The Oklahoman

Miracle needed

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Rother was 46 when he was killed July 28, 1981, by unknown assailants in Guatemala. An Okarche native, Rother was an Archdioces­e of Oklahoma City priest serving as pastor of the Santiago Atitlan parish in Guatemala at the time of his death.

The Most Rev. Paul S. Coakley, Oklahoma City archbishop, said the determinat­ion of Rother’s martyrdom and beatificat­ion were critical steps toward his canonizati­on as a saint.

Now, Coakley said, at least one authentica­ted miracle attributed to Rother’s intercessi­on is required for him to be declared a saint.

The archbishop said the miracle must have occurred after Dec. 1, 2016, the date Pope

Francis signed a decree clearing the way for Rother’s beatificat­ion.

“He needs a miracle,” Coakley told members of the media gathered for the priest’s Sept. 23 beatificat­ion ceremony at the Cox Convention Center.

This same miracle mandate was required of other individual­s canonized in recent years, including those with considerab­ly

higher profiles than Rother, like St. Mother Teresa (1910-1997) and St. Pope John Paul II (1920-2005). Several other people canonized recently have ties to the U.S., including St. Kateri Tekakwitha (1656-1680), a Mohawk Indian who became a saint in 2012, and Junipero Serra (1713-1784), a Franciscan friar who was canonized in 2015 by Pope Francis during the pope’s first visit to the U.S.

According to a CNN report, the approved miracle for Mother Teresa’s canonizati­on involved Monica Besra, a 30-year-old Kolkata woman who said praying to the nun cured a stomach tumor. CNN reported that a Vatican committee said in 2002 that it could find no “scientific explanatio­n” for the woman’s recovery.

The miracle that propelled Pope John Paul II to sainthood involved Costa Rican Floribeth Mora Diaz, whose recovery from an inoperable brain aneurysm was deemed miraculous by her neurosurge­on and, ultimately, the Vatican in 2013.

It’s worth noting that both Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul II, and any other individual who is not recognized by the Church as a martyr, has to have two miracles attributed to their intercessi­on before they may be declared a

saint.

Rother is only required to have one miracle attributed to his intercessi­on because the Church declared him a martyr. Coakley has said medical miracles have been more likely in modern times because they are more easily verified by medical science and the Church.

He said the archdioces­e has already received some informatio­n about miraculous claims attributed to Rother’s intercessi­on. The clergy leaders said these matters will be checked out to see if they are deemed worthy of further scrutiny by the Vatican.

‘I believe’

McGougan, daughter of Leo and Kay Rother, is Stanley Rother’s cousin. She said her grandfathe­r and the priest’s grandfathe­r were brothers.

She said many people — not just Rothers — believe in miracles, particular­ly

people in her Okarche hometown where Stanley Rother also was born.

It may help that many of them know about the “medical miracle” that occurred in their midst, McGougan said.

“It has brought so many people closer to God. It has brought me closer to God,” she said.

During a recent brief interview at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Okarche, McGougan’s mother Kay Rother talked about the July 1992 day that changed the family’s lives forever.

She said she got a call telling her that McGougan had suddenly fallen ill at her home and had been taken to a nearby hospital. Kay Rother said the situation was so dire by the time she got to the hospital that medical personnel had pronounced her daughter brain dead, placed her on life support and asked about the family donating her organs.

Instead of doing that, Kay Rother had her daughter taken to St. Anthony Hospital where doctors performed emergency brain surgery. McGougan had suffered a massive hemorrhagi­c stroke. However, an internist at St. Anthony had found brain activity and doctors agreed to do surgery.

The doctors determined that McGougan suffered from arterioven­ous malformati­on, known as AVM. McGougan said her stroke was caused by an AVM rupture in the brainstem.

Her mother remembers all the details.

She said the Rev. Marvin Leven, the family’s pastor at Holy Trinity at that time, told the family that he had gone to the Okarche cemetery where his good friend and fellow priest Stanley Rother was buried. Leven told the family not to worry because he had asked

Rother to intercede on McGougan’s behalf.

The priest seemed unfazed by the diagnosis although even after surgery, doctors were skeptical about McGougan’s survival. Kay Rother said it was difficult to be optimistic but the family continued to hope for a miracle.

“It was a Friday when the doctor made his rounds at the hospital and he said he didn’t expect her to be there that Monday,” she said. “He said there was a 1 percent change of her making it.”

The miracle occurred three days after surgery.

McGougan opened her eyes and her mother asked her to blink twice if she recognized her and watched in amazement as her daughter’s eyelids fluttered twice in response.

During a recent interview, McGougan said she remembers being paralyzed except for her eyes and on a respirator. She was in different stages of a coma over the next several days but she was alive.

McGougan said she underwent much physical therapy and dealt with other illnesses, including pneumonia, but she eventually overcame all of them to walk and talk again and to lead a normal life.

She said she enjoyed a special friendship with Stanley Rother’s father Franz Rother after it became known that her miraculous recovery was attributed to his son’s intercessi­on. Franz Rother gave her a book of his son’s letters and always had a word of encouragem­ent and a smile for her.

McGougan said she was 12 years old when Stanley Rother died and she didn’t understand all the matters related to his ministry in Guatemala and his death.

However, that changed after her recovery, which was chronicled in a PBS documentar­y.

She said getting the opportunit­y to attend his beatificat­ion was amazing. “I think what an honor to know about this man and to be saved by him and to be related to him,” McGougan said.

She said she’s sure that there are many people of faith who believe in miracles from the divine.

“We just have faith. It’s not just a Catholic thing. It’s about faith. We believe in miracles,” McGougan said.

“I believe.”

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