Many uninformed people have condemned and denounced the Church for daring to term its members “Saints.” The idea was very prevalent in the 1830s, and still is in some quarters today, that only a dead man or woman could be a Saint. But the term was used quite differently in the New Testament times, and even in the Old Testament. Cruden‘s Concordance gives over sixty references to “Saints” in the New Testament alone, and thirty-one more in the Old Testament. Practically every reference is to people who were still living—imperfect people perhaps—but people who were trying to the best of their ability to be holy, godly people, sanctified and regenerated through the power of the gospel. Paul’s epistles are especially replete with references to the “Saints” who composed the Church. In the King James Version, the phrase “called to be saints” occurs twice: in Romans 1:7 and 1 Corinthians 1:2, but in both passages the words to be are printed in italics, indicating that they have been added by the editors and translators with the idea of improving the sense. As Paul wrote it, the phrase was, “To all that be in Rome, beloved of God, called saints,” and “Unto the church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called saints.“ Evidently the members of Christ’s New Testament Church were commonly called Saints. They were not called Christians, except in derision or contempt, as a nickname; and the word “Christian” appears only three times in the Bible, compared to ninety-odd times for the word “Saints.”