ALW said:
Side question are there any canonised saints that were not Christian?
"Can you elaborate or explain more of what you mean here. Please. (mostly the last 4ish sentences)"
What is the difference between prophet and premonition?
Well, AWL, "canonisation" in the Roman Catholic context is merely a formal process whereby the Church states, on the basis of research into their lives, that certain people were saints and would have gone straight to Heaven, without need for further purification in Purgatory.
In fact, the Church would be the first to say that there would be innumerable saints belonging to all Christian churches, and surely other religions too. (I have read anecdotes concerning Indian holy men of the most extraordinary ascetical lives you could imagine, and have absolutely no reason to doubt their veracity).
In the Christian churches, it would be a matter of adoption by the Holy Spirit, through baptism (seemingly, also through the baptism of others in some cases), into the Mystical Body of Christ, and thereby into the very life of the Holy Trinity. Obviously, this divine life within us through baptism is embryonic and develops throughout our life and spiritual development.
Just as Christ's moment of supreme glory was when he suffered and gave his life on the cross, our divine nature as this "new creation" is not normally expressed through Superman-type worldy heroics, whether kryptonite-strengthened or not, but by our love and the capacity we show for it through our acceptance of suffering for Christ's sake, the sake of Christ in his own person and in the person of his adoptive brothers and sisters.
Well, AWL, I mean that, because of the distortion of the institutional Church's witness down the centuries, chiefly as a result of its political alliance with the richest and most powerful "movers and shakers" of this world (as much through silence as through a preferential fraternisation with them at the highest ecclesial levels), many people have been scandalised and turned away from Christianity to find solace elsewhere.
Fortunately, the Church has done a great deal to repair the damage caused by the "traditions of men", since Vatican II, although obviously it will have to, and I believe will, continue to make more radical changes, in order to put its house in order, and to return more closely to the teachings of the New Testament.
So, Im not surprised to see on this thread a kind of innocence, the kind of simplicity that the 17th century French Jesuit priest considered the "pearl of great price". That may sound patronising in a way, but not, I believe, if you understand the nature of true intelligence which owes little or nothing to worldly intelligence and everything to the spiritual wisdom of the heart, which discerns the true spiritual priorities, usually not even on what we would ordinarily consider a conscious level. I saw a TV documentary the other day that indicated that this superior kind of intelligence is becoming recognised and researched by some neuroscientists.
I believe Solzhenitzin also alluded to this extraordinary wisdom in one of his books, when he marvelled at how this friend of his, who I believe was a caretaker, always seemed to make the right decision, throughout a whole series of extremely perplexing situations. "Dont fret about what to say. The Holy spirit will tell you..". Also, surely, what to do. The Holy Spirit coordinates the strands of our intelligence.
Prophecy may involve premonition or forewarning, either "religious" and for the edification of the Church as a whole, or simply personal and what we would normally call "psychic"; but it has a wider meaning in the Christian tradition, namely, being a vessel, medium, vehicle, etc., of truth. The Israelites were sometimes referred to by God as "his prophets". Because the Judaism, which they preserved, was to become the bedrock from which Christianity was to develop, and their race, the human stock from which Christ was to derive his human nature.
I hope those answers are helpful, AWL. Sorry again, Mylinkay! And other impatient souls.