Upcoming Events View All
20
Vocation Day: Open Wide Your Heart

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 7:30 AM - 4:00 PM

20
Ave Maria Workshop

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM

20
Bonus Day at St. Mark Book Fair

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 9:00 AM

28
KC Ladies Auxiliary Council 7198 BUNCO BASH

Sunday, 04/28/2024 at 1:00 PM

28
Organ concert with David Sinden

Sunday, 04/28/2024 at 3:00 PM

4
La Festa

Saturday, 05/04/2024 at 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM

5
May procession

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 1:00 PM

5
International Bereaved Mothers' Gathering

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

8
Made for More Speaker Series

Wednesday, 05/08/2024 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Sainthood cause for Augustust Tolton advances

Next step would be for pope to recognize Tolton’s ‘heroic virtues’ and proclaim him ‘venerable’

Fr. Tolton
CHICAGO — The canonization cause for Father Augustus Tolton has advanced, and is now one step away from going to Pope Francis for the priest to be declared “venerable.”

On Feb. 5, a nine-member Vatican theological commission unanimously voted that Father Tolton’s cause be moved forward to the cardinals and archbishops in the Congregation for Saints’ Causes for a final vote to send a decree of the priest’s “heroic virtues” to Pope Francis for his approval.

Upon the promulgation of that decree, Father Tolton would receive the title “venerable,” which indicates he lived the theological virtues of faith, hope and charity and the cardinal virtues of prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance at a heroic level.

The next steps would be beatification and canonization. In general, one miracle attributed to the sainthood candidate’s intercession is needed for beatification, and a second such miracle is needed for canonization.

Father Tolton, the first African-American to be ordained a Catholic priest for the United States, was born into slavery, ordained in 1886 in Rome because no U.S. seminary would take him and died serving in Chicago in 1897.

If canonized, Father Tolton would be the nation’s first African-American saint.

“Father Tolton’s story represents the long and rich history of African-American Catholics, who have lived through troubling chapters and setbacks in our American history,” said Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Joseph N. Perry, archdiocesan postulator for the cause.

“Lessons from his early life as a slave and the prejudice he endured in becoming a priest still apply today with our current problems of racial and social injustices and inequities that divide neighborhoods, churches and communities by race, class and ethnicity. His work isn’t done. We will continue to honor his life and legacy of goodness, inclusivity, empathy and resolve in how we treat one another.”

Bishop Perry said unexplained physical healings have been reported to the cause and are under investigation.

The Archdiocese of Chicago formally opened Father Tolton’s cause for canonization in 2010.

Norbertine Father Gerard Jordan holds the canonical title “promoter of the cause” and travels the country sharing the message of Father Tolton and the canonization efforts on behalf of Bishop Perry.

He said Father Tolton’s story transcends the lines of race, gender and priesthood.

“If we start with the black part, then it’s just a nice Black History Month story. If we start from the priesthood part you only include the ordained,” Father Jordan told the Chicago Catholic, the archdiocesan newspaper. “First off, he didn’t start off as a black man or an ordained priest. The first thing that Tolton was was a created child of God. You gotta start there.”

“The first experience Tolton would have recognized, and it would have had a physical and spiritual effect on him, was his baptism,” Father Jordan said.

“The baptism of Tolton tells the real story that we’re supposed to be paying attention to and that’s the story of the Gospel of Jesus Christ,” Father Jordan said. “Everything that Tolton experienced in life is the Gospel story.”

In his lifetime, Father Tolton also talked about how the Church took him as a poor slave to become fully who he was in the eyes of God.

“Everybody has to realize that the greatest inheritance we will ever receive is our baptism,” Father Jordan said. “It is your decision whether or not you’re going to keep that inheritance and invest in it or whether you’re going to squander it or give it away or abandon it. Tolton never abandoned his inheritance.”

His story begins and ends there, the priest said.

“Once people relate to Tolton’s baptism they will find pieces of their life that they can relate too.”

Related Articles Module

From the Archive Module

Sainthood cause for Augustust Tolton advances 3675

Must Watch Videos

Now Playing

    View More Videos