Mass With Pope John Paul II example essay topic
Archbishop Edward Nowak, secretary in the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, added to the speculation after he was quoted as saying a decision on starting the saint-making process could come as early as October, when bishops from around the world meet in Rome. Nowak concurred that all the letters the Vatican had received so far of supposed miraculous cures wouldn't count toward John Paul's saintliness. ' But since you only need one for beatification and one for canonization, if there are so many of these 'signs' that you hear about, it shouldn't be difficult to have new ones,' he told the newspaper Corriere della Sera. Some of the old 'miracles' have been given prominent play in Italian newspapers, including the case of an unidentified American Jewish millionaire afflicted with a brain tumour who attended Mass with John Paul in 1998. The Turin daily La Stampa, reported that some weeks after the audience, Dziwisz was told 'that the tumour had completely disappeared in the span of a few hours'. Another case is that of Jose Heron Ba dillo, who was four-years-old when John Paul visited his hometown of Zacatecas, Mexico, in 1990.
The boy, who suffered from leukemia, was selected to hold a dove as part of the airport ceremonies to welcome John Paul. ' The pope told him, let the dove fly! Then (the pope) hugged him and kissed him on his forehead,' recalled Mexican Cardinal Javier Lozano Bar ragan in an interview published by Corriere della Sera over the weekend. The cardinal, who headed the Vatican office on health care issues under John Paul, said there was no medical explanation for the boy's subsequent recovery. Another inexplicable cure was announced over the weekend by Cardinal Francesco Marchisano during his homily at a Mass of mourning for John Paul. Marchisano told the faithful he had lost the ability to speak after undergoing throat surgery.
' The pope touched the part of the throat where I was operated on, saying that he would pray to the Lord for me,' he told the faithful. 'After some time, I was able to speak regularly. ' Vatican procedures in place for some 500 years require one miracle for someone to be beatified and a second to be canonized. There has been speculation that a new pope might do away with those procedures and simply declare John Paul a saint based on popular acclaim..