The Sentinel-Record

Admirers still urging sainthood for chaplain who was killed on 9/11

- DAVID CRARY Associated Press religion coverage receives support from the Lilly Endowment through The Conversati­on U.S. The AP is solely responsibl­e for this content.

NEW YORK — Among the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 9/11 terror attacks, Mychal Judge, a Catholic chaplain with New York’s fire department, left a uniquely complex legacy that continues to evolve 20 years after his death.

Some of his many admirers point to Judge — a gay man who devoted himself to serving vulnerable population­s — as a reason for the U.S. Catholic Church to be more welcoming to LGBTQ people.

And some argue passionate­ly that Judge should be considered for sainthood, with a new initiative to be launched in the coming days. Though Judge’s religious order has not embraced that cause, a Rome-based priest who helps the Vatican investigat­e possible candidates for canonizati­on is urging Judge’s supporters not to give up the effort.

Judge died two decades ago after hurrying with firefighte­r colleagues to the burning World Trade Center. As he prayed in the north tower’s lobby for the rescuers and victims, the 68-year-old priest was crushed by debris from the falling south tower.

“Mychal Judge shows us that you can be gay and holy,” said the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest who advocates for greater LGBTQ inclusion in the church.

“Father Judge’s selflessne­ss is a reminder of the sanctity that the church often overlooks in LGBTQ people,” Martin said via email. “Heaven is filled with LGBTQ people.”

The son of Irish immigrants, Judge grew up in Brooklyn and decided while still in his teens to join the Franciscan religious order. He was ordained as a priest in 1961, battled alcoholism with the help of Alcoholics Anonymous and developed a passion for ministerin­g to marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

After serving in localities across the Northeast, Judge became a pastor at St. Francis of Assisi Church in New York City in 1986. At a peak in the AIDS crisis in 1989, he founded one of the first Catholic HIV/AIDS ministries, recruiting a handful of volunteers to visit hospitaliz­ed patients and their families.

In 1992 he became a chaplain with the city’s fire department, a post he held until his death.

During those decades, only a few friends knew Judge was gay. It became more widely known after his death, when some in his inner circle wrote about it and passages from his diaries were disclosed. Yet according to friends and biographer­s, he honored his vow of celibacy.

Many of Judge’s admirers took heart in 2017 when Pope Francis proclaimed a new pathway to sainthood, recognizin­g those who sacrifice their lives for others.

After that announceme­nt, the Rev. Luis Escalante, who has investigat­ed possible sainthood cases for the Vatican’s Congregati­on for Causes of Saints, began receiving testimonie­s supporting Judge’s canonizati­on.

Those accounts depicted Judge as “the best icon” of humanity, Escalante told The Associated Press via email this week. But there was a hitch: The Franciscan­s — who would be expected to lead a sainthood campaign on behalf of someone from the order — declined to do so for Judge.

“We are very proud of our brother’s legacy and we have shared his story with many people,” the Rev. Kevin Mullen, leader of the Franciscan­s’ New York-based Holy Name Province, told AP via email, “We leave it to our brothers in the generation­s to come to inquire about sainthood.”

Escalante hopes supporters persevere and form a viable organizati­on that could pursue sainthood in the coming years. Among the tasks: building a case that a miracle occurred through prayers to Judge.

“The negative decision of the Friars cannot be seen as a preclusion to going ahead with Fr. Judge’s cause,” Escalante wrote. “It’s just a challenge to American people.”

Francis Debernardo, leader of the LGBTQ Catholic advocacy group New Ways Ministry, was among those providing Escalante with favorable testimonie­s about Judge.

Debernardo told AP he’ll soon announce plans to form an associatio­n promoting Judge’s sainthood, ideally with help from firefighte­rs, LGBTQ people and other communitie­s he ministered to.

“It would be a testimony to Fr. Judge’s legacy if these diverse sectors of society came together to work for the canonizati­on of a man that they all already know is a saint,” Debernardo said via email.

Sal Sapienza, now a Protestant minister in Michigan, was a 20-something wavering Catholic in New York in 1989 when he saw an ad in a gay publicatio­n seeking volunteers to do AIDS/HIV outreach. Answering the ad, Sapienza met Judge at St. Francis of Assisi.

Throughout their collaborat­ion, Sapienza marveled at Judge’s faith and generous spirit.

“What is a saint?” Sapienza asked. “Part of it is they inspire us to want to rise higher along our spiritual path, to be the best versions of what God wanted us to be. Mychal was the best example of that.”

Particular­ly striking, Sapienza said, was how Judge interacted lovingly with others, whether they were homeless people or wealthy celebritie­s.

“The macho group of fire department guys, they kind of claimed him for their own,” Sapienza said. “The Catholic gay community also claimed him, thinking, ‘Father Mychal is our guy,’ because he was really able to connect with everybody.”

Sapienza had joined the Marist Brothers, a Catholic order, and took a pledge of celibacy after leading an active gay social life. But within a few years, he left the church, no longer able to reconcile his faith with a disapprovi­ng view of homosexual relations as “intrinsica­lly disordered.”

He remains grateful to Judge for supporting that decision.

To whatever extent he was saintly, Judge is remembered for earthly traits — a vibrant sense of humor, a willingnes­s to critique the church hierarchy. According to Sapienza’s biography of Judge, the priest awoke one morning early in his career after a night of heavy drinking to discover he’d acquired a shamrock tattoo on his buttocks.

In 1974, long before settling in New York, Judge was pastor of St. Joseph Church in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

John Barone, then a youthful truck driver and now the 68-year-old owner of an engineerin­g firm, was impressed by Judge’s caring ministry to his family when his mother-in-law became seriously ill. Sometimes in church, Barone recalled, Judge would become so impassione­d that he’d descend from the pulpit and preach from the aisle.

“He was genuine — you knew he truly walked in Christ’s shoes,” Barone said. “If someone was an underdog, he was their champion.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Father Mychal Judge’s helmet is placed on his coffin on Sept. 15, 2001, as representa­tives of various fire brigades in New Jersey form an honor guard at the Franciscan Fathers burial site in Totawa, N.J. Judge, 68, died as he was administer­ing last rites to a firefighte­r mortally injured in the attack on the World Trade Center.
The Associated Press Father Mychal Judge’s helmet is placed on his coffin on Sept. 15, 2001, as representa­tives of various fire brigades in New Jersey form an honor guard at the Franciscan Fathers burial site in Totawa, N.J. Judge, 68, died as he was administer­ing last rites to a firefighte­r mortally injured in the attack on the World Trade Center.

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