Soon to be Blessed) Carlo Acutis - Catholic Open Mic - An Old School  Catholic Message Board

 

Blessed Carlo Acutis (born May 3, 1991, London, England—died October 12, 2006, Monza, Italy; beatified October 10, 2020) was an English-born Italian computer programmer who was beatified (the second of three stages in the process of canonization) by the Roman Catholic Church in 2020. Only 15 years old when he died of leukemia, his beatification and his interest in using digital communication to teach others led to Acutis being popularly dubbed “the patron saint of the Internet” and “the first millennial saint.”

Websites

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People around him considered him a “computer geek” due to his passion for and skill with computers and the internet.[5][4] He was skilled in using DreamweaverJavaC++, and Ubuntu.[50] He often helped others with technical issues.[51]

When he was 14, his parish priest asked him to create a webpage for his parish, Santa Maria Segreta in Milan.[50] After this, a priest at his high school asked him to create a website to promote volunteering.[52] For this work, he won a national competition called “Sarai volontario” (You will be a volunteer).[52]

Eucharistic miracles

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Keen to transmit the faith to a younger generation,[46] Acutis applied himself to creating a website dedicated to cataloguing each reported Eucharistic miracle in the world and maintaining a list of the approved Marian apparitions of the Catholic Church. He appreciated Blessed Giacomo Alberione‘s initiatives to use the media to evangelize and proclaim the Gospel, aiming to do likewise with his own website.[53] Acutis launched the website in 2004[25] and worked on it for two and a half years, involving his entire family in the project.[54] It was unveiled on 4 October 2006, the Feast of St. Francis, only days before his death.[54] Because he was hospitalized, Acutis was not able to attend the debut of his exhibition at Rome’s Church of San Carlo Borromeo.[55] The exhibition was also presented at his high school, the Leo XIII Institute.[54]

Final days

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Illness

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On 1 October 2006, Acutis developed an inflammation of the throat.[56] His parents took him to a doctor who diagnosed parotitis and dehydration, which a second doctor, a family friend, confirmed.[56] A few days later, Acutis’ pain worsened and he had blood in his urine.[57] By Sunday, 8 October, Acutis was too weak to get out of bed to go to Mass.[57]

Acutis was taken to a clinic that specialized in blood diseases and was diagnosed with acute promyelocytic leukemia.[57] He was given little chance of recovery.[58] He was rushed to intensive care and put on a respirator.[59] After a sleepless night, Acutis was transferred to San Gerardo Hospital north of Milan, one of only three hospitals in Italy equipped to treat his condition.[59]

The hospital staff called in their chaplain and he performed the anointing of the sick.[60] When a nurse came in to care for Acutis, Acutis asked her not to wake his parents since they were already very tired and he did not want to worry them more.[60]

Acutis offered his suffering both for Pope Benedict XVI and for the Catholic Church, saying:, “I offer to the Lord the sufferings that I will have to undergo for the Pope and for the Church.”[61][57] The doctors treating his final illness had asked him if he was in great pain, to which he replied, “There are people who suffer much more than me”.[5][60] His final words to his mother were:

Mom, don’t be afraid. Since Jesus became a man, death has become the passage towards life, and we don’t need to flee it. Let us prepare ourselves to experience something extraordinary in the eternal life.[62]

Death and funeral

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Acutis fell into a coma and was taken to the intensive care unit where he underwent a blood-cleansing treatment.[63] After a cerebral haemorrhage, he was pronounced brain-dead on 11 October, aged 15.[63] Acutis died the next day, 12 October 2006, at 6:45 p.m.[63] His parents brought his body home, where people came for four days to pay their last respects.[64] A crowd of strangers attended his funeral,[65] including young people who had abandoned the Church and those who returned for a memorial Mass three months later.[66]

Exhumation to Assisi

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Tomb of Carlo Acutis at the Sanctuary of the Spoliation in Assisi, Italy

It was Acutis’ final wish to be buried in Assisi.[67] On 6 April 2019, his body was brought to the Sanctuary of the Spoliation and venerated at its final resting place.[68] Overnight, the procession stopped at the Cathedral of San Rufino and the diocesan choir sang a Non io, ma Dio, (“Not me, but God”), a hymn especially composed for the occasion by Marco Mammoli.[69]

Legacy

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Following the Catholic Church’s recognition of a miracle in 2020 that was attributed to Acutis’s intercession, Antonia told the press that her son had appeared to her in dreams saying that he would be not only beatified but also canonized a saint in the future.[70] A website was created for his canonization cause. Others were created for educators, young people, and prayer groups, and for each of the four exhibitions that he inspired.[71]

Photo exhibition of Eucharistic miracles

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In memory of Acutis, Bishops Raffaello Martinelli and Angelo Comastri have helped to organize a traveling photo exhibition of all the Eucharistic miracle sites. It has since traveled to dozens of different countries across five continents.[72]

The preface to the print version of the exhibit was written by Cardinal Angelo Comastri[54] and has been translated into 18 languages.[73] It has traveled to more than 10,000 places, including churches, congressional palaces, youth clubs, and welcome centers. The exhibit was also brought to the canonization of Francisco and Jacinta Marto in Fatima, Portugal.[73]

