PEORIA — It’s going on two years since the Vatican interrupted the sainthood path of Archbishop Fulton Sheen.
When and if that effort resumes isn’t clear — not even to the incoming bishop of the Catholic diocese where Sheen was born, grew up and was ordained.
Sheen’s remains, entombed in Peoria, already are drawing religious pilgrims to the area regularly.
“Let me say it this way: If there is something out there, if there is some reason why his cause should not go forward, I think we should have a clear understanding of why that is,” said Louis Tylka, coadjutor bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Peoria.
“Since nobody has given that, I have to believe that there’s got to be some reason why there was a pause, but it’s only a pause. When it was paused, they didn’t say, ‘It’s over.’”
Continuing to ‘promote his…
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