Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Blessed Pope John Paul II moves a major step closer to sainthood

Blessed Pope John Paul II's beatification on May 1 made him move a major step closer to sainthood with only one more miracle needed to be finally conferred as saint.

Blessed Pope John Paul II needs one more miracle to be canonized as saint | Photo courtesy of Hoteldesatistes.com

Reuters recently outlined the process Blessed Pope John Paul II underwent before he was beatified. It also presented key facts about the canonization process by which the Roman Catholic Church makes a saint.

The process

-- Under normal Church rules, five years must pass after a person dies before the procedure for sainthood can even begin. Despite a person's reputation of holiness during his or her life, the process cannot begin until after death.

-- The reigning pope has the authority to waive the five-year waiting period. Pope Benedict put John Paul on the fast track in May 2005, just two months after his predecessor died.

-- When the local bishop begins the "cause", the candidate for sainthood receives the title "Servant of God". A "postulator" is then appointed to help gather information about the candidate. The postulator also reviews nearly every word known to have been written or spoken by the candidate.

-- One miracle is required after a candidate's death for the cause to move on to beatification. The miracle must be the result of a person praying to the candidate for intercession with God. Miracles are usually the healing of medical conditions that doctors are at a loss to explain.

-- The candidate can then be beatified and declared a "blessed" of the church. Another distinct miracle is needed between beatification and canonization, or the conferring of sainthood.

-- Parts of the Church's saint-making process go back several centuries. The procedure is detailed and often long. In the early Church, a simple acclamation sufficed.

The first miracle

-- Last January, Benedict approved a decree attributing a miracle to John Paul's intercession with God and announced that he would be beatified on May 1.

-- The miracle concerned Sister Marie Simon-Pierre Normand, a French nun diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, from which the pope himself had suffered. She said in June 2005 her illness inexplicably disappeared two months after his death when she and her fellow nuns prayed to him. - Reuters

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