Walking With the Saints
The Communion of Saints in the Celtic Orthodox Church
“That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him:
The eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints.”
— Ephesians 1:17–18
The saints are not distant myths of the past. They are witnesses to what God can do in human lives transformed by faith, repentance, prayer, sacrifice, perseverance, and holiness in Christ.
Within the Celtic Orthodox Church of the Culdees, the communion of saints is not merely an abstract doctrine or historical memory. It is a living participation in the one Body of Christ across generations. We remember the saints because they remind us how to walk faithfully in our own generation.
The Celtic Church preserved the memory of thousands of saints, missionaries, confessors, bishops, monks, mothers, kings, poets, martyrs, and holy laborers who helped shape the Christian world before Augustine ever arrived in Britain. Their examples continue to strengthen and inspire Christians today.
Quick Navigation
- Why We Remember the Saints
- Saints in Daily Worship and Prayer
- The English Liturgy and the Saints
- The Celtic Missal and Ancient Commemorations
- Understanding the Communion of Saints
- Live Commemorations and Saints Festivals
- Study Library and Research Categories
- Saints Calendar and Future Reports
Why We Remember the Saints
The saints are remembered because Scripture itself commands Christians to imitate faithful examples:
“Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.”
— 1 Corinthians 11:1
“Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses…”
— Hebrews 12:1
The saints do not replace Christ. Rather, they point toward Him. Their lives show what repentance, worship, endurance, holiness, charity, missionary labor, and steadfast faith looked like in real human lives transformed by God.
The ancient Celtic Church especially emphasized the practical imitation of holy lives. Saints were remembered to inspire courage, purity, prayerfulness, fasting, charity, perseverance, and faithfulness under persecution and hardship.
For more on the spiritual unity of the Church across heaven and earth, see:
- Zoals het hoofd onafscheidelijk is van het levende lichaam, zo zijn zijn heiligen dat ook
- Heavenly Participation in Early Christian Liturgy
Saints in Daily Worship and Prayer
Within the Orthodox Church of the Culdees, the remembrance of saints is integrated into daily worship, morning prayer, Eucharistic services, feast commemorations, and personal devotion.
Christians may follow these commemorations:
- during the Morning Offices,
- during Eucharistic worship,
- during feast days,
- within the daily liturgy,
- or privately within the home prayer closet.
The purpose is not merely historical remembrance, but spiritual encouragement and participation in the life of the Church.
The saints remind believers that holiness is possible in every generation.
Worship resources may be found through our liturgical and prayer materials, including:
The English Liturgy and the Saints
The primary liturgical form used within our communion is the classical English liturgy derived from the Book of Common Prayer tradition.
Within the English liturgy, saints are commemorated principally:
- during the Great Thanksgiving,
- within the Prayer for the Whole State of Christ’s Church,
- during the Litany,
- during the collects of major feast days,
- and particularly during All Saints observances.
One of the most beautiful examples says:
“And we also bless thy holy Name for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith and fear…”
This prayer preserves an ancient Christian understanding: the Church remembers the faithful departed before God while confessing Christ as “our only Mediator and Advocate.”
The older English liturgical tradition also became important in Orthodox dialogue under St. Tikhon and the Russian Holy Synod, which recognized that much within the older English rite preserved ancient Western Christian structure rooted in the historic Sarum tradition.
For more on this background:
The Celtic Missal and Ancient Commemorations
The older Celtic liturgical tradition preserved even fuller commemorations of saints within the Eucharistic service.
Within the Celtic Missal tradition, saints are commemorated:
- in the Collects before the Epistle,
- within the Litany of the Saints,
- and in the Diptychs, the Great Commemoration of the Living and Departed.
At the beginning of the liturgy, the Litany of Saints invokes a historic roster of saints from the Celtic and universal Church.
Later, within the Eucharistic prayer itself, the saints, clergy, living faithful, and departed are commemorated together before God as one Body in Christ.
This older liturgical structure did not sharply separate thanksgiving, remembrance, intercession, and participation. Rather, the Church understood herself as one communion across heaven and earth.
Thus, the liturgy could simultaneously ask the saints to pray with the Church while also commemorating them before God together with all the faithful departed.
For deeper studies:
- The Celtic Missal of Maelruain and the Stowe Tradition
- Stowe Missal Litany of Saints: Directed Petition Origins
- Prayer for the Departed in the Celtic Church and Early Christianity
The older Bobbio Missal baptismal form even concludes:
“That thou mayest have a part with the Saints unto life everlasting.”
This reveals the ancient Christian understanding that salvation itself means entering the fellowship and inheritance of the saints in Christ.
Understanding the Communion of Saints
The communion of saints does not mean replacing Christ with other mediators.
Rather, it means recognizing that the Church is one Body in Christ:
- the living,
- the faithful departed,
- the martyrs,
- the saints,
- and all who belong to Him.
The saints are remembered because Christians believe the Church remains united in Christ across heaven and earth.
This is why ancient liturgies could:
- commemorate saints,
- commemorate the departed,
- ask prayers together,
- and celebrate together within the Eucharistic assembly.
The deeper principle is mutual love within the Body of Christ.
For more on this distinction:
Live Commemorations and Saints Festivals
Join us in celebrating the faithfulness of God working in His people throughout the centuries.
From time to time we hold:
- live commemorations,
- study sessions,
- saints day reflections,
- historical presentations,
- and liturgical observances centered upon many of the great Celtic Orthodox founders and saints.
These commemorations are intended not merely to study history, but to encourage believers toward prayer, holiness, endurance, and deeper devotion to Christ.
Subscribe and follow along to receive notice of future broadcasts and saints commemorations.
Study Library and Research Categories
Communion of Saints and Spiritual Unity
Celtic Liturgical Studies
- Celtic Missal of Maelruain and the Stowe Tradition
- Stowe Missal Litany of Saints
- Primitive Worship and the Prayer Book
Prayer for the Departed
Monastic and Celtic Spirituality
Sacred Artwork and Biblical Symbolism
Saints Calendar and Future Reports
We continue developing:
- saints calendars,
- feast commemorations,
- saint biographies,
- Vita studies,
- liturgical reports,
- and historical presentations covering the Celtic saints and the wider Orthodox Christian tradition.
Over one thousand Celtic saints are remembered from the period before Augustine arrived in Britain alone.
Many additional studies and commemorative materials are planned for future publication and broadcast.
You may also explore:
May the examples of the saints strengthen us to walk faithfully in our own generation, until we also become partakers of “the glory of his inheritance in the saints.”
