Pope authorizes start of sainthood probe into slain French priest
ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE -- Pope Francis has authorized the French church to start the preliminary sainthood investigation for the the Rev. Jacques Hamel, whose throat was slit by Islamic militants as he celebrated Mass in July.
Francis told reporters Sunday that he had authorized the gathering of witness testimony to determine if a beatification cause is warranted.
Usually the Vatican requires a five-year waiting period before such investigations can begin. But Francis said he authorized the start of the probe now since witnesses might die or forget over time.
Hamel was killed July 26 in his parish church in Normandy.
Eighty-five years old and a Catholic priest in the community for more than six decades, he was murdered during mass when two men broke into the church and slit his throat.
Police killed the assailants, and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) claimed responsibility. In honoring Hamel as a martyr last month, Francis urged all to display the same courage Hamel had and denounced such slayings in the name of God as “satanic.”
According to the Vatican’s complicated saint-making process, people whose deaths are due to hatred for the faith can be declared a martyr and be beatified without having a miracle credited to their intercession. The Vatican, however, must do a full-fledged investigation to determine if indeed Hamel’s death qualifies as martyrdom.
A miracle is needed to be declared a saint.