B
Bill_Martin
Guest
I thought Dolan and Jenky already settled this: eyeofthetiber.com/2014/09/08/dolan-jenky-to-settle-dispute-over-sheen-remains-in-octagon/
I’ve certainly got some questions after reading that article.More, from a close associate of Sheen’s. Part of his “household”
newsmax.com/Newsfront/archbishop-fulton-sheen-anniversary-death/2016/12/09/id/763188/
There is one thing about this article that doesn’t make sense. Why didn’t the Archdiocese of New York start the process themselves? How and why was it started in Peoria?More, from a close associate of Sheen’s. Part of his “household”
newsmax.com/Newsfront/archbishop-fulton-sheen-anniversary-death/2016/12/09/id/763188/
Agree completely.I again state my wish that the Holy See would make a decision and take all of this out of the civil courts.
Dan
I think the article was less about the who initiated the cause and more about what was Bph Sheen’s wishes as to where he would be buried.There is one thing about this article that doesn’t make sense. Why didn’t the Archdiocese of New York start the process themselves? How and why was it started in Peoria?
It seems to me that AD of NY wasn’t willing or able to start the process and allowed Peoria to do it.
It’s natural that if Peoria was going to pay for the investigation that the main Shrine (including his body) should be located there.
To me it seems like now NY is trying to get out of paying for the investigation, yet receive all the financial benefits of having the shrine.
This is pretty much a scandal all around.
Right. So how did it wind up in this situation?I think the article was less about the who initiated the cause and more about what was Bph Sheen’s wishes as to where he would be buried.
According to this article by apparently someone very close to him, a member of his “household” for several decades, Sheen wanted to be buried in NY.
I think that was the point of the article, at least that is what I got: Sheen’s wishes.
I’m not sure what to think yet I find it as embarrassing as the Al Smith Dinner.There is one thing about this article that doesn’t make sense. Why didn’t the Archdiocese of New York start the process themselves? How and why was it started in Peoria?
It seems to me that AD of NY wasn’t willing or able to start the process and allowed Peoria to do it.
It’s natural that if Peoria was going to pay for the investigation that the main Shrine (including his body) should be located there.
To me it seems like now NY is trying to get out of paying for the investigation, yet receive all the financial benefits of having the shrine.
This is pretty much a scandal all around.
Well Abp Sheen’s wish was stated in his will, to be buried in Calvary Cemetery. And the article is a one-sided view of the issue. Here are a few interesting highlights from the judge’s decision on the matter: (note: petitioner is Abp Sheen’s niece, and respondent is the Archdiocese of NY)I think the article was less about the who initiated the cause and more about what was Bph Sheen’s wishes as to where he would be buried.
According to this article by apparently someone very close to him, a member of his “household” for several decades, Sheen wanted to be buried in NY.
I think that was the point of the article, at least that is what I got: Sheen’s wishes.
And yet the archdiocese is appealing. Ridiculous.Well Abp Sheen’s wish was stated in his will, to be buried in Calvary Cemetery. And the article is a one-sided view of the issue. Here are a few interesting highlights from the judge’s decision on the matter: (note: petitioner is Abp Sheen’s niece, and respondent is the Archdiocese of NY)
When a man’s stated intention about his burial site is not followed because the parties involved in the burial believed he would have accepted an offer to be buried at a more prestigious location, how should a Court analyze an application for disinterment? This Court must consider petitioner’s justification for the requested disinterment and the basis of respondents’ refusal to consent. After reviewing the papers in this proceeding, the Court finds that petitioner has provided a good and substantial reason for moving the remains of the decedent, Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen (Archbishop Sheen), to St. Mary’s Cathedral in Peoria, Illinois and that respondents failed to supply a sufficient reason to reject the instant application.
In 2002, Bishop Jenky of the Diocese of Peoria, Illinois began the process to explore whether Archbishop Sheen should be declared a Saint of the Roman Catholic Church. Petitioner claims that the Archdiocese of New York had no interest in this cause for canonization and **cites a letter from Cardinal Egan in 2002 suggesting that Peoria was the “ideal diocese” **to start the canonization process (see petition, exh A).
How did his remains end up in St. Patrick’s when his will directed burial in Calvary? According to petitioner, after her uncle’s death, she was approached by Cardinal Cooke, who asked petitioner for her permission to have Archbishop Sheen’s body interred in the crypt at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. Notably, petitioner, as Archbishop Sheen’s closest living relative, was asked to make the ultimate decision regarding the location of Archbishop Sheen’s remains. Respondents admit that petitioner consented to Archbishop Sheen’s burial in St. Patrick’s Cathedral (answer of respondent #5). …But what is relevant to the instant proceeding is that this decision contravenes Archbishop Sheen’s will, that respondents suggested it and that** respondents, by Cardinal Cooke, sought petitioner’s permission**.
After giving that consent in 1979, petitioner now claims, universally supported by Archbishop Sheen’s family, that Archbishop Sheen should be moved to Peoria to support his own canonization process.
…However, the agreement demonstrates that respondents suggested and offered petitioner the opportunity to overlook the decedent’s written burial wishes and then gave petitioner the final say. Certainly, there is no evidence that, in 1979, respondents insisted on strictly enforcing Archbishop Sheen’s will.