New York Post

IT TAKES A MIRACLE (OR TWO)

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THE movement to have Dorothy Day canonized started shortly after the centennial of her birthday, Nov. 8, 1997, by John Cardinal O’Connor. He began the necessary process of gathering testimonia­ls of people who were witness to her life of prayer and faith. According to Joseph Zwilling, director of communicat­ions for the New York Archdioces­e, the late O’Connor (below) formally requested that the Congregati­on for the Causes of Saints in Rome consider canonizati­on in 2000. The congregati­on officially named Day a Servant of God, and a guild to support her cause was establishe­d in 2005. Several steps remain before Day can be declared a saint, though. If Day is found to have lived a life of “heroic virtue,” she will be named Venerable. The most important is proving that she performed miracles. “Canonizati­on is the infallible declaratio­n by the church that the person in question is in heaven,” says Zwilling. Proof of one miracle elevates a candidate to beatified or Blessed status. Proof of two miracles elevates a candidate to canonizati­on status. How do you determine a miracle has occurred? “A person will pray for the intercessi­on of an individual we believe to have interceded with God, and that is almost always some kind of miraculous healing,” Zwilling says. “There’s a rigorous medical review to see if there is [any] scientific or natural explanatio­n for why soand-so is healed. “If a person has prostate cancer a and they unde undergo chemo and ra radiation, t that wouldn’t cou count, because it’s sci scientific. “If they have determined that a tumor is inoperaino­pe ble and suds denly that situation reverses, thatt can be considcons­id ered to be a miramir cle.”cle

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