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Seton Shrine highlights American ‘Saints on Their Way’

The canonization of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in 1975 not only marked the establishment of the first American-born saint but also opened the door for other American Catholics to be honored for embodying the universal call to holiness.

“What made her canonization remarkable was that after 200 years of history in the country, it was the first time that a native-born American was declared a saint of the universal Church,” Rob Judge, executive director of the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton in Emmitsburg, Maryland, told CNA. “It was this validation, that you can come from these lands and obtain holiness.”

Today there are 87 American Catholics on their way to sainthood. To recognize these men and women, the shrine put together the “Saints on Their Way Village” to help share the stories of Americans deemed blessed, venerable, and servants of God. 

The “Saints on Their Way Village” was displayed on Sept. 14 — the 50-year anniversary of Seton’s canonization — and was made up of ​​nearly two dozen guilds, each dedicated to advancing the cause of an American on the path to sainthood. They gathered on the shrine’s grounds, where Mother Seton lived and worshipped, to host tables with information and to sign petitions to help advance their causes.

“St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and those on the path to joining her all share one thing in common: They each lived lives of love and service that embody the universal call to holiness,” Judge said. 

Dorothy Day

In 2000, Dorothy Day became a servant of God after her cause for sainthood was officially opened by the Church. Members of the Dorothy Day Guild attended the event to highlight her “steadfastness” and “relatability.”

Day worked as an activist and journalist, focused on social justice and aiding the poor. She influenced 20th-century American Catholicism by demonstrating the “preferential option for the poor,” which integrated faith and action.

“What I find hopeful is that she stayed the course her whole lifetime,” guild member Carolyn Zablotny told CNA. “There were times where I’m sure she had her doubts and she wrote so openly about her struggles. She’s not a cookie-cutter kind of person, she failed at times, but she persevered.”

Day is a “sign of hope,” Zablotny said. “She’s a radical alternative to militarism, racism, and the selfishness that we’re all suffering from. I think she’s a real model for a different kind of holiness.”

Blessed Solanus Casey

Members of the Father Solanus Guild shared the message of Blessed Solanus Casey and provided a prayer for the Capuchin’s canonization. Fellow friar and guild member Brother Daniel, who did not wish to share his full name, told CNA that Casey’s “main goal” was to “thank God ahead of time” as a way to recognize what he is already doing in our lives. 

Casey grew up on a farm in Wisconsin and was known as a “simple man” who dedicated his ministry to the sick and troubled. While the Catholic Church has only officially attributed one miracle to Casey, many people have shared stories of unexplained healing after asking for his intercession. 

“One of our brothers in the order, his family is connected with Father Solanus,” Brother Daniel said. “He got in an accident and the doctor wanted to amputate his legs. So his mother and father came to Solanus and told him ‘the doctors are going to amputate the leg of my son.’ Solanus said: ‘Nothing is going to happen. Don’t worry.’ The doctors, the next morning, said they could do [another] treatment and not amputate his legs.”

“When people come to [Solanus], he may not get rid of all the problems,” Brother Daniel said. “But when they go from him, they feel peace. They feel that someone is there to comfort them.” 

Blessed Francis Xavier Seelos 

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Francis Xavier Seelos was born in Germany in 1819 but moved to the United States and lived much of his life in New Orleans. Now the city houses the National Shrine of Blessed Francis Xavier Seelos, where people come daily “to ask for the blessing of Blessed Francis,” Father Steve, a priest advocating for his canonization who did not wish to give his full name, told CNA.

Seelos was known “as a wonderful man,” he said. “He was totally self-giving — the type of person that makes a saint. When people were sick, he didn’t think about himself at all. He went to bless them and ended up getting sick himself, which is how he died.”

Blessed Francis served as a priest during a time where judgment was often passed, but he “was very kind and gentle in confession,” Father Steve said. “His confession line was always longer than anybody else’s because he was willing to listen and give absolution without making people feel bad.”

Mother Mary Lange

Mother Mary Lange was an American religious sister who founded the Oblate Sisters of Providence, the first African American religious congregation in the United States. In 1829, she founded the order despite the trials she knew she would endure. She believed that “if you put your faith in God, it’ll be OK,” Phyllis Johnson, a member of the Mother Mary Lange Guild, told CNA.

Dominican nuns walk around the
Dominican nuns walk around the “Saints on Their Way Village” at the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton to learn more about potential American saints. Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNA

The guild is advocating for her canonization because “she loved all people,” Johnson said. “Even the people who treated her shabbily, she still cared for them. She’s a saint for everyone. She took care of everyone. She didn’t discriminate … So if anybody should be a saint, it’s the person who says ‘all people are God’s people.’”

Blessed Michael J. McGivney 

Several employees of the Knights of Columbus, the world’s largest Catholic fraternal service organization, talked with attendees to share the cause for canonization of the organization’s founder, Father Michael J. McGivney. 

“He’s a powerful intercessor,” Alicia Mucha, manager of events at the Knights of Columbus, told CNA. “He loves to answer prayers for unemployment, family conflict, and any substance abuse.”

In 1882, McGivney founded the Knights of Columbus “to give men a better community, something that was rooted in their faith that would keep them away from drinking,” Mucha said. The organization started in Connecticut “to provide benefits for women and children, in case anything happened to the men. He would ensure that women and orphans were taken care of.”

In 2020, McGivney was beatified after the Vatican recognized a miracle attributed to his intercession.

Judge said that McGivney and the other potential American saints show “us that we, too, can draw closer to God and achieve great things.”

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