Parents St Thérèse of Lisieux to be beatified.
Pope Benedict XVI recognized Thursday a miracle attributable to the intercession of Louis and Marie-Zélie Martin, the parents of St Thérèse of Lisieux. It involved the healing of Pietro Schiliro of Monza, Italy. This paves the way for their beatification.
The prefect of the Congregation for Saints' Causes is expected to announce the date for their beatificatifation at celebrations marking their 150th wedding anniversary.
According to Bishop Pierre Pican of Bayeux-Lisieux and other Church leaders in France, Cardinal José Saraiva Martins will attend the anniversary celebrations set for July 12-13 in Lisieux and Alencon (where the Martins married on July 12, 1858).
Read full story at http://www.zenit.org/article-23112?l=english
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They will be the second couple to be beatified in modern times:
Pope beatifies married couple
October 22, 2001 Posted: 9:59 AM EDT (1359 GMT)
VATICAN CITY -- The Roman Catholic church has beatified its first married couple in 500 years for having led "ordinary lives in an extraordinary way."
Pope John Paul II carried out the ceremony in Rome's St Peter's Basilica as part of two days of "Celebration of the Family."
Italians Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi were promoted to the ranks of the "blessed" -- one formal step from sainthood -- after being deemed as a model of "Christian spirituality, (who) lived heroically through marriage and family."
The pontiff said: "Dear families, today we have a singular confirmation that the path to holiness, followed together as a couple, is possible, is beautiful, is extraordinarily fruitful and is fundamental for the good of
the family, of the church and of society."
He gave special words of encouragement for those couples who experience "the drama of separation," illness or the death of a child.
The only previous married couple to have been given such status were the martyrs Aquila and Prisca, who became saints in the very early days of Christianity.
The Beltrame Quattrocchis had four children, three of whom became religious. One of their two daughters became a nun and both sons were ordained priests -- they helped the pontiff celebrate Mass at Sunday's ceremony. The fourth child attended the service.
Born in the 1880s, the couple married in 1905 and spent their entire lives in Rome.
Newspapers quoted the sons as saying the couple decided to sleep in separate beds after 20 years of marriage, living like brother and sister for another 26 years.
Luigi, who died in 1951, was a lawyer who worked for the government and banks and who was active in several Catholic groups.
His wife, who died 14 years later, was a teacher and writer. She comforted soldiers during World War I and later studied nursing and accompanied invalids travelling to shrines in such places as Lourdes, France.
"Ours was a normal family that sought to live its relationships on a plane of high spirituality, " Don Tarcisio Beltrame Quattrocchi, one of the couple's sons, said in a recent interview.
The couple initially supported dictator Benito Mussolini's regime, but later rejected fascism and opened their home to resistance fighters, sometimes lending their priest sons' vestments to help partisans escape controls by Nazi occupiers.
Detailed records of beatifications only began to be kept five centuries' ago.
Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi became the 1,273rd and the 1,274th Catholics to be beatified by the pontiff since his tenure began 23 years ago.
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Not so well known is that the wife of San Isidro Labrador is also a saint, Santa María de la Cabeza. You can read more about her at http://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/ Maria_Torribia . They weren't beatified or canonized together, however.
That is good news for us who
That is good news for us who have answered the vocation for marriage. I personally thought before that the only way to be holy was to offer one's self completely to the Lord as a religious sister or if you are a man -- be ordained as His priest. That's why I had quite a struggle discerning which vocation I was called to.
Yet, at the end, I realized, it would take a lot out of me to be married -- it would force me to continually go beyond myself to serve another... a path very close to what sainthood is. I opted then to answer the call to marriage.
Such news as you have shared gives me hope. I can still become a saint together with my husband! with god's grace, of course. I think I shall start praying to this couple for help in my married life....