VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis will declare Blessed John Henry
Newman, the 19th-century British cardinal, a saint Oct. 13.
The British theologian will be canonized during a Mass at the
Vatican along with a Swiss laywoman, an Indian nun, an Italian nun and a nun
known as the "Mother Teresa of Brazil."
The date for the canonization Mass was announced July 1 during an
"ordinary public consistory," a meeting of the pope, cardinals and
promoters of sainthood causes that formally ends the sainthood process.
Born in London in 1801, John Henry Newman was ordained an
Anglican priest in 1825. He later founded the Oxford Movement, which emphasized
the Catholic roots of Anglicanism.
After a series of clashes with Anglican bishops made him a
virtual outcast from the Church of England, he joined the Catholic Church at
the age of 44 and was ordained a Catholic priest in 1846. Pope Leo XIII made
him a cardinal in 1879 while respecting his wishes not to be ordained a bishop.
A theologian and poet, he died in 1890 and his sainthood cause
was opened in 1958. Pope Benedict XVI beatified him in Birmingham, England, in
2010.
The others who will be declared saints are:
— Blessed Dulce Lopes Pontes, who was a member of the Missionary
Sisters of the Immaculate Conception.
Born in 1914, she was known to Brazilian Catholics as Sister
Dulce, the mother of the poor. She founded the first Catholic workers'
organization in the state of Bahia, started a health clinic for poor workers
and opened a school for working families. She created a hospital, an orphanage
and care centers for the elderly and disabled.
She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by then-President
Jose Sarney in 1988. St. John Paul II, who called her work "an example for
humanity,'' met her in 1980 during his first trip to Brazil and, returning in
1991, he visited her in the hospital. She died in 1992 at the age of 77 with
tens of thousands attending her funeral and even more gathering for her
beatification in 2011.
— Blessed Marguerite Bays, a laywoman from Switzerland known for
her spirituality in the face of great physical suffering and for bearing the
stigmata of Christ. She died in 1879.
— Blessed Josephine Vannini, co-founder the Daughters of St.
Camillus, who served the sick and elderly. She died in 1911.
— Blessed Mariam Thresia Chiramel Mankidiyan, the Indian founder
of the Sisters of the Holy Family, who died in 1926.