Pope Paul VI's Miracle Healing Called 'Unexplainable' Putting Former Pontiff Closer To Sainthood
ROME -Vatican
officials have approved what they believe to be a miracle attributed to the
intercession of Pope Paul VI, putting the pontiff who served for much of the
1960s and ’70s one step closer to possible sainthood.
The Vatican’s
Medical Commission of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints said the
healing of an unborn child is medically “unexplainable,” and could serve as the
miracle that allows Paul VI to be beatified.
The sainthood cause
for Paul VI, who reigned 1963 to 1978, was opened in 1993, allowing him to be
called a “Servant of God.” Last year, Pope Benedict XVI moved the process along
in declaring that Paul “lived a life of heroic virtue,” allowing him to be
called “Venerable.”
Paul was a pivotal
pope for the Roman Catholic Church, even as he is sometimes overshadowed by the
charismatic papacies of his predecessor, John XXIII, and John Paul II, who are
both scheduled to be declared saints next year. John XXIII and Paul VI were
seen as so important that the man who succeeded Paul, John Paul I, took both
names as his own; he died a month after his election.
Paul oversaw the
conclusion and implementation of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965), which
among other things transformed relations with other Christians and Jews and
changed the Mass from Latin to local languages. His 1968 encyclical “Humanae
Vitae” banned artificial birth control, and he was also the first pope to visit
Jerusalem.
In the early 1990s,
a pregnant woman was told her fetus had serious problems that usually result in
brain damage. Doctors advised her to abort the fetus, but the woman refused,
praying for Paul’s intercession because of “Humanae Vitae.”
The child was born
without any defects, though doctors waited to judge the veracity of the healing
until the child reached puberty and could have a more thorough health
examination.
The healing is not
considered a certified miracle until it is approved by a team of theologians
and Pope Francis. But the most difficult step in this process is usually the
recognition from the medical commission.
In 2012, the Rev.
Antonio Marazzo, a member of the commission, told Vatican Radio the events
where “truly extraordinary and supernatural that occurred thanks to the
intercession of Paul VI.” Last month, at a conference on Paul’s 1964 visit to
the Holy Land, Cardinal Angelo Scola of Milan said Paul’s beatification should
be “relatively imminent.”
Once approved as a
miracle — likely to come in the next several months, according to Vatican
sources — Paul can be beatified, allowing him to be called “Blessed.” A second
post-beatification miracle would be needed for canonization.

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