A NEW
SAINT FOR IRELAND
The Passionist
Congregation are delighted to inform you that a date has been announced by the Vatican for the
Canonization of Blessed Charles of Mount Argus. This will take place in Rome on Sunday 3rd
June 2007.
There is a shrine to Blessed
Charles in The Graan Monastery, Enniskillen and
people come from all over the North to be blessed with the special relic of
Blessed Charles in The Graan.
Blessed Charles was born John
Andrew Houben on 11th December 1821 in the
village of Munstergeleen in Holland. He was enrolled for military service
from 1840-1845 and it was during this time he heard of the Passionists
and resolved to join them at first opportunity. In 1845 he entered the
novitiate at Ere, near Tournai,
in Belgium,
and was ordained in December 1850. In November 1852 he was sent to England and
came into contact with the Irish who were emigrating in the wake of the famine.
He transferred to Ireland
on July 9th 1857 – 150 years
ago this year. He arrived at the new monastery of Mount
Argus at Harold’s Cross, Dublin, which had been
founded just the year before. He was not a good preacher and never quite
mastered the English language, but it was in the Confessional and in comforting
the sick that he excelled. He soon became extraordinarily popular not only in Dublin but all over Ireland.
It was his gift of healing the
sick which is most clearly remembered. As many as 300 people a day came to be
blessed by him from all over Ireland
and beyond. He was transferred back to England
in 1866 and returned to Ireland
in 1874, remaining at Mount
Argus for the rest of his
life. The daily pilgrimage of sick and distressed resumed immediately on his
return. He went out all over Dublin
and into the country blessing people. He was constantly available. During the
last few years of his life his own health was failing, having spent himself so
much. He said his last Mass on 8th December 1892. Word of his
illness spread through the city and crowds gathered to ask after him. At 5.30
in the morning of 5th January 1893 he passed peacefully away. His
body was brought to the Church and lay in state for 5 days. Many thousands
filed past his coffin with the police keeping order. His funeral was reported
to have been bigger than Parnell’s two years before. His remains were laid to
rest in the cemetery beside Mount
Argus Church
and soon his grave became a place of pilgrimage where people came daily to
pray. When in 1949 his remains were moved inside the Church the Shrine became
the place of prayer.
Father Charles was Beatified by Pope John Paul II on 16th October
1988 after the cure of a Dutch lady, Mrs Octavia Spaetgens
Verheggen, was approved as a miracle attributed to
the intercession of Father Charles. Many people come daily to be blessed with the
relic of Blessed Charles. It is the approval of a second miracle, the cure of
Mr Dolf Dormans, also from Holland, that has now
paved the way for the Canonization of Father Charles. This will be a wonderful
and an historic occasion, not just for the Passionists
and the people of Mount Argus, but for the whole Church in Ireland.
A new portrait by James Hanley
will feature on a postage stamp to mark the occasion. A new song has been
written and performed by Liam Lawton. Plans are underway for a pilgrimage to Rome for the Canonization and this will be paralleled by a
series of events in Mount
Argus itself. We invite
everyone in Ireland
to rejoice with us at this wonderful news. Ireland
has a new saint whose remains and shrine are here in Dublin. He is a saint for the poor, a saint
for the sick, a saint for immigrants and emigrants, a
saint for everyone. Thanks be to God!
____________________________________________________________________________________________
December
2005
THE
MIRACULOUS HEALING OF MR. DORMANS
This is the cure that, having passed
through stringent medical scrutiny in the Netherlands, has now been given
unanimous approval by the even more stringent Vatican Medical Council as a
miracle attributed to the intercession of Blessed Charles of Mount Argus.
Mr. J.H.A. Dormans
comes from Munstergeleen in Holland, birthplace of Blessed Charles. On
March 29th, 1999, his doctor had him taken in to the emergency room
of the Maasland
Hospital in Sittard. What he had experienced as abdominal pains turned
out to be a ruptured appendix. Complications emerged. The oozing acid had
damaged the small intestines to such an extent that, every other day, the inside of his abdomen had to be rinsed out under
fall anesthetic. From the outset Mr. Dormans had
surrendered his faith into the hands of Blessed Charles, praying for a positive
outcome to his disease, and a blessing on the hands of the physicians who were
treating him.
On April 11th his grandson,
Simon, was due to make his First Holy Communion. All dressed up, he was brought
to see his papa in hospital. On arrival it was discovered that Mr. Dorman's
wife, Mia, and the other family members had been sent for. His condition had
worsened. The surgical procedure that morning had exposed totally weakened and
already porous intestines. Every action taken by the surgeon to improve the
situation seemed to have the opposite result. When he wanted to close a hole, a
little touch caused the intestines to leek even further. The doctor informed
the family that from a medical point of view nothing more could be done and
that there was no hope of recovery. His condition was so bad that the attending
medical staff had decided not to resuscitate him. The family
were advised to prepare themselves for an unpleasant death, within a
very short time. With Mr. Dorman's intestines totally destroyed, the surgeon
calmly and quietly explained how he had reached the boundaries of what he could
do. Medical Science had nothing farther to offer. The last sacraments of the
Church were administered. The family said their goodbyes. Blessed Charles was
invoked to guide him through these difficult hours.
But somebody up there had other plans. On
a visit a couple of days later, Mr. Dorman's family doctor was looking at him
and saying to him: "Father Charles has performed his miracle, now it's
up to the medical staff here". His health continued to improve with
every passing day. The surgeon said: "It is beyond me that you are
sitting here, opposite me, and still alive!" The medical team decided
to perform farther surgery and reserved a fall day in the operating room on
October 27th. When they went in, however, they found that all they
had to do was connect the small intestines and close a little hole. Everything
else was already healed in a natural way.