

She lived a full life, generally hidden from the world in a Carmelite convent in Portugal, but left us a wealth of wisdom that we can all learn from. Read more: 20 Memorable lines from Mother Angelica According to the National Catholic Register, it took 30 full-time employees to examine the life of Sister Lucia, sifting through all of her writings as well as gathering testimonies from 60 witnesses.

The initial phase of Sister Lucia’s canonization process took nine years to finish because Sister Lucia lived a long life, dying at the age of 97.

Read more: 5 Surprising Revelations of the Third Secret of FatimaĪfter the official positio document is written, the cause will be forwarded to Rome, where the Vatican Congregation for the Causes for Canonization will review what has been collected and determine whether Sister Lucia lived a life of “heroic virtue.” (It is her life as a follower of Jesus like any one of us, not her role in the apparitions of Our Lady, that is examined.) If the decision is favorable, Sister Lucia would then be declared “Venerable.” It was recently announced that “the diocesan phase of the canonization process for Sister Lucia, one of the three seers who saw and conversed with Our Lady of the Rosary at Fatima, came to an official close on February 13.” This announcement marked a major step for Sister Lucia’s canonization process, which began almost 10 years ago.
