That would make sense in the Catholic model.
Wouldn't make sense to the atheists, but it isn't supposed to. It would provide comfort for those Catholics who feel a need to pray for their apostate loved ones.
Problem is, the Pope can't just invent one. There has to be some famous person, famous for his or her effforts on behalf of atheists, then a few atheist-themed miracles attributed to him afterwards...
anyone setting out to dedicate their lives to atheists would do well to first study the priests who dedicated their lives to administering to lepers... an ungodly lot of them ended up lepers, themselves.
Funny that, because Hansen's Disease isn't particularly contagious. If they had just washed their hands after physical contact with the patient's bodily fluids, they likely would never have contracted the disease themselves. It's astonishing that while the authors of the Bible were busy writing up all of God's rules for living, with close detail about how often and how severely one may beat ones slaves, never once did the creator of
Mycobacterium leprae bother to mention the importance of washing ones hands after contact with the sick. Or for that matter, not crapping in the river, using latrines that are too shallow, or putting cesspits and latrines uphill of, or close to, the water supply.
The hazards of wearing mixed fabrics seem rather to pale alongside Leprosy, Dysentery, Cholera and Typhus. It's almost as though the priorities were being set by a bunch of ignorant pre-scientific control freaks, and not a divinely inspired elite with access to all the wisdom of the universe. Go figure.
If only Leviticus had included a bit about 'Let not mosquitoes feast upon your flesh or that of your children, for they are unclean and spread plagues; drain the still water in which they multiply, and do not make your homes near swampy ground', several million people's lives would have been spared the horrors of Malaria, West Nile Fever, Yellow Fever, various hemorrhagic fevers and versions of encephalitis, etc., etc. It's rather astonishing that they couldn't find room for something that important.