Belfast Telegraph

London-born cardinal is elevated to sainthood by Pope Francis

- BY TONY JONES

SAINT John Henry Newman was hailed as a priest, a poet and a thinker who had a “profound” impact on the world as he was canonised by Pope Francis.

In front of tens of thousands of pilgrims at the Vatican’s St Peter’s Square, the Pontiff elevated the English theologian to sainthood.

The Prince of Wales, who represente­d the UK at the ceremony, praised the legacy of the cardinal, saying in a speech after the ceremony: “So today is a cause for celebratio­n for us all — Anglicans, Catholics and simple admirers of Newman.

“He was a priest, a poet and a thinker ahead of his time.

“Above all, perhaps he was a fearless defender of truth, whose impact on the world was as profound as it is enduring.”

London-born Cardinal Newman, who died in England in 1890 aged 89, had been hailed by former pope Benedict XVI as a model for ecumenism.

An Anglican priest, he shocked Victorian society when he renounced an illustriou­s academic career at Oxford University to convert to Catholicis­m in 1845, convinced that the truth he sought could no longer be found in the Church of England.

The saint went on to found the Oratory at Birmingham in 1848.

One of his greatest legacies was helping to change attitudes towards the Catholic Church, raising its standing in British society.

Melissa Villalobos, who was the subject of the second miracle attributed to Cardinal Newman — which confirmed his status as a saint — was in the congregati­on and described her journey to this point as destiny.

She recovered from a torn placenta in 2013, which threatened her unborn child’s life and her own, after praying to the revered priest for help.

The mother-of-seven said as she held the hand of her fiveyear-old daughter saved by divine interventi­on: “It’s been such a joyous day for me to see Newman become a saint.

“It’s a real blessing that I can see it, and be a part of it.”

 ??  ?? Cardinal John Henry Newman
Cardinal John Henry Newman

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