Saint Olivia is eligible for Catholic Confirmation. However some people say that she is fiction. I have done my research on Saint Olivia and have concluded that Saint Olivia is in fact fiction. But she is still eligible for Catholic Confirmation. Even though she is fiction she is still a Saint that people have believed in and cherished for century's. Many Catholic people still believe she is real. So technically if you want to have your Catholic Confirmation name as: Saint Olivia go right ahead!
If you have recently figure out that Saint Olivia is fiction and you are nervous about if your Catholic Confirmation name will work it will!
Roman Catholic AnswerBlessed Olivia's feast day is June 10, she is not a saint, she has only been beatified (the last step before being declared a saint). If you are permitted beati names, then, yes, she would be eligible.Olivia Palak is 5' 0 1/2".
While not everyone believes that Saint Olivia was a real girl, I do because she has an amazing history (check out wikipedia)! If you do think she was real than you can come to appreciate her and what she did. You can feel her empathy and her kindness. If you don't think that she ever existed its easier to say that she never existed, leave it at that, and ignore all of her amazing accomplishments! But what if she was real? Than you are ignoring a saint! For confirmation I chose her to be my saint. Saint Olivia pray for us!
A wonderful choice as a patron saint of your confirmation.
I can find no saint named Lauren and your confirmation name should be that of a saint.
Olivia Olson's birth name is Olivia Rose Olson.
Saint Olivia never existed. She was a character in a story that was taken by some to be an actual biography.
Yes she does. In fact the only place that Saint Olivia exists is in that story. She was the central character in a pious tale that was mistaken to be a biography. Olivia is a fictional character.
Olivia never was a real saint, although she was honored as one for centuries. She was a fictional character who achieved a large following when her story was mistaken for a biography.
Saint Olivia was a fictional character in a pious story that circulated hundreds of years ago that was mistaken to be a biography. Olivia never existed.
Your Confirmation name needs to be that of a saint and not a rock star. There is no saint named Rhianna.
Olivia never was a real saint, although she was honored as one for centuries. She was a fictional character who achieved a large following when her story was mistaken for a biography.
No! The name chosen for confirmation must be the name of a saint or blessed and Blath is not the name of a saint.