Praise and life adaptations

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Relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis and Saint Manuel González García visiting the St. Clement Chapel at Dartmouth College

Acutis once said, “We are all born originals, but many of us die as photocopies.”[32] In the document that concluded the Synod on Young People in 2018, Pope Francis used the phrase and praised him thusly:

Carlo did not fall into a trap. He saw that many young people, if they seem to be different, end up, in reality, looking like each other, by running behind what powerful people impose on them via mechanisms of consumption and stupor. In this way, they do not let the gifts that the Lord has made for them flow into them. They do not offer the world these personal and unique gifts that the Lord has sown in each one of them.[74]

Francis also called Acutis a model for people who live normal lives to grow in holiness.[75]

In April 2022, the first life-sized statue of Acutis in the United Kingdom was erected at Carfin GrottoNorth Lanarkshire, Scotland.[76][77] A stained-glass window dedicated to Acutis was installed in St Aldhelm’s Church, Malmesbury later in the same year, with his image chosen to connect with younger parishioners.[78] In 2024, Timothy Schmalz created a sculpture of Acutis featuring a crucified image of Jesus emerging from his chest.[79]

Relics of Carlo Acutis, along with his Eucharistic miracles photo exhibition, have been touring around the world.[80]

Adaptations of Acutis’ life story include a comic book[81] and a video game.[82]

Beatification

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Santa Maria Maggiore, Assisi, Acutis’s burial place

The call for Acutis to be beatified began not long after his death.[5] On 12 October 2012, the sixth anniversary of his death, the Archdiocese of Milan opened the cause for canonization.[83]

The campaign gained momentum on 13 May 2013, when the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued a nihil obstat stating there was nothing preventing the cause from moving forward.[75] He was then named a Servant of God, the first stage on the path towards sainthood.[4][84] The Lombardy Episcopal Conference approved the petition for the official canonization cause to proceed at a meeting in 2013.[84]

The opening of the diocesan investigation was held on 15 February 2013, with Cardinal Angelo Scola inaugurating the process, and concluding it on 24 November 2016.[85] Scola said Acutis was not called to be “a movie star, but a star in Heaven” and that Acutis was “a new treasure in the Ambrosian church”.[85] The formal introduction to the cause occurred on 13 May 2013, and Acutis became titled a “Servant of God”. Pope Francis next confirmed his life as one of heroic virtue on 5 July 2018, declaring him Venerable.[86][87]

Heart relic of Carlo Acutis

On 14 November 2019, the Vatican’s Medical Council of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints expressed a positive opinion about a miracle in Brazil attributed to Acutis’s intercession.[88][89] Luciana Vianna had taken her son, Mattheus, who was born with a pancreatic defect that made eating difficult, to a prayer service. Beforehand, she had prayed a novena asking for the teenager Acutis’s intercession. During the service, Mattheus had asked that he should not “throw up as much”. Immediately following the service, he told his mother that he felt healed and asked for solid food when he came home. Until then, he had been on an all-liquid diet.[90][91] After a detailed investigation, Pope Francis confirmed the miracle’s authenticity in a decree on 21 February 2020, leading to Acutis’s beatification.

Within a month of the decree, the beatification ceremony was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy, during which the country was placed on lockdown. It was rescheduled for 10 October 2020 and was held in the Upper Church of the Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi in Assisi, Italy, with Cardinal Agostino Vallini presiding on the Pope’s behalf.[92][93] As of 2019, the postulator for Acutis’s cause is Nicola Gori.[84][94]

Since the beatification ceremony on 10 October 2020, silent crowds have been filing past the exposed relics of the blessed youth in the one-time cathedral of Assisi, the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore.[95]

Canonization process

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On 23 May 2024, Pope Francis recognized a second miracle attributed to the intercession of Acutis.[96][97][98] The miracle attributed to his intercession occurred in 2022 when a Costa Rican woman named Valeria had fallen off her bike and suffered a brain haemorrhage with doctors giving her a low chance of survival. Valeria’s mother, Lilliana, prayed for the intercession of Acutis and visited his tomb. The same day, Valeria began to breathe independently again and was able to walk the next day with all evidence of the haemorrhage having disappeared.[99]

On 1 July 2024, Pope Francis presided at an Ordinary Consistory of Cardinals, which approved the canonization of 15 people, including Blessed Carlo Acutis. The date of his canonization has not been announced

 

 Information about the Youth in the Parish of St Joseph:

Motto:

 Ignite, Unite, Evangelize

Charism:

The charism of the Youth in a Parish is to:

1. Ignite a passion for Christ and His Church
2. Unite young people in faith, fellowship, and service
3. Evangelize and share the Good News with others

Spirituality:

The spirituality of the Youth in a Parish is rooted in:

1. A personal relationship with Jesus Christ
2. The Eucharist and the Sacraments
3. Prayer and devotion to the Holy Spirit
4. The teachings of the Catholic Church
5. Service to others, especially the poor and marginalized

The Youth in a Parish may draw inspiration from various spiritual sources, including:

-The Gospels and the lives of the saints
– The writings of Pope Francis and other Catholic leaders
– The spirituality of St. John Bosco, who worked with young people and emphasized the importance of reason, religion, and kindness.

Youth  Co ordintor: Kopano Pieta

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