Miracle at Santa Teresita!
From an article in the National Catholic Register April 1992
MAKING OF A SAINT
At death’s door, a California priest is saved by the intercession of a 17th-century Jesuit.
Most Catholics, if their memories are jostled, will recall that the formal process of canonizing a saint involves a miracle or two. But for Father John Houle, it’s more than a matter of speculative interest. For when a 17th century priest, Blessed Claude la Colombiere, is canonized in Rome on May 31 this year, Houle will be there as a witness to a miracle wrought through his fellow Jesuit’s intercession – namely, his own.
The veteran Los Angeles-based member of the Society of Jesus, with nearly half a century of service to the Church to his credit, tells the story in a disarmingly straight-forward, undramatic way. “I entered Santa Teresita Hospital in Duarte, CA, on Dec. 23, 1989,” the priest relates, “with a history of serious coronary disturbances.” Father Houle had had coronary-by-pass surgery, for example, in 1983. By early February, with his condition worsening by the day, Houle’s physician, cardiologist Dr. Gary Conrad, diagnosed the priest as having pulmonary fibrosis, in most cases, a terminal complaint.
Enter Father Frank Parrish, superior of the Jesuit house in Hollywood. Father Parrish had had a long-standing interest in the revival of devotion to the Sacred heart, a devotion which Blessed Claude la Colombiere had been instrumental in fostering. Eager for Colombiere’s cause, Father Parrish encouraged the many Sacred Heart prayer groups he had formed to pray that a miracle be worked through the beatified’s intercession. When Father Houle began succumbing to his disease in February 1990, Father Parrish visited the unconscious priest, prayed with him and blessed him with a Colombiere relic. Father Houle’s sister-in-law, a witness to the event, who asked to remain anonymous, relates that when Father Parrish rose to leave Father Houle’s bedside, he told her simply, “Don’t worry, John will be all right. There will be a miracle.”
Father Houle says: “Three days later, on Feb. 23, 1990, I was sitting up and taking nourishment. A week earlier, I’d been dying. Now my lung had been restored, and there was no sign whatsoever of illness.” (The priest, however, cannot resist a wry aside when he points out that, while apparently dispatching a terminal illness, “God has still not seen fit to rid me of the back problems I’ve had since childhood.)”
Father Houle’s physician confirms the “miraculous” claim. “There’s no doubt in my mind that John Houle was dying in February 1990,” the cardiologist says. “He’d been on oxygen for a month and was in an increasingly weakened state. While, as a physician, I can’t affirm or deny miracles as such,” he says, “I’d have to say, and I have attested, that there’s simply no medical explanation for the sudden turn-around in his condition. He was too far gone for that.”
With Conrad’s assistance, Sister Maria Elia, O.C.D., Santa Teresita Hospital’s pastoral director for patients, and Father Parrish patiently gathered the pertinent x-rays and other medical data in order to submit a report to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Cause of Saints, a process which required many months. Los Angeles Archdiocesan officials, Bishop John Ward particularly, repeatedly interrogated hospital doctors and staff about the case. And in October 1990, Father Paul Molinari, postulator for the cause of Jesuit saints and martyrs in Rome, visited Father Houle and conducted his own inquiry on the reported miracle. Eventually the more than 200 page report on Father Houle’s healing made its way to Rome where, after extensive examination, Roman officials unanimously ruled last year that there was no question of human agency in the events surrounding the Jesuit’s remarkable recovery. That verdict was then recommended to the Pope.
In February 2020, Sister Maria Elia, O.C.D. shared how special it was for the Sisters to witness the miracle that helped canonize St. Claude de la Colombiere!
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