Whispers in the Loggia reports:
7.40pm, Saturday 20 October -- For all the
place has witnessed over the centuries, it seems plausible to say that not even
Rome has seen a moment like this.
In the morning, for the first time, American Catholicism can boast the canonization of two of its own at once as the "Lily of the Mohawks" Kateri Tekakwitha (1656-80), and Hawaii's "Angel to the Lepers" Mother Marianne Cope (1838-1918) are declared saints together on the basis of their own causes.
Set to be raised to the "honors of the altar" with five others – including Blessed Pedro Calungsod, a 17th century teenage martyr who becomes the second saint from the Philippines – the rites begin at 9.30am Vatican time (3.30 Eastern; 9.30pm Saturday in Hawaii) in St Peter's Square. As ever, the Vatican's HD feed will be live, with options for "clean" audio or commentary in any of six languages, and the liturgy's worship aid is posted.
To honor the weekend's – and, quite possibly, all of 2012's – Big Story in American Catholicism, we'd be remiss to begin anywhere but with the sounds of a very unique canonization pilgrimage.
Starting off, to honor the first Native American saint, a piece of the annual powwow held in St Kateri's honor at her shrine in upstate New York...
...and for Mother Marianne – Hawaii's second saint in three years (following her longtime collaborator who she succeeded as head of the Molokai colony, now St Damien deVeuster) – what else but the non-Mainland's classic homage, here in an hour-long festival performed Friday night in a garden at the Vatican Museums:
Speaking of sainthood causes and the States, it seems worth noting that – just in time for the titanic pontiff's feast this Monday, 22 October (the anniversary of his 1978 inauguration as the church's "universal pastor") – the USCCB announced that the requisite Vatican permission had been granted for the memorial of Blessed John Paul II to be observed in the nation's dioceses.
For the rest, the background and context to tomorrow's events were relayed in the following piece, published here last 6 December, which provided the first report of the historic moment now at hand.
Above all else, as the
greatest distinction among God's people is never one of rank or authority, but
holiness – and, whatever the age, the church's truest "reformers" are
the saints among us – may the witness of these sisters become mothers, each
in their own way, ever be a lesson to us all.
*
* *
Only
six years after Mother Marianne
Cope was beatified, the New York-bred collaborator of St Damien
deVeuster on Hawaii's Molokai leper colony has cleared the final hurdle to
sainthood.
Earlier today,
officials of Blessed Marianne's Syracuse-based cause relayed word that the
cardinal-members of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints had affirmed that
a second inexplicable healing attributed to the intercession of the Franciscan
nun (1838-1918) was, indeed, miraculous. Following the initial judgment of its
medical board, the full dicastery's vote to recommend canonization marked the
last deliberative part of the sainthood process.
A decree of the
miracle's authenticity will now be presented to Pope Benedict at his next
audience with the Congregation's prefect, Cardinal Angelo Amato SDB, which is
expected to take place within weeks. Once the pontiff's pro forma approval of the finding is granted,
Cope's canonization date would then be announced by the Pope at a subsequent
consistory of the cardinals resident in Rome.
Don't book tickets
yet, but if the consistent pattern of B16's six-year reign holds, smart money
sees Rome's second mass
dose of Aloha as most likely to come next October, just three years after
liturgical hula first broke
out in basilicas on Father Damien's elevation to the altars. Though Benedict
customarily holds an earlier canonization each year during the Easter season,
the time needed to arrange the 8,000-mile pilgrimage would indicate the later
date.
The Roman move comes
on the heels of last month's 216-2 vote by the US bishops to add the
Franciscan's feast to the national calendar, along with that of Blessed John
Paul II.
While Blessed Marianne
is commemorated in the dioceses of Honolulu and Syracuse (her community's home
base) on her 23 January birthday -- and is additionally recognized as a saint by
the Episcopal church -- conflicts with the wider calendar have left the feast's
national scheduling in the hands of the Holy See.
Initially buried at
the isolated Kalaupapa colony where she served Hansen's patients for over three
decades, Marianne's remains were returned to the Empire State at the time of her
beatification for re-interment at the Franciscan Sisters' Motherhouse. Relics of
the saint-to-be are kept for public veneration in Syracuse's Cathedral of the
Immaculate Conception and Honolulu's Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace.
And
that's not all -- as first
relayed on the Inside Pages
in early November, likewise expected in the impending batch of miracle decrees
is the long-awaited final step to sainthood for the "Lily of the Mohawks,"
Blessed Kateri
Tekakwitha (1656-80).
Beatified in 1980, the
convert and catechist of Mohawk-Algonquin roots enjoys a particularly intense
devotion among Native American Catholics, and is likewise regarded as a patroness of ecology and
the care of the environment. Though Kateri's cult extends far beyond her
home-turf, like Mother Marianne, she can be considered a New Yorker, having been
born near present-day Auriesville (home of Martyrs Shrine).
Her 14 July feast long
on the US calendar, Bl Kateri is buried in a mission church near Montreal. A national shrine to her is kept at her
onetime home in upstate New York, but is only open seasonally.
Since his 2005
election, Benedict has already canonized two heroes from current-day US
territory: the French-born Indiana foundress Mother Theodore
Guerin in 2006, and the Belgian-born Father Damien -- now a Hawaiian folk
hero -- who's revered worldwide as a particular patron for HIV/AIDS sufferers
and the marginalized in general.
Flying in the face of
the reigning pontiff's intent to declare far fewer saints than his prolific
predecessor, it's very plausible that the uptick of Americans reaching the
altars of late can be linked to the Stateside church's recovery from a decade of
epochal scandal, and Benedict's repeated, emphatic response to the crisis it
birthed.
Much as recent years
have seen no shortage of heated calls for institutional reform, the Pope's consistent
retort has been that -- as opposed to the fold's loudest, most prominent or
incendiary elements -- "in every age the saints
are the true reformers of the church’s life" through their ability to
inspire and challenge others to embrace a deepened fidelity to Christ and the
Gospel, and by the integrity of their witness.
While six American
saints have been elevated on the basis of individual causes since the "Mother of
Immigrants" Frances
Xavier Cabrini in 1946, never have two been canonized at once.
Throw in a rare
convergence of Indians, Halau and Yankee fans, and you've got the makings of
quite the trip.
*
* *
The foreseen
melting-pot now come together, more as the footage makes its way home. In the
meanwhile, we'd be remiss to not close out with a blessing from a fruit of the
"Lily" – the church's first Native American archbishop... backed up by his
tribe's drums:
And as a historic day dawns, even more than usual, buona domenica a tutti... yet most of all, Saints Kateri and Marianne, pray for us.
And as a historic day dawns, even more than usual, buona domenica a tutti... yet most of all, Saints Kateri and Marianne, pray for us.
PHOTO: AP
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