How to Become a Saint in the Catholic Church
First of all, a clarification: The Catholic Church doesn’t make saints like Hollywood makes movie stars. Catholics saints are men and women who lived holy lives in obedience to God’s will, and they became saints at the moment they entered heaven. However, the Church does recognize those souls that the Church can confirm are in heaven as saints.
The process for being declared a saint is ancient, traditional, and often mysterious. Evidence must be presented to persuade Church officials that the person in question in fact lived a virtuous life, had faith, and had the support and help of God. The Church also looks at miracles as evidence that God is working through that person.
Stages on the road to sainthood
Usually, the process of recognizing a saint starts no earlier than five years after a person’s death. Usually, the potential saint’s pastor presents the case to the bishop. Specific stages are met on the path to being declared a saint:
Servant of God: As soon as the person is accepted for consideration, she’s called a Servant of God.
Venerable: After the Vatican Congregation for the Causes of Saints determines that the servant of God lived a life of heroic virtue, she is granted the title of venerable. Heroic virtue doesn’t mean a person was perfect or sinless, but that she worked aggressively to improve herself spiritually and never gave up trying to be better and grow in holiness.
Blessed: After the Church establishes one miracle, the venerable person’s cause is presented to the pope to see whether he deems her worthy of being called blessed. This step is called beatification and is the next-to-last step.
*Saint: Another miracle and the blessed person’s cause is presented to the pope again for his judgment. If he determines that the evidence is clear and that contrary reports aren’t credible, he may initiate the canonization procedure. If all goes well, the candidate is publicly recognized as a saint.
The process
Only people whose existence can be verified and whose lives can be examined are possible candidates for canonization. Candidates for sainthood undergo an investigation:
Informative inquiries are made into the person’s life, reputation, and activities while they lived on earth
Proof that no one has proclaimed or is already proclaiming and honoring the person as a saint before it’s been officially declared
A thorough examination of the person’s written and spoken (transcripts) works
If the thorough background check leads the investigators to declare the candidate venerable, evidence of miracles attributed to the candidate’s intercession with God is sought. Miracles need to be documented and authenticated, so eyewitnesses alone are considered insufficient. Medical, scientific, psychiatric, and theological experts are consulted, and evidence is given to them for their professional opinion. If a scientific, medical, or psychological explanation exists for what had only appeared to be a miracle, then it isn’t an authentic miracle. Only immediate, spontaneous, and inexplicable phenomena are up for consideration as authentic miracles.
A group of Italian doctors (Consulta Medica) examine the healing miracles. Some of the doctors aren’t Catholic and some are, but all are qualified and renowned physicians. They don’t declare a healing a miracle, but instead say, We can find no scientific or medical explanation for the cure.
Besides miraculous healings, the commission examines other phenomena:
Incorruptibility: Long after the saint is dead, the body is found free of decay when exhumed from the grave. The Church considers St. Catherine of Siena to be an example. She died in 1380, and 600 years later without any embalming, her flesh hasn’t decomposed.
*Liquefaction: The dried blood of the saint, long dead, miraculously liquefies on the feast day. The Church considers St. Januarius (San Gennaro in Italian; A.D. 275?–305), the patron saint of Naples, to be an example. According to the Church, a vial of his dried blood liquefies every year on September 19.
Odor of sanctity: The body of the saint exudes a sweet aroma, like roses, rather than the usual pungent stench of decay. The Church considers St. Teresa of Avila (1515–82) to be just such an example. The Church believes her grave exuded a sweet fragrance for nine months after her death.
The pope alone decides who is publicly recognized as a saint in churches all over the world and gets a feast day.
The actual act of beatification, in which a person is declared blessed, or of canonization, which is officially recognizing a saint, usually takes place in St. Peter’s Square outside the Vatican and St. Peter’s Basilica. Sometimes, though, the pope beatifies and canonizes in the country where the person lived and died, as in the case of St. Juan Diego. He was an Aztec peasant, and the Church believes Mary, as Our Lady of Guadalupe, appeared to him in Mexico in 1531. In his case, 12,000 people were present in the Basilica in Mexico City, and 30,000 waited outside, watching on video monitors.

Catholicism Glossary
Advent
The religious season before Christmas when Christians prepare to celebrate the birth of Christ.

Catholicism Glossary
altar
A raised table-like structure from which a priest celebrates Mass.

Catholicism Glossary
annulment
A canon law decree that declares that a marriage was never a valid sacrament in the first place, usually because one or both of the partners did not enter into it with good faith and intentions.

Catholicism Glossary
apostles
The 12 men who accompanied and supported Jesus and were trained by him to spread Christianity.

Catholicism Glossary
archdiocese
A large diocese run by an archbishop.

Catholicism Glossary
Ash Wednesday
The first day of Lent when Catholics are anointed with ashes as a reminder of their mortality.

Catholicism Glossary
Baptism
The essential sacrament that washes away original sin and welcomes the baptized person into the Church.

Catholicism Glossary
Holy Trinity
The Catholic belief that God, the one Supreme Being, is made up of three persons: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Catholicism Glossary
bishop
A man ordained first to the priesthood, then elevated to the next level by the pope. A bishop oversees a diocese; an archbishop oversees an archdiocese.

Catholicism Glossary
Byzantine Catholicism; Eastern Catholicism
A branch of Catholicism that recognizes the authority of the pope and celebrates the sacraments, but whose rituals differ from those of Western or Roman Catholic sects.

Catholicism Glossary
canon law
The supreme law of the Catholic Church that spells out the rules and regulations that guide the Church.

Catholicism Glossary
cardinal
An ordained man elevated to the step just below the pope. Cardinals help the pope administer to the faithful and a new pope is elected from among them when a pope dies.

Catholicism Glossary
catechism
A book that contains the doctrines of Catholicism.

Catholicism Glossary
celibacy
A formal and solemn oath to never enter the married state. Priests take a vow of celibacy.

Catholicism Glossary
chalice
The gold or silver cup that holds the wine that will become Christ’s body and blood during the Mass.

Catholicism Glossary
cleric
A member of the clergy.

Catholicism Glossary
confession; penance
A sacrament during which a Catholic confesses all known mortal sins to a priest.

Catholicism Glossary
Consecration
The part during the Mass when the priest changes the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus.

Catholicism Glossary
creed
A Christian oath, stating what Catholics believe as revealed to them by God through Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition. Key Catholic creed are the Apostles’ Creed and the Nicene Creed.

Catholicism Glossary
deacon
An ordained man who normally has no intention or desire of becoming a priest. A deacon may be single or married.

Catholicism Glossary
diocese
A collection of parishes overseen by a bishop.

Catholicism Glossary
feast day
The day in the Catholic calendar when a specific saint’s holy life and deeds are remembered.

Catholicism Glossary
genuflection
The act of touching the right knee to the floor while bending the left knee as a gesture of respect and obedience to God.

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godparent
Sponsor to a child or adult being baptized.

Catholicism Glossary
Good Friday
The Friday before Easter Sunday; the day Jesus died on the cross.

Catholicism Glossary
grace
A totally free, unmerited gift from God. Grace is a sharing in the divine; the inspiration to do God’s will.

Catholicism Glossary

Catholicism Glossary
Heaven
A place of eternal joy and the ecstasy of dwelling with God.

Catholicism Glossary
Hell
A place of eternal torment and damnation.

Catholicism Glossary
Holy Communion; Holy Eucharist
The essential sacrament of Catholicism in which a host consecrated by a priest becomes literally the body and blood of Jesus and is received by the Catholic faithful.

Catholicism Glossary
holy day of obligation
A day in the Catholic calendar when all Catholics must attend Mass.

Catholicism Glossary
homily
The sermon given after the Gospel is read at Mass. Different than a sermon in that it’s a explanation and reflection on the Word of God, read only by clergy.

Catholicism Glossary
host
A wafer of bread used in a Eucharistic service. It becomes the Host (capitalized) when consecrated.

Catholicism Glossary
infallible
Incapable of error. The pope is believed to be infallible when he teaches a doctrine on faith or morals to the universal Church.

Catholicism Glossary
laity; lay people
Non-ordained, everyday Catholics. Members of a religious organization who are not clergy.

Catholicism Glossary
lector
A layperson trained for the task of reading at Mass.

Catholicism Glossary
Lent
The 40 days before Easter, when Catholics prepare for the death and resurrection of Jesus through fasting, abstinence, and prayer, often giving up a specific treat for the duration of the season.

Catholicism Glossary
Mass
The formal, official worship service of Catholicism. Catholics are required to attend Mass every Sunday and on holy days of obligation.

Catholicism Glossary
mortal sin
A sin that kills grace; committing a mortal sin is tantamount to choosing Hell over Heaven.

Catholicism Glossary
natural family planning NFP
The only sanctioned birth control method for Catholics, it relies on charting a woman’s fertile cycle and abstaining from sex during fertile periods to prevent pregnancy.

Catholicism Glossary
original sin
Sin passed down to every human from Adam and Eve; the Sacrament of Baptism washes it away.

Catholicism Glossary
parish
A collection of neighborhoods in one region of a county within a given state under the spiritual care of a priest.

Catholicism Glossary
pope
The supreme head of the Catholic Church.

Catholicism Glossary
priest
An ordained man responsible for administering the sacraments and tending to the spiritual health of his parishioners.

Catholicism Glossary
purgatory
A spiritual state of the soul in which it is purified before entering heaven.

Catholicism Glossary
sacrament
A rite established by Jesus Christ to bring grace to those participating in or receiving it. The seven sacraments of Catholicism are Baptism, Penance, Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Matrimony, Holy Orders, and Anointing of the Sick.

Catholicism Glossary
seminarian
A student training for the priesthood.

Catholicism Glossary
seminary
The equivalent of Protestant divinity school where men are trained for the priesthood.

Catholicism Glossary
sign of the cross
A gesture of respect in which a Catholic uses the right hand to touch the forehead, then the middle of the breast, then the left shoulder, and finally the right shoulder.

Catholicism Glossary
Ten Commandments
God’s laws as given to Moses. Following the Commandments is the path to a holy life; breaking them is the basis of sin.

Catholicism Glossary
transubstantiation
The act of changing the substances of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ.

Catholicism Glossary
Vatican
The physical seat of the Catholic Church; the pope lives and rules from the Vatican.

Catholicism Glossary
venial sin
A transgression that inflicts a slight wound to the soul and which may be forgiven by making a confession and a sincere act of contrition.