The beatification of El Salvador’s martyred Archbishop Óscar Romero will take place during a ceremony in El Salvador on May 23, the day before Pentecost Sunday. The date was announced on March 11 by Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, postulator of Romero’s cause for sainthood, in El Salvador. According to a report in Avvenire, the weekly newspaper of the Italian bishops’ conference, the announcement came on the eve of another significant anniversary, that of the assassination on March 12, 1977, of the Salvadoran Rutilio Grande, S.J., three years before the death of Romero. The cause for the canonization of this early victim of repression by the Salvadoran military will parallel Romero’s cause, according to Archbishop Paglia. He told reporters in El Salvador that a “close bond” unites Romero and Grande from a “theological and pastoral perspective,” because “it is impossible to understand Romero without understanding Rutilio Grande.” According to the report, Pope Francis met Grande once in the 1970s, though they did not talk together. Pope Francis described him as a priest who “left the center to go to the peripheries,” a model that has become a familiar refrain of his pontificate.
Romero Beatification
Show Comments (
)
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
The latest from america
Pope Leo said that if the teen “had come all the way to Rome, then (the pope) could come all the way to the hospital to see him.”
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Molly Cahill
As emergency workers searched for survivors and tried to recuperate the bodies of the dead, Pope Leo XIV offered his prayers for people impacted by the latest shipwreck of a migrant boat off the coast of Yemen.
The Archdiocese of Miami celebrated the first Mass for detainees at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the Trump administration’s controversial immigrant detention center in the Florida Everglades.