Not at all. That's why there are saints and Saints.
As Ive said so many times in this thread, I will fight this proposed nomenclature to my dying breath.
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Per biblical source (Paul I believe, but haven't looked it up yet), all followers of TWC are saints. Be they alive or in their graves, they are saints. Saints are those who have passed away, but are recognized as having attained paradise.
Sure, that is one of the many contradictory definition of Saint out there in the Real World. Which is why we are trying to keep this conversation restricted to the In-Setting examples and data we have.
The argument that it would require someone to be a saint to lead a mob against an elder of the Black Court Vamps is a fallacy as well.
And you have to realize that while they don't get the press, there were saints who led mobs against great evil (in the form of a BCV elder or some other thing) that weren't successful. That doesn't make them any less of a saint. It just means that they weren't as successful as other saints. And the others who were successful are the ones who got the better press and often were canonized and recognized as a Saint.
Um, what? We're talking about Saints. Sure there are other things out there with Power that might lead such a fight, the OWJ in question listed quite a few. But we're focusing on Saints, specifically the only Dresden Files example we have. You dont need to be a Saint to lead such as fight, but as far as we have any Data anyone who is a Saint should be able to lead such a fight.
I mean look at all the martyrs who died unsuccessfully fighting against an evil, but are recognized as Saints.
Per catholic use, originally there was no distinction between Saint and Martyr, the ONLY saints were those that were Martyred. Though yes this is certainly different than the usage in the New Testament. But since we know that DF Saints are living things, that cannot be a part of it in the story.
But if it was a willing sacrifice, then Finn would be a saint, wouldn't he? Or at least a martyr.. Also wouldn't he have considered it a blessing instead of a curse? Not sure what long time good could come from a Loop randomly killing innocents every full moon until the end of time. I may be wrong but I think cursing someone or putting a curse on someone is the same as damning them..
Not Finn, though perhaps the originating Ancestor; descendants are Bound by their ancestor's Choices to some degree (you can sell a baby apparently, Firstborn, etc) but the later generatiosn dont seem to get any credit for the actions of their ancestors (they can inherit responsibility, but they dont get to just inherit Faith, I wouldnt think. Wouldnt surprise me if the originating Ancestor actually /was/ the Saint in question, truthfully.
As far as Why: My theory is that Odin needed to craft a weaponized Mantle that would be powerful enough to Kill him come the prophesied Ragnarok; he needed to create the Fenrir Wolf, because only that will allow him to release his full God-level Deathcurse. He didnt want to deal with the concentrated Mass destruction of a Darkhallow ritual, so instead he created a Curse that would spread the killing harvest out over the course of generations and centuries (as WOJ implied that the Erlking did it, Im thinking one hunt at a time).
Random Note: We do have WOJ confirmation that one of Vadderung's Mantles is
Saint Nicholas.