A Brief History of
Gaetano Errico


Sainthood

<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1849474,00.html>http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1849474,00.html
 


By Kate Pickert Monday, Oct. 13, 2008
Gaetano Errico

On Oct. 12, Pope Benedict XVI canonized four new 
saints to the Catholic liturgy: 19th-Century 
Italian priest Gaetano Errico; Mary Bernard 
(Verena) Bütler, a Swiss nun and missionary in 
Latin America who died in 1924; Alfonsa of the 
Immaculate Conception, a nun who who died in 1946 
and is the first named female saint from India; 
and Narcisa de Jesús Martillo Morán, a pious 
laywoman from Ecuador who died in 1869. In the 
Catholic faith, only God can make a saint; these 
four are among those who "have emerged as 
individuals who can light the way ahead," as the 
Modern Catholic Encyclopedia puts it. But the 
means by which these saints are identified ­ and 
by whom ­ has varied over the history of the church.


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The first Catholics revered as saints were 
martyrs who died under Roman persecution in the 
first centuries after Jesus Christ was born. 
These martyrs were honored as saints almost 
instantaneously after their deaths, as Catholics 
who had sacrificed their lives in the name of 
God. Over the next few centuries, however, 
sainthood was extended to those who had defended 
the faith and led pious lives. With the criteria 
for canonization not as strict, the number of 
saints soared by the sixth and seventh centuries. 
Bishops stepped in to oversee the process, and 
around 1200, Pope Alexander III, outraged over 
the proliferation, decreed that only the pope had 
the power to determine who could be identified as 
a saint. (Alexander was reportedly angered about 
one saint in particular whom he believed had been 
killed in an alcohol-fueled brawl and was 
therefore not worthy of canonization.)

In the 17th century, the Vatican's standards for 
sainthood were formalized. A non-martyr would 
need to have performed four posthumous miracles, 
usually spontaneous healings. (Today, the church 
requires a team of doctors to verify their 
veracity and prove that miraculous healings were 
not the result of modern medicine.) The process 
included two major steps: beatification, the 
pope's recognition that a person is worthy of 
consideration, which begins a lengthy 
investigation process; and canonization, the 
pope's formal recognition that a person is truly 
a saint. In each case the argument for sainthood 
would be rebutted by a Devil's Advocate, a person 
appointed by the Church to argue against the case 
for sainthood. Before becoming pontiff, Pope 
Benedict XIV was one of the foremost Devil's 
Advocates of the 18th century. It wasn't until 
1983 that a revised Code of Canon Law was 
published that included reforms to the 
canonization process begun in 1913. Under Pope 
John Paul II the procedures for investigating and 
recognizing a saint were streamlined, the Devil's 
Advocate position was eliminated and the number 
of miracles required for beatification and canonization was reduced to two.

Over his 27-year tenure, Pope John Paul II named 
more saints than all his predecessors combined, 
beatifying more than 1,300 people and canonizing 
nearly 500. He fast-tracked Mother Theresa's 
canonization, and made a distinct effort to 
identify saints in Africa and Asia. In 2000, much 
to the chagrin of the communist government there, 
John Paul II canonized the first saints in China, 
naming 87 Chinese citizens and 33 foreign 
missionaries who had died in the country between 
1648 and 1930. He also named the first saint from 
Brazil, home to more Catholics than any other 
country. Many within the Catholic church 
disapproved of the mass canonizations, which one 
critic calling the pope's actions "Vatican marketing decisions."

But at Pope John Paul II's funeral in 2005, those 
gathered at St. Peter's Basilica shouted "Santo 
subito!" ­ Sainthood now! The current pope, 
Benedict XVI, began the beatification process for 
John Paul II within a month of his death, waiving 
the five-year waiting period usually required 
between a candidate's death and the beatification process.

Early this year, the Vatican announced it would 
make the procedures to name saints more rigorous. 
The latest canonizations bring to 18 the number 
of saints named so far in Pope Benedict XVI's 
papacy. "For all of Catholic history, the saints 
have been a central part of Catholic 
spirituality," says James Martin, a Jesuit priest 
and author of My Life with the Saints. They are, 
he says, like "elder brothers and sisters ­ people who help you along."

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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

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