Vatican again OKs Archbishop Fulton Sheen
beatification after 2019 ceremony derailed at last minute
ROME
— The Vatican has given the green light, again, to beatify Archbishop Fulton
Sheen, the popular U.S. radio and TV preacher whose path to sainthood was
derailed first by a lengthy court battle over his remains and then by concerns
about how he handled clergy sexual misconduct cases.
After
a rare six-year delay to investigate the concerns, Sheen's beatification can
now take place in Peoria, Ill., as originally planned, the Peoria diocese
announced Monday.
No
new date for the ceremony, the last major step before possible sainthood, was
immediately announced. But the Vatican's approval now sets the stage for the
Illinois-born Sheen to be beatified during the pontificate of the Illinois-born
Pope Leo XIV.
“The
Holy See has informed me that the cause for the Venerable Servant of God
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen can proceed to beatification," Peoria Bishop
Louis Tylka said in a written and video statement on the websites of the
diocese and the Sheen foundation. “We are working with the Dicastery of the
Causes of Saints at the Vatican to determine the details for the upcoming
beatification.”
Sheen
was an enormously effective evangelizer in the 20th century U.S. church, who in
some ways pioneered televangelism with his 1950s television series, “Life is
Worth Living.” According to Catholic University of America, where he studied
and taught before he was made a bishop, Sheen won an Emmy Award, was featured
on the cover of Time Magazine "and became one of the most influential
Catholics of the 20th century.”
Pope
Francis had confirmed a miracle attributed to Sheen’s intercession on July 6,
2019 and had set his beatification for Dec. 21 that year in Peoria. But with
less than three weeks’ notice, the Vatican postponed the ceremony indefinitely.
It
acted after the diocese of Rochester, N.Y., where Sheen served as bishop from
1966-1969, asked for further investigation into Sheen’s tenure and “his role in
priests’ assignments.”
The
concerns focused on Sheen’s handling of two cases of priests accused of sexual
misconduct. Sheen was never accused of abuse himself. A top canonical affairs
official from Peoria, Monsignor James Kruse, said in 2019 that an investigation
had cleared Sheen of any wrongdoing. Kruse later complained that the Rochester
diocese was “sabotaging” the cause, writing a lengthy essay that had been
posted on the official Sheen beatification site but later taken down.
Peoria
Bishop Tylka's statement made no reference to the concerns that prompted the
delay in 2019.
The
2019 investigation was the latest obstacle to hinder Sheen’s cause, coming
after an expensive, years-long legal battle between Sheen’s relatives in Peoria
and the New York City archdiocese over his final resting place.
Sheen,
who died in 1979, was interred under the altar of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in
New York. His remains were returned to Peoria in 2019 after a court ruled
Sheen’s niece could bury him there.
Among
those celebrating the Vatican's new green light to beatify Sheen was The
Pontifical Missions Societies in the U.S., the Vatican's main missionary
fundraising office in the U.S., which Sheen headed from 1950-1966. Sheen left
most of his patrimony, including writings and audio recordings, to the
organization, which raises money for the Catholic Church in Africa, Asia, Latin
America and other mission areas.
"It
is profoundly moving that, in God’s providence, the first U.S.–born pope is
able to advance the cause of his fellow Illinois native, the most iconic
evangelizer ever produced by the American Church,” Monsignor Roger Landry,
national director of the office, said in a statement.

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