Mexico: Catholic Cult's 'Saint of Death' Gets Makeover

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
Aug 12, 2007, 9:24:36 PM8/12/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*False Churches, False Brethren, False Gospels

Mexico: Catholic Cult's 'Saint of Death' Gets Makeover*

By JULIE WATSON
The Associated Press
Sunday, August 12, 2007; 6:44 PM

MEXICO CITY -- Death just isn't what it used to be.

A small religious group that worships the grim reaper and is fighting
for government recognition unveiled a softer image of their so-called
Death Saint on Sunday: a woman with a porcelain face, brown,
shoulder-length hair and long thin fingers.

Hundreds of worshippers filed into the Santa Muerte sanctuary in
downtown Mexico City to see the statue in a flowing golden dress and
veil, clutching a rose. She offers another option to followers who have
traditionally prayed to figures of a skeleton dressed in a black cloak
and carrying a scythe, or in a long flowing white gown.

David Romo, the Traditional Mex-USA Church's archbishop, said the new
incarnation of the saint appeared to a woman in a dream in December and
told her to ask Romo to commission a statue so devotees could see her
new look.

He denied the change is a publicity stunt to win government recognition
and shed the group's image as a cult dabbling in black magic.

"This image is one of justice, of freedom, but above all one that
reveals the face of God," Romo said. Believers say the Death Saint kills
only on God's orders.

The church, an unofficial offshoot of Roman Catholicism, was registered
as a religious group in 2003, allowing it to legally raise money and own
property. But in 2005, the government withdrew its permit after an
excommunicated member accused it of forcing followers to worship death
and failing to stick to its bylaws. The church started filing papers
again last month to gain official status.

The Catholic Church speaks out against worshipping Santa Muerte, linking
it to black magic, Satanism and cults.

Romo said Catholic authorities are trying to scare people away from the
group, which he said is growing in popularity mostly among Mexicans and
Mexican Americans.

Santa Muerte, which some believe to be rooted in pre-Colombian beliefs,
is one of several unofficial folk saints worshipped in Mexico. Death is
commonly honored as a part of life in Mexican culture _ such as during
November's Day of the Dead celebrations _ and does not have the same
morbid stigma as in other societies.

Yareli Ceron said worshippers will continue praying to the grim reaper,
but now also to the new image which will help the group gain respectability.

"Everyone still loves the skeleton, but now there will be no reason to
criticize" the Death Saint, said Ceron, who was among the hordes filing
past the new statue.

Standing nearby, Mabel Gonzalez, agreed.

"It's a lot better," she said. "She's not as scary now."

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages