Approval for the beatification of the Italian Jesuit missionary Matteo
Ricci, who ministered in China 500 years ago, depends to some degree on
the Vatican’s relations with China.
“Part of the beatification depends on the political relations between
China and the Vatican,” said Father Anton Witwer, the postulator of his
cause.
“It’s possible to wait, even if all things are clear for a
beatification, something like five years to see if the political
situation has changed and is more favorable for the cause,” he told CNA
in a May 15 interview.
Jesuit Father Matteo Ricci was an expert in mathematics, cosmology and
astronomy, who helped spread the Gospel in China during the 16th
century.
The Italian Jesuit was the first Westerner invited into the Forbidden
City, the Chinese imperial palace where the emperor lived, and he
produced the first map of China where Africa, Europe and America also
appeared.
The process of naming him a saint involves several steps, beginning with
his life being recognized as one of “heroic virtue,” before he can be
beatified, which is the step before sainthood.
According to Fr. Witwer, the process began in 1985 in the Italian town
of Macerata, but “it was only a historical opening so it was not
sufficient.”
“This is why we had to make a new process,” he added, referring to the one initiated on Jan. 24, 2010.
The German priest, who is the General Postulator of the Society of
Jesus, also explained some of the considerations that can impact the
timing of Fr. Ricci’s beatification.
“First, a beatification has to help the local church (in China) to
sustain and grow faith, and if there is a political impediment, it is
sometimes necessary to choose the just time,” Fr. Witwer said.
In fact, the Vatican asked Fr. Witwer to introduce the cause of Fr.
Ricci’s lay collaborator Xu Guanqi because “for China, it would maybe be
better if a European and a Chinese are beatified more or less
together,” he explained.
“This would be better for China because it is easier to accept a Chinese
Blessed and not only a missionary working in China,” he added.
But according to the Jesuit postulator, Xu Guanqi’s beatification
process is on hold since it was introduced in Shanghai, which is
currently without a bishop.
The Italian Diocese of Macerata finished studying the case of Fr. Ricci
on May 10, and passed it to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Causes of
Saints.
The congregation will now examine the case to decide whether or not to
give the missionary, who spoke fluent Chinese and embraced the country’s
culture and customs, the status of heroic virtue.
The postulator pointed out that if the Vatican gives Fr. Ricci that
status, it would mean “he lived as a virtuous of faith, obedience and
poverty, more than the average Christian.”
The next step in eventually proclaiming him a saint would be to beatify
him, making him Blessed Mateo Ricci. That step, among other things, will
involve a miracle being attributed to his intercession and have it
certified as miraculous by separate panels of medical doctors, cardinals
and the Pope.
“We still have to wait for the beatification because we have to wait for
a miracle, which we don’t have yet,” Fr. Witwer reported.
“The Diocese of Macerata will now bring documents to the congregation
and we will have to examine their canonical correctness,” said Fr.
Witwer.
The postulator explained that the next step in determining whether Fr.
Ricci lived a life of heroic virtue involves drafting a document of
around 500 pages – known as a “Positio” – that details the life,
writings and virtues of the priest.
It will be directed by the relator of the saints congregation, a “sort
of thesis moderator, and then studied by historians, theologians and
finally by cardinals,” said Fr. Witwer.
“Maybe in two years we can finish the Positio, then several years will
be needed to study it, and then a few more years may be needed before
the beatification finally takes place,” he said.