Marshfield man's prayer an answer in sainthood query

<http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/04/29/marshfield_mans_prayer_an_answer_in_sainthood_query/?page=full>http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/04/29/marshfield_mans_prayer_an_answer_in_sainthood_query/?page=full
 



Says his back woes gone, credits late British cardinal

Jack Sullivan asked the late British cardinal, John Henry Newma

  Jack Sullivan asked the late British cardinal, John Henry Newman, 
for help for a back ailment. (Debee Tlumacki for The Boston Globe)
By 
<http://search.boston.com/local/Search.do?s.sm.query=Jenna+Russell&camp=localsearch:on:byline:art>Jenna
 
Russell
Globe Staff / April 29, 2009

MARSHFIELD - Lying in a hospital bed after surgery on his spine, 
unable to walk and in agonizing pain, Jack Sullivan propped himself 
up on elbows and prayed.

Not to some vast, unknowable god, but to a specific figure in the 
Catholic Church, vastly respected, yet mortal: Cardinal John Henry 
Newman, an Englishman who died in 1890.

The healing, as Sullivan tells it, was almost immediate. He felt a 
tingling all over, was flooded with warmth, and, as easy as that, he 
could walk.

Now, the recovery that Sullivan, 70, has been describing for almost 
eight years, a drama that unfolded in August 2001, is on the verge of 
being deemed a miracle by the Catholic Church, and the unassuming 
Marshfield man, a church deacon and father of three, is at the center 
of a campaign to make the late British cardinal a saint.

A panel of theologians, convened by the branch of the Vatican that 
investigates possible miracles, has concluded that Sullivan's 
recovery resulted from his prayer, the London Telegraph newspaper 
reported. A panel of doctors previously researched his claim and 
found no medical explanation for what happened, Sullivan said. The 
final decision on whether recognize the healing as a miracle rests 
with Pope Benedict XVI. If that status is given, as expected, it 
would lead to beatification for Newman. Sainthood would require 
recognition of a second miracle.

A spokesman for the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston declined to 
comment yesterday, saying that the Vatican does not allow discussion 
of such investigations.

For Sullivan, who said he has remained pain-free since his prayers 
were answered and who has lately been busy fertilizing his rose 
garden and celebrating 40 years of marriage to his wife, Carol, the 
Vatican finding confirms what he has long believed.

In an interview at his home, the good-natured, rosy-cheeked Sullivan 
said his most striking memory of that summer day in 1991 is the wave 
of well-being that swept over him as he prayed.

"The most important thing was the sense of exuberance I felt, 
exuberance and confidence that all would be well, all would be rosy, 
and a tremendous happiness," he said yesterday, sitting in a 
comfortable brown armchair with views of towering pine trees. "I got 
up and walked all over the place, twisting my cane like Charlie Chaplin."

The Vatican investigates such claims scrupulously, said the Rev. 
James Martin, a Jesuit priest and writer on Catholicism. To be deemed 
a miracle, a medical recovery must be instantaneous, not attributable 
to treatment, and verified by doctors, he said. In addition, the 
ailment must disappear for good.

"The bar is higher than what most people would set," said Martin, the 
author of "My Life with the Saints."

Sullivan's suffering erupted on June 6, 2000, he said, when he woke 
up with excruciating pain in his back and legs. At Jordan Hospital in 
Plymouth, a CAT scan showed several vertebrae squeezing his spinal 
cord. A doctor told him to find a surgeon fast, because his spinal 
stenosis could lead to paralysis. In the meantime, Sullivan said, he 
was forced to walk hunched over, his right hand gripping his right 
knee for support.

He learned that the long recovery from surgery would keep him off his 
feet for months and dreaded the timing: Halfway through a four-year 
program that would lead to his ordination as a deacon in the Catholic 
Church and passionately devoted to his goal, he was in the midst of 
classes and a 120-hour internship at a Boston hospital.

One night, watching television to escape his troubles, Sullivan 
happened on a show about Cardinal John Henry Newman. Born in London 
in 1801 and widely admired as a funny, brilliant thinker and writer 
on religion, Newman converted to Catholicism in his 40s after 
clashing with leaders of the Church of England over what he saw as a 
shift away from the church's roots.

The television show described the current movement, based in England, 
supporting the cardinal's beatification and appealed to viewers for 
news of miraculous happenings that might help make the case. Sullivan 
wrote down the address. And that night he asked Newman for help.

"I said, 'Please, Cardinal Newman, help me so I can go back to 
classes and be ordained,' " Sullivan said. "The next morning I woke 
up, and there was no pain."

Saints do not perform miracles, Martin said, explaining Catholic 
belief, but intercede with God to bring results.

Sullivan remained free of pain for eight months, but after his last 
class, the pain returned, he said. He had surgery at New England 
Baptist Hospital in Boston on Aug. 9, 2001. Five days later, his 
second prayer to Cardinal Newman was answered. He was ordained in 
September 2002, and now serves as deacon at St. Thecla Parish in 
Pembroke, where his duties include assisting at Mass, performing 
baptisms, and teaching classes for local prisoners.

After Sullivan shared his story with leaders of the campaign for 
Newman's sainthood, years of investigation followed, culminating in 
hearings in Boston where Sullivan and his wife both testified about 
his recovery.

The inquiry was exhaustive, he said, and for good reason. "Just 
because you want to believe something, it doesn't mean it's so," he said.

He said he does not know why Newman helped him, except that he wanted 
so badly to become a deacon. "The point is, there is a greater 
reality," he said. "We don't have to worry."

Michael Paulson of the Globe staff contributed to this report.
[]


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