New York saints hailed as good news for beleaguered Catholics
Upstate New York Catholics on Monday cheered the canonization of two women from the region as welcome good news for a church that has been more used recently to making headlines about sex scandals and controversies over doctrine.
The Vatican declared the 17th century convert Kateri Tekakwitha and 19th century health pioneer Marianne Cope saints on Sunday.
“It’s very rare to have two people canonized from the same state,” said Sister Fran Ganglosf, a member of Cope’s congregation at the Sisters of St. Francis in Western New York state.
Tekakwitha, the first Native American to be canonized, was born in 1656 to a Mohawk father and an Algonquin mother in what is now New York state. Cope was the daughter of German immigrants who settled in Utica, New York, in 1839.
In naming the saints on Sunday, the Catholic church drew a spotlight that has focused more often recently on the church’s opposition to same sex marriage, birth control and litigation tied to child sex abuse allegations against priests.
“Often times the goodness of the church and the goodness of the people in the church is overlooked because it won’t make sensational news,” said Sister Lorraine Wesolowski, director of communications for St. Francis.
“I think this gives the church an opportunity to say, ‘we do have good news,’” Wesolowski said. [more]
SOURCE






0 Comments
You can be the first one to leave a comment.