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The
Catholic Patron Saint of Elections is St. Chad-Fiction!
Summary of eRumor:
This
email reflects on the controversy over "chads" in the
Florida ballots for election of President of the United States in
November of 2000. Chad was the name given to the little pieces
of ballot that were punched out by voters using voting
machines. The email says that according to the Oxford
Dictionary of Saints, Saint Chad is the patron saint of elections.
The Truth:
Chad
is a real person and is a saint of the Roman Catholic church, but is
not the Patron Saint of elections. According to the Catholic
Encyclopedia, the Catholic Forum listing of saints, and the Oxford
Dictionary of Saints, St. Chad was a missionary monk to Ireland and
at one point was elected the Bishop of York, but later removed from
the position by a superior. No sources, including the Oxford
Dictionary of Saints, list him as the Patron Saint of Elections and,
in fact, there is no Patron Saint of Elections.
A real example of the story as it has
been circulated:
St. Chad's grace in defeat won him eternal veneration By Robin Galiano COX NEWS SERVICE
"Keep us, we pray, from thinking of ourselves more highly than we ought to think, and ready at all times to step aside for others, in honor preferring one another, that the cause of Christ may be advanced." - Suggested prayer on the Feast of Saint Chad
LONGVIEW, Texas - As if this presidential election needs another twist, it turns out there is a patron saint of disputed elections, and it's none other than St. Chad of Lichfield, England. The seventh-century Anglican bishop is perhaps best known for not being the archbishop of York. While Chad was elected and duly installed as archbishop of York, some bishops objected to his ordination because his consecration had not been rightly performed. Unlike his bickering American counterparts today, however, Chad humbly withdrew in favor of the other candidate to preserve unity. Rather than cause division in the church, Chad is said to have told the archbishop of Canterbury: "If you decide that I have not rightly received the episcopal character, I willingly lay down the office; for I have never thought myself worthy of it, but under obedience, I, though unworthy, consented to undertake it." The archbishop of Canterbury was so impressed with Chad's humility, the story goes, that he ordained Chad Bishop of Lichfield instead. Chad died on March 2, 672, and he was venerated as a saint soon afterward. The Rev. Jim Bass, pastor of Mission Bend United Methodist Church in Houston, uncovered the ironic historical twist and passed along the information to Methodist pastors in the Texas conference. His tale was verified by the Oxford Dictionary of Saints. The Rev. Jim Welch of Longview's First United Methodist Church said the irony of a saint named Chad was too good to pass up at the beginning of his sermon Sunday morning. And the congregation cracked up, he added. "I was going to use it in our newsletter, but I could not resist using it in church," Mr. Welch said. "I mean, how ironic. The Bible is full of gentle humor, with all kinds of word play. And the greatest use is
irony."
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