Pope Francis has approved a fourth pathway to possible sainthood — giving one’s life in a heroic act of loving service to others.
In a new apostolic letter, the Pope approved new norms allowing for candidates to be considered for sainthood because of the heroic way they freely risked their lives and died prematurely because of “an extreme act of charity.”
The document, given “motu proprio” (on his own initiative) went into effect the same day of its publication on July 11, with the title “Maiorem hac dilectionem,” which comes from the Gospel according to St John (15:13): “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”
Archbishop Marcello Bartolucci, secretary of the Vatican Congregation for Saints’ Causes, said the addition is meant “to promote heroic Christian testimony, [that has been] up to now without a specific process, precisely because it did not completely fit within the case of martyrdom or heroic virtues.”
For centuries, consideration for the sainthood process required that a Servant of God heroically lived a life of Christian virtues or had been martyred for the faith. The third, less common way, is called an equivalent or equipollent canonization: when there is evidence of strong devotion among the faithful to a holy man or woman, the Pope can waive a lengthy formal canonical investigation and can authorize their veneration as saints.
While these three roads to sainthood remain unchanged, they were not adequate “for interpreting all possible cases” of holiness, the archbishop wrote in the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, on July 11. According to the apostolic letter, any causes for beatification according to the new pathway of “offering of life” would have to meet the following criteria:
— Free and willing offer of one’s life and a heroic acceptance, out of love, of a certain and early death; the heroic act of charity and the premature death are connected.
— Evidence of having lived out the Christian virtues — at least in an ordinary, and not necessarily heroic, way — before having offered one’s life to others and until one’s death.
— Evidence of a reputation for holiness, at least after death.
— A miracle attributed to the candidate’s intercession is needed for beatification.
