  
   If Mary Magdalene was the victim of misunderstanding, George is 
the object of a vast amount of imagination. There is every reason to 
believe that he was a real martyr who suffered at Lydda in Palestine, 
probably before the time of Constantine. The Church adheres to his 
memory, but not to the legends surrounding his life. 
 
That he was willing to pay the supreme price to follow Christ is what the Church believes. And it is enough. 
The
 story of George's slaying the dragon, rescuing the king's daughter and 
converting Libya is a 12th-century Italian fable. George was a favorite 
patron saint of crusaders, as well as of Eastern soldiers in earlier 
times. He is a patron saint of England, Portugal, Germany, Aragon, 
Catalonia, Genoa and Venice. 
   Comment:  Human nature seems to crave more than cold historical
 data. Americans have Washington and Lincoln, but we somehow need Paul 
Bunyan, too. The life of St. Francis of Assisi is inspiring enough, but 
for centuries the Italians have found his spirit in the legends of the Fioretti,
 too. Santa Claus is the popular extension of the spirit of St. 
Nicholas. The legends about St. George are part of this yearning. Both 
fact and legend are human ways of illumining the mysterious truth about 
the One who alone is holy. 
            Quote:  "When we look at the lives of those who have 
faithfully followed Christ, we are inspired with a new reason for 
seeking the city which is to come" (Vatican II, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 50). | 
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