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Saint
Christopher is listed as a martyr killed in the reign of the 3rd
century Roman emperor Decius (reigned 249–251). In Catholicism he is considered
the patron saint of travellers.
One legend states that Christopher was a Roman of
imposing stature, originally named Reprobus.
According to legend, Reprobus—referred to as a giant by those who knew
him—converted to Christianity and vowed to serve Jesus Christ. Other sources say
his name was Offero, and that he was born in
Canaan. He sought out a Christian hermit
to inquire as to how he could better serve Jesus. The hermit directed him to a
path with a dangerous crossing point at a swift river, and suggested that the
man's great size and strength made him a good candidate to assist people in
crossing the river. Reprobus began ferrying people across the river on his
back.
One day, a small child approached the river and asked to
be carried across. Reprobus began to comply, only to discover that the small boy
was far heavier than any other passenger he had taken. The child revealed that
he was in fact Jesus Christ, and that his unusual weight was due to the fact
that he bore the sins of the world. The boy (Jesus) then baptized Reprobus in
the river, and he acquired his new name, Christopher, which is Greek for "Christ-carrier" (from
Christos, "Christ", and pherein, meaning "to bear").
The child then told Christopher to plant his staff in
the ground. The staff miraculously bloomed into a fruit-bearing tree. This
miracle converted many. Enraged at these conversions, a local king (or by some
accounts, the emperor Decius) had Christopher imprisoned, where, after cruel
tortures, he was beheaded as a martyr.
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