A relative of Princess Diana, Prince William and Prince Harry has moved one step closer to sainthood.
According to reports from the British news source Catholic Herald, a
20-year investigation into the life and works of Father Ignatius Spencer
has recently been approved by Vatican historians.
The positio, or document used in the process to declare someone
“venerable,” has officially been passed to the theologians of the
Vatican Congregation for the Causes of Sainthood.
If sufficient “evidence of sanctity” is found, they will appeal to
Pope Francis to declare the Passionist priest “venerable,” the second of
four major steps on the path to canonization as a saint in the Catholic
Church.
Fr. Ignatius Spencer was born George Spencer in 1799 and was an
Anglican clergyman in the area of Althorp, Northamptonshire, where Lady
Diana was buried after she was killed in a Paris car crash in August
1997.
Fr. Spencer converted to Roman Catholicism at the age of 31, scandalizing some in the Victorian society.
The Spencer family, mostly members of the Church of England, were the fifth wealthiest family in the country at the time.
Early on in his priesthood, Fr. Spencer was attracted to the active
contemplative community of the Passionists. He became known for his
ecumenical efforts in pursuit of “unity in truth,” the same quest for
truth that led him to the Catholic faith.
According to Fr. John Kearns, the British Passionist Provincial, Fr.
Spencer also maintained his love for cricket, calling it “my mania.”
He was also known for his work with the poor, particularly with Irish
immigrants. He once said that he wished he could die like Jesus - “in a
ditch, unseen and unknown.”
The words ended up being prophetic, because
Fr. Spencer died alone after having a seizure on a country lane near
Edinburgh, Scotland. His body is entombed in the Church of St Anne and
Blessed Dominic in St Helens, Merseyside.
Fr. Spencer is the great-great-great uncle of the Princess Diana, as well as the great uncle of Winston Churchill.
Once Fr. Spencer is declared venerable, the next step in his
canonization process would be beatification, which would require
evidence of a miracle that occurs through the intercession.
Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury told the Catholic Herald that Fr.
Spencer’s life is a “heroic and often neglected” chapter of Catholicism
in England.
“In facing the challenge of secularism, Fr Ignatius and his fellow
Passionists – Blessed Dominic Barberi and Mother Elizabeth Prout –
remind us of the missionary energy and purpose which marked ‘the second
spring’ of the Catholic Church in England.”