INTERCESSION OF SAINTS

'Intercession of the saints' is a Christian doctrine common to the vast majority of the world's Christians . Intercessory prayer is a petition made to God on behalf of others. If a believer prays for his children or friends, his enemies or leaders, then the believer is interceding on behalf of another. The doctrine of saintly intercession goes back to the earliest church. The justification for calling upon a saint in prayer is that the saints are both close to God, because of their holiness, and accessible to humans.
Some Christians say that Jesus' parable of Dives and Lazarus in Luke 16:19-31 indicates the ability of the dead to pray for the living. Paul's repeated references to Jesus Christ as "advocate" for the believers also indicates that Jesus, living at the right hand of God, may intercede for the believer (Epistle to the Romans 8:34; Hebrews 7:25). By extension, other holy persons who are living in Christ on earth or in heaven (having left their earthly existence) may be able to intercede-through Christ- on behalf of the petitioner. (John 11:25; Rom 8:38-39) This is a controversial doctrine, because in some faiths, only Jesus is holy enough to intercede for people. From the 'Catholic and Orthodox Churches' perspective, as well as ' "High Church" Anglican/Episcopalianism' and certain 'Old Lutheran' perspective: if those living here on earth can intercede on behalf of each other, then those which have already been glorified in heaven, and are even closer "in Christ", are made holy as "one" unified through him (the mediator between God and men- on earth and heaven) by his sacrifice, can certainly intercede for those on earth as well. (Heb 2:11, 10:10; 1 Tim 2:1-5)
Catholic Church doctrine supports intercessory prayer to saints. Intercessory prayer to saints also plays an important role in the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches. Also some Anglo-Catholics believe in saintly intercession. They may point to such Scriptural passages as Tobit 12:12,15, Revelation 5:8, or Revelation 8:3-4, which depict heavenly beings offering the prayers of mortals before God. In addition, James 5:16 (where all those in heaven can be presumed to be living righteously), which states the prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective.

Contents
Protestant views
Jewish views
Muslim views
See also
External links

Protestant views


Many Protestant churches strongly reject all saintly intercession, in seeming accordance with verses like 1 Timothy 2:5, which says that Jesus is the only mediator between God and man. The practice was attacked both by the Waldensians of the 12th century, and the various Gnostic Bogomil groups (including the Albigensians). The Calvinists and Zwinglians were particularly zealous in their rejection of saintly intercession. The Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England condemned the invocation of saints as "a fond thing, vainly invented, and grounded upon no warranty of Scripture, but rather repugnant to the Word of God" (Article XXII). However, Oxford Movement led to a revival of the practice, which is now found among High Church Anglicans and especially Anglo-Catholics.

Jewish views


There is some evidence of a Jewish belief in intercession, both in the form of the paternal blessings passed down from Abraham to his children, and 2 Maccabees, where Judas Maccabaeus sees the dead Onias and Jeremiah giving blessing to the Jewish army.
In modern times one of the greatest divisions in Jewish theology (''hashkafa'') is over the issue of whether one can beseech the help of a ''tzadik'' - an extremely righteous individual. The main conflict is over a practice of beseeching a ''tzadik'' who has already passed away to make intercession before the Almighty. This practice is common mainly among Chasidic Jews, but also found in varying degrees among other usually Chareidi communities. It strongest opposition is found largely among sectors of Modern Orthodox Judaism, Dor Daim and ''Talmide haRambam,'' and among aspects of the Litvish Chareidi community. Those who oppose this practice usually do so over the problem of idolatry, as Jewish Law strictly prohibits making use of a mediator (''melitz'') or agent (''sarsur'') between oneself and the Almighty.
The perspectives of those Jewish groups opposed to the use of intercessors is usually softer in regard to beseeching the Almighty alone merely in the "merit" (''skhut'') of a ''tzadik''.
Those Jews who support the use of intercessors claim that their beseeching of the ''tzadik'' is not prayer or worship. The conflict between the groups is essentially over what constitutes prayer, worship, a mediator (''melitz''), and an agent (''sarsur'').

Muslim views


Intercession is a practice in which a prayer is offered to Allah through an intermediary. The Arabic term for intercession is called tawassul. Intercession is a defining characteristic of the sufi tradition in Islam. According to the traditional Sunni scholars, tawassul is considered a great virtue as long as the sharia is observed, and that no one is worshiped other than God. Wahhabism, a movement that started in the 18th century in the Najd region of Arabia, consider tawassul to be shirk.

See also



Patron saint

Pokrov

Slava

Shrine

External links



Salatul Istisqa, Islamic prayer for rain ceremony

★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank> The performance of the Salatul Istisqa, the Islamic prayer for rain, in the parched bed of the Goulburn River in Denman, in the Hunter Valley, Sydney, Australia, 2003.

Hadith Proofs for Tawassul through the Prophet

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