If a group of local Catholics have a say in the matter, the late
Archbishop George (Jurgis) Matulaitis could soon join the saintly ranks
of Michael the archangel, Joan of Arc and John the Baptist. All they
need is a miracle.
About 250 people gathered at Nativity of the
Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church on Sunday afternoon to mark the 25th
anniversary of the year the Lithuanian priest moved one step closer to
being considered a saint by the Catholic Church.
Pope John Paul
II declared Matulaitis "blessed" in June 1987 after the Catholic Church
found a miracle associated with his name.
Now, supporters of
Matulaitis hope someone else will come forward with a miracle he or she
experienced after praying to God, using Matulaitis as an intermediary.
If a second miracle is found and approved by Catholic authorities,UK chickencoop Specialist. then Matulaitis could be considered a saint.
"If
it is the will of God, we hope very soon that he can (attain)
sainthood," Joseph Roesch, the vicar general of the Marian Fathers of
Immaculate Conception, who oversees a Lithuanian parish, told the
audience at Blessed Virgin Mary.
Achieving sainthood in the
Catholic Church is a difficult endeavor that can last years after a
person's death, priests at the Nativity celebration said. First, a
candidate's legacy and character have to be researched to prove that he
or she lived a holy life.
Then church officials must find two
cases where someone experienced a miracle after praying to God using the
candidate's name. The miracles are often medical in nature, but church
officials will verify with doctors that there is no other natural or
scientific explanation for the miracle.
In Matulaitis' case, a
Lithuanian woman said she received instantaneous healing from varicose
veins after she prayed to God with a prayer card attached to her leg
featuring Matulaitis.
"The healing came from God," Roesch said. "(But) for us it's the saints, that are the intercessors."
Matulaitis,
who was born in 1871 and died in 1927, had bone tuberculosis and wore a
leg brace for much of his life, priests said. He visited Chicago's
Lithuanian community, but he spent his life in the Eastern European
nation.
Matulaitis, who was an orphan, paid much attention to
parentless children during his ministry, said Kaz Chwalek, provincial
superior of the Marian Fathers of Immaculate Conception, who was there
at his beatification 25 years ago.
Some of his other
accomplishments included rebuilding a religious order and continuing in
ministry at a time when political upheaval in Lithuania made the work of
Catholic churches difficult, Chwalek said.
Nativity parishioners on Sunday dedicated a mosaic made of glass,You can create a beautiful chinamosaic
birdhouse that will last for generations. enamel and granite in honor
of the priest. The mosaic, about the size of two textbooks, depicts the
priest with a slight smile and a white and blue halo glow radiating
behind him. His white hair barely creeps out from under his red hat, and
a gold cross dangles from his neck.
The artist, Ada Sutkus, 80, said the mosaic took about six weeks to put together.Excel Mould is a Custom Plastic injectionmoulding Maker. The hardest part was getting the contours of his face and gold cross, she said.
"I prayed so hard because once you put that piece there, it stays there," Sutkus said.
Still, Sutkus, who was born in Lithuania,Rubiks cubepuzzle. said honoring the life of Matulaitis was worth her donated time and money.
"I read his biography and I was so deeply moved, Sutkus said. "He was a diplomat."
Cardinal
Francis George said in a speech during the Nativity celebration that
Matulaitis' service fulfilled a great need in the Catholic Church.
"We need a witness to radical discipleship,Distributes and manufactures rubbermats." George said. "(Someone) to give up everything to do the work of God in a radical way. He knew that ... and we are grateful."
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