Page 3, 10th July 2009

10th July 2009

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Page 3, 10th July 2009 — Pope approves beatification of Newman
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Pope approves beatification of Newman

POPE APPROVES NEWMAN MIRACLE
BY SIMON CALDWELL
POPE BENEDICT XVI has announced the beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman.
The declaration means that the Anglican vicar who shocked Victorian England by converting to Catholicism will be given the title “Blessed”.
It also puts Newman just one stage away from becoming the first English saint in about 40 years.
The Pope signed the decree authorising the beatification after Vatican doctors and theologians finally approved the inexplicable healing of Jack Sullivan, an American “bent double” by a severe spinal condition, as a miracle which came about as a result of praying to Cardinal Newman.
His decision to beatify Cardinal Newman was welcomed by Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Westminster. “I am delighted to learn this news, which will be warmly welcomed by Catholics around the world,” Archbishop Nichols said.
“To have Cardinal Newman among the Blessed is an occasion of great thankfulness to the Lord and of great pride to those associated with him in Birmingham and in Oxford.
“I am sure he will help us greatly in the task of protecting the Faith amidst the difficulties he foresaw so clearly.” Fr Paul Chavasse, Provost of the Birmingham Oratory, the church that Newman founded, said: “The prayers of Christ’s faithful all over the world have now been answered.
“The Holy Father’s decision is one of great significance for the whole Church.
“I pray that Newman, by the example of his life and the depth of his teaching, will be received as an authentic guide for Catholics everywhere.
“It is surely providential that the beatification of this great English theologian will occur in the pontificate of Benedict XVI, a major theologian in his own right whom Cardinal Newman has influenced profoundly.” Cardinal Newman will be beatified during a solemn Mass within the next year and a second miracle will then be needed to recognise him as a saint.
When Gordon Brown visited the Vatican in February he invited Pope Benedict to Britain to perform the ceremony in person, possibly at Wembley Stadium.
But there have also been suggestions that the beatification should take place in St Peter’s Square, Rome, because of Newman’s international significance as a modern theologian.
Benedict XVI has been an admirer of the writings of Cardinal Newman since the 1940s, especially his “theology of conscience”, and is keen to make him a saint and reportedly also a theological Doctor of the Church.
Newman was born in the City of London in 1801. He became a Church of England vicar and led the Oxford movement in the 1830s to draw Anglicans back to their Catholic roots.
He converted to the Catholic faith at the age of 44 after a succession of clashes with Anglican bishops made him a virtual outcast from the Church of England.
He continually clashed with both Anglicans angry about his conversion and Catholics who suspected him of being “half-Protestant” but his brilliant intellect, combined with his life of virtue, won him his cardinal’s red hat from Pope Leo XIII in 1879.
He died in his room at Oratory House, Birmingham, at the age of 89 and more than 15,000 people lined the streets for his funeral a week later.
His Cause for sainthood was opened in 1958 and he was declared “Venerable” by Pope John Paul II in 1991 after it was established that he had led a life of “heroic virtue”.
A miracle was needed for the Cause to progress further and this came on August 15 2001 when Sullivan, now 70, from Marshfield, Massachusetts, whose back condition was so severe that doctors feared he would be paralysed, prayed to Newman after he watched a television documentary about him. He rapidly returned to full health and today spends much of his free time working in his garden.
Mr Sullivan, a deacon who hopes to be on the altar during the beatification Mass, said he felt “an intense sense of gratitude and thanksgiving” to God and to Cardinal Newman.
“I have dedicated my vocation in praise of Cardinal Newman, who even now directs all my efforts,” he added.
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