Now that the Holy See has a Latin American Pope is it Rome’s time for a
“San Romero de América”?
The Pontifical Institute for Foreign Mission’s
magazine MissiOnLine.org asked this question, recalling that Sunday
marks 33 years since the assassination of the Archbishop of San
Salvador.
He was killed by a commando of one of El Salvador’s
paramilitary death squads whilst celebrating Mass.
A bloody civil war
raging in the country at the time.
In its article, MissiOnLine.org quotes an important witness: the 70
year old Auxiliary Bishop of San Salvador, Gregorio Rosa Chávez, one of
Mgr. Romero’s closest collaborators.
In the mass he celebrated in San
Salvador cathedral on Sunday, he speculated that Romero’s beatification
could be near: “I know Bergoglio personally – he said – and I know he is
absolutely convinced that Romero is a saint and a martyr. Everything
points to his beatification being on the cards, although we follow God’s
time frame which is not the same as ours.”
The Congregations for the Causes of Saints has been examining
Romero’s beatification cause since 1996.
Despite El Salvador’s Bishops’
Conference has consistently asked for its quick examination, the process
for the recognition of his beatification has been slowed down by a
number of obstacles: the Vatican seemed eager not to turn Romero’s
beatification into the restoration of the theology of liberation.
It is
worth remembering, however, that in 2000, John Paul II explicitly
mentioned the name of the archbishop who was assassinated in San
Salvador during a commemoration ceremony in honour of the martyrs of the
20th century in the Coliseum, one of the key moments of the Jubilee.
Pope Francis – who is not part of the Liberation Theology movement
but is aware just the same of the love which Latin American poor feel
for Romero – could play a key role in helping his cause for
beatification.
This rite would make Romero’s veneration – which is
already taking place across the Continent – official.