Saturday, Jun 6, 2009
Posted on Fri, Jun. 05, 2009

Family says prayer cured son's cancer; U.S. priest's sainthood sought

<http://www.star-telegram.com/religion/v-print/story/1417692.html>http://www.star-telegram.com/religion/v-print/story/1417692.html
 



By ASHLEY KINDERGAN
The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)
RIVER EDGE, N.J. ­ A River Edge, N.J., resident 
is on a mission to get saint status for a beloved 
Detroit priest, who he believes answered prayers to heal his son’s cancer.

Kevin Blute hopes the Vatican will make the Rev. 
Solanus Casey the first male saint born in the 
U.S., and he suggested a friend’s prayer group 
name itself after the friar. Blute’s teenage son, 
Ryan, was diagnosed with melanoma in 2007 and has since recovered.

"I feel like I’m in gratitude to him big time, 
and so I want to do everything I can," said 
Blute, 50. "I also think it would be great for 
the country if we had an American-born male saint."

The River Edge area chapter of the Ancient Order 
of Hibernians, a Catholic service and prayer 
group, is now helping fellow member Blute with 
his cause. The group now has about 100 active 
members from northern New Jersey. They have held 
fundraisers for local charities and marched in 
parades with a big banner bearing Casey’s name, 
hoping to pique people’s interest.

The church has already declared Casey venerable, 
the second step in a four-stage canonization 
process. Now, the friar’s supporters need to 
document miracles that can be attributed to 
Casey’s intercession. Blute hopes that people 
with miraculous stories will come forward.

'Reputation for holiness’

To the Blute family, Ryan’s story is a miracle. 
But the fact that he was treated with interferon 
immunotherapy for a year after his diagnosis may 
make his case a tough sell for the Vatican. The 
church needs to document stories in which medical 
treatment cannot possibly explain a recovery.

Ryan Blute was diagnosed with melanoma on his 
14th birthday after having a mole removed in 
2007. His grandmother, Anne Blute, belongs to a 
Father Solanus Casey prayer group in Yonkers, 
N.Y., where the priest served at Sacred Heart 
Friary from 1904 to 1918. She gave Ryan a Father 
Solanus Casey relic badge to wear. The family started praying to Casey, too.

The cancer had spread to Ryan’s lymph nodes, 
which doctors removed. Three days after the 
surgery, all the scans for cancer came back clean 
and subsequent scans have stayed that way.

Today, he is one of the top hitters on the River 
Dell High School baseball team.

Casey, a Capuchin friar, has long had a devoted 
following in Detroit, where he spent most of his 
career. Capuchins there have created the Solanus 
Casey Center and a guild that advocates for his 
canonization and documents possible miracles.

The Congregation for the Causes of Saints in the 
Vatican has not yet accepted any of the guild’s 
submissions as miracles, said Brother Leo 
Wollenweber, a friar in Detroit and vice-postulator for Casey

"He had a great reputation for holiness," 
Wollenweber said. "He was very ordinary, very 
human, very interested in people and very easy to talk to."

Ordained in 1904

Casey, the son of Irish immigrants, joined the 
Capuchin friars. He was ordained a priest in 1904 
but was not permitted to hear confessions. He is 
most famous for his service as doorkeeper at the 
St. Bonaventure Monastery in Detroit, where he 
started a soup kitchen, counseled people and gained a reputation as a healer.

One tale about Casey holds that a local Chevrolet 
plant was saved from the brink of collapse by an 
influx of orders that came in after an executive 
signed the company up to receive prayers from a 
Mass association that Casey promoted.

"He’s a possible saint out of central casting," 
said Lawrence Cunningham, a professor of theology 
at Notre Dame University. "He fits a classical 
profile of someone who was heroically interested 
in the people who came to his door."

The president of a Detroit Hibernians chapter 
named after Casey hopes Blute’s group will help 
to carry the torch in the future. The Detroit 
order still runs a charity event that feeds more 
than 1,000 people on Super Bowl Sunday, but 
members are getting older, said Bill Byrne, president.

"It’s been hard to get recruits," Byrne said. 
"What’s great about what Kevin and his group is, 
they’ve got about 100 guys, and they’re mostly 40 and under."

If the faith of a new generation is what the 
movement to canonize Casey needs, it has found a young believer in Ryan.

The high school junior keeps a relic of Solanus 
in his wallet when he goes for scans at the hospital and when he took the SAT.

"When I need help, he’s always with me," Ryan said.

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