Blessed Carlo Acutis is set to become the first millennial saint. This
isn’t the first time the Catholic Church has canonized children.
The
body of Carlo Acutis
(THE CONVERSATION) On Oct. 10, 2020,
a young Italian named Carlo Acutis was beatified at
a special Mass in the city of Assisi, putting the late teenager just one step
away from sainthood. It allows Catholics to venerate him as “Blessed Carlo
Acutis.”
Acutis died of leukemia in 2006, at the
age of 15. Like other boys his age, he was avidly interested in computers,
video games and the internet. He was also a devout Catholic who went to Mass
daily and persuaded his mother as well to be a regular attendee. One of his pet
projects was designing a webpage listing miracles across the globe associated
with the bread and wine consecrated at Mass, believed by Catholics to be the
body and blood of Christ.
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After his death, townspeople began to attribute miracles to his
intercession, including the birth of twins to his own mother four
years after his death. His case was submitted to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, one of
the offices that make up the papal administrative structure – the Curia – of
the Catholic Church. It initiated the process of his official canonization in
the Roman Catholic Church.
To non-Catholics, bestowing potential
sainthood on one who died so young might seem puzzling. As a scholar of medieval
liturgy and culture, I know that there has been a long history of
including children among the saints approved for official recognition and
veneration.
Who becomes a saint
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For the first thousand years of
Western Christian history, there was no formal process in Rome for declaring
deceased persons as saints. In antiquity, Christians who became martyrs or
imprisoned as confessors during persecutions were venerated after their deaths because
of the strength of their beliefs. They were considered more perfect Christians
because they chose to die rather than give up their faith.
Because of this, the martyrs were
believed to be closely united with Christ in heaven. Individuals would pray at
their tombs, asking the martyrs to intercede with Christ for help with
spiritual or material problems, like healing from an illness.
Miracles were attributed to their
intervention, since Christians believed that the tombs
of the martyrs were holy places where they could access the
healing power of God’s grace.
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After Christianity spread throughout
Europe, other Christians who led lives of unusual holiness were also venerated
in the same way. These included bishops and priests, monks and nuns and other
laypeople of exceptional virtue.
All of these saints were venerated
locally, with the approval of the local bishop. However, the first saint to
be officially canonized by a pope – Pope
John XV – was St. Ulrich of Augsburg. Ulrich had served as the bishop of
Augsburg for almost 50 years, building churches, revitalizing the clergy, and
helping the residents resist a siege by invaders.
His canonization took place in A.D.
993 after the local bishop requested that the pope make the declaration.
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From that time on popes would preside
over the canonization process, and a set procedure for investigating potential
candidates was established as part of the papal bureaucracy in Rome. After
the Second Vatican Council, held from 1962 to
1965, called for a new vision of the church’s role in the world of the 20th
century, the process was updated.
Today, proposed candidates are given
the title “Servant of God.” If they were martyred or killed “in hatred of the
faith,” they move to the next-to-last stage – beatification – and receive the
title “Blessed.” Non-martyrs, if shown to have lived lives of “heroic virtue,”
are given the title “Venerable Servant of God.”
Proceeding to beatification requires
clear evidence of a miracle, often a healing, that is understood to have
resulted from a direct prayer to the Servant of God asking for help. Claims of
healing miracles are closely examined by a panel of medical
experts. A second miracle is required for canonization.
Why child saints?
Over the centuries, several children
have been proclaimed “Blessed” or “Saint.”
One group of child saints was
venerated from late antiquity onward because of their mention in the
gospels: the Holy Innocents. In the Gospel of Matthew, King Herod, threatened by
rumors of the birth of a new king, sends soldiers to Bethlehem to kill all male
infants and toddlers. These children became known as the Holy Innocents.
Because of their connection with the
story of the birth of Jesus, sometime in the fifth century the commemoration of
the Holy Innocents was set during Christmas week, Dec. 28 in the Western
Church. This day is observed by all Catholics even today.
Sometimes child saints have been
canonized as part of a larger group of martyrs. For example, among those
martyred in China for their Christian faith are 120 Chinese Catholics killed between 1648 and 1930.
Members were recognized for their unswerving dedication to the Catholic faith
during several periods of intense persecution.
They were canonized by Pope St. John Paul II in 2000. In his homily on that day, the pope made
special mention of the heroic deaths of two of them: 14-year-old Anna Wang and 18-year-old Chi Zhuzi, both of whom died in 1900.
Other child saints were canonized as
individuals. One modern example is Maria Goretti, an Italian peasant girl
murdered in 1902. Only 11 years old, she was alone at the home her impoverished
family shared with another family when she was attacked by the young adult son
of that family.
He attempted to rape her and stabbed
her when she fought him off. Maria died the next day in a hospital after
stating that she forgave her attacker and prayed that God might forgive him,
too.
News of this spread quickly across
Italy, and stories of miracles followed soon after. Maria was canonized in 1950 and quickly
became a popular patron saint for young girls.
A few child saints were deemed to
have demonstrated heroic virtue in other ways. In 1917, three peasant children
from the town of Fatima in Portugal claimed to have received visions of the
Blessed Virgin Mary. News of this spread widely, and the location became a
popular pilgrimage site. The oldest child, Lucia, became a nun and lived into
her 90s; her cause for sainthood is still in process.
However, her two cousins, Francisco
and Jacinta Marto, died young of complications from the Spanish flu: Francisco
in 1918 at the age of 10, and Jacinta in 1919, age 9. The two were beatified in 2000 by Pope St. John Paul II and canonized by Pope Francis in 2017.
They were the first child
saints who were not martyrs. It was their “heroism”
and “life of prayer” that was considered to be holy. There were other child
saints too who were canonized for reasons other than being martyrs,
yet led lives considered exemplary.
But there were also those who were
dropped from the official list of saints because of details that were later
revealed. One such case was of a 2-year-old Christian boy Simon from Trent, Italy,
whose body was found in the cellar of a Jewish family in 1475. Simon’s body was
on display and miracles were attributed to him. It was 300 years later that the
Jews of Trent were cleared of murder charges. In 1965 his name was removed from
the Calendar of Saints by Pope Paul VI.
Nonetheless, this long history shows
that sanctity is not limited to adults who lived in the distant past. In the
eyes of the Catholic Church, an ordinary teenager in the 21st century too can
be worthy of veneration.
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