from a wide range of periods and places, Thomas Craughwell discovered a veritable rogues gallery of sinners-turned-saints. There's St. Olga, who unleashed a bloodbath on her husband's assassins; St. Mary of Egypt, who trolled the streets looking for new sexual conquests; and Thomas Becket, who despite his vast riches refused to give his cloak to a man freezing to death in the street. Written with wit and respect (each profile ends with what inspired the saint to give up his or her wicked ways), Saints Behaving Badly will entertain, inform, and even inspire Catholic readers across America.… (more)

Publication

Image (2006), Edition: First Edition - So Stated, 208 pages

ISBN

0385517203 / 9780385517201

Collections

Rating

(30 ratings; 3.5)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Devil_llama
A fun romp through Church history, which loses a little bit of its fun by the constant apologetics the author presents for the bad behavior of the saints, and his constant insistence that only the Church was able to "fix" them. As history, it's difficult to be sure of its total accuracy, since it
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was taken almost exclusively from the archives of the Catholic church, but if you keep that in mind, and don't assume this is all 100% accurate history, you can have a pretty good time reading it.
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