Pope canonizes first married couple in modern times

October 18, 2015 05:14 pm | Updated 05:17 pm IST - Vatican City

A tapestry showing Louis and Zelie Martin, parents of St. Therese of Lisieux, hangs from a balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, on Sunday.

A tapestry showing Louis and Zelie Martin, parents of St. Therese of Lisieux, hangs from a balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, on Sunday.

Pope Francis canonized the Catholic Church’s first married couple in modern times on Sunday, declaring the parents of the beloved St. Therese of Lisieux saints in their own right.

Pope Francis told followers gathered in St. Peter’s Square that the couple, Louis and Zelie Martin, “practiced Christian service in the family, creating day by day an environment of faith and love which nurtured the vocations of their daughters.”

Pope Francis is particularly devoted to the 19th century French Carmelite nun, fondly known as “The Little Flower,” who died at the age of 24 in 1897 and was later honoured with the title doctor of the church.

Pope Francis has had a copy of Therese’s “Story of a Soul” on his bookshelf since his days as a novice. As archbishop of Buenos Aires, he had her image on his desk. And he has said that whenever he has a problem, he directs his payers to Santa Teresita, as she is known in Spanish, and often a white rose appears to him as a sign that she has heard his prayers.

“It’s the first time a couple have been canonized as a couple, and this is a beautiful sign for Christian families, who often are left without any support and have to go against the grain, especially in the West, to live and educate their children in the truth of creation and with that love that God has given us in Christ,” said the Rev. Romano Gambalunga, the postulator who followed the saint-making case through.

It is not insignificant that both miracles required for the canonization concerned the inexplicable cures of newborns born with what doctors determined to be life-ending ailments.

When the Martins were beatified in 2008, the “miracle” concerned little Pietro Shiliro, born in the Italian city Monza in 2002 with a congenital lung deformation that doctors said he could not survive. The priest who was called to baptize him encouraged his parents to pray to the Martin’s intercession. After a month in the ICU, during which he came close to death, he was released and is now a healthy teenager.

The second miracle needed for the Martin’s canonization concerned little Carmen, born at 28 weeks on Oct. 15, 2008 in Valencia, Spain after a difficult pregnancy. Two days later, she suffered a cerebral haemorrhage that caused near-fatal blood poisoning. Her parents went to the Carmelite nuns seeking guidance; they suggested they pray to the intercession of the Martins, who had just been beatified on Oct. 17, 2008 in Lisieux.

After three months in the hospital, Carmen was released, cured, on Jan. 2, 2009 the 135th anniversary of the birth of the Martin’s youngest daughter, Therese.

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