Not an earthshaking question, but who was St. Croix? Was there such a person? My French (is it French?) is negligible but does “croix” translate to “cross”, so that the correct interpretation would be “holy cross”, a thing rather than a person? Or was there a fella named Croix who did good works and was elevated to sainthood? Did he live in the Virgin Islands?
Bob T is right-- the Holy Cross is just the cross, the “True Cross” that JC allegedly died on and supposedly was found by St Helen, hence the instrument of our alleged salvation. There are a lot of old churches (not necessarily named after a French guy, who was named after the holy cross)-- Heiligen Kreuz-es, and the aforementioned Santa Cruz-es are variants (FYI: the first university in the Americas was the Universidad de Santa Cruz del Tlatelolco outside Mexico City (hit its peak in the 1570’s, I think. . .). San Sepulchre, Holy Blood/Corpus Christi, Holy Ghost-- there are lots of “saints” or “holies” that weren’t people.
Interesting… I know of several churches named after “Saint John of the Cross”, (or San Juan de la Cruz), and I would’ve guessed that “St. Croix/Cross/Cruz” was a shortened form of that.
It’s only confusing because in English we have separate words for “saint” and “holy”.
Nevertheless, I had to help a kid in the library who had to report on Santa Cruz and he wanted a book about the person. It was an honest mistake since “Cruz” is a first name in Spanish.
Just noting that “corpus christi” is “body of christ”, as in the sacrifice, or the sacrament of communion(host). The syntax was off a bit in that sentence. I’m sure you didn’t mean to combine them to mean the same thing.