Vatican makes it tougher to be a saint
Vatican makes it tougher to be a saint
There are more than 2,200 beatification and sainthood cases pending.

Vatican City: The Vatican is making it tougher to become a saint.

New procedures announced today call for more "rigour" and "sobriety" by bishops deciding to begin the process of beatification and determining the required miracles.

Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins, head of the Vatican's sainthood office, recently suggested that the Vatican was overwhelmed by causes following the pontificate of the late Pope John Paul II, who elevated more people to sainthood than all his predecessors combined.

Saraiva Martins said there are more than 2,200 beatification and sainthood causes pending.

The cardinal, speaking at a news conference, stressed the need for a "true reputation for holiness" among candidates before a process begins. He said "rigorous historical research is obviously intrinsic" to the investigation.

During his 27-year pontificate, John Paul beatified 1,338 people and canonized 482, more than all his predecessors combined since current procedures were introduced in the 16th century.

Asked about prominent cases now pending, the cardinal said the beatification cause of Archbishop Oscar Romero, the outspoken Salvadoran church leader who was killed in 1980 as he celebrated Mass, remains at a standstill while officials study whether his death made him a martyr for the faith.

To put Romero on the path to sainthood, the church must first determine if the archbishop of San Salvador was killed for religious reasons or for other motives, the cardinal said.

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