Theologians approved Scrosoppi's writings as a prerequisite for beatification on 14 March 1952. The introduction of the cause for sainthood - which conferred upon him the title of
Servant of God - came on 27 February 1964 under
Pope Paul VI. The declaration that he led a life of
heroic virtue allowed for Paul VI to name him
Venerable on 12 June 1978.
Pope John Paul II beatified him on 4 October 1981 and would also canonize him as a saint on 10 June 2001. His Day of Remembrance in the liturgy is on April 3 (day of his death).
The miracle for canonization For the purposes of canonization, the
Catholic Church considers to be necessary have a second
miracle after the one required for the
beatification: in the case of Luigi Scrosoppi, it considered miraculous the healing of Peter Chungu Shitima, a terminal
AIDS sufferer, which occurred in 1996. Peter Chungu Shitima was a student of the oratory of St.
Philip Neri of
Oudtshoorn, a town near the southern coast of
South Africa. In the
spring of 1996, he began to experience increasingly serious disturbances, so much so that he was hospitalized, where he was diagnosed with AIDS at the terminal stage. The religious community in which he belonged began unremitting prayers, to obtain the intercession of Luigi Scrosoppi. In the night between 9 and 10 October 1996, the young man dreamed of Scrosoppi, and suddenly he felt he was cured, awakening, resuming his normal activity. The healing was observed by doctors Johannes Le Roux and Pete du Toit, both non-Catholics, who could not explain the incident. The case, examined at the Oudtshoorn Curia, was submitted to the
Congregation for the Causes of Saints who, on July 1, 2000, promulgated in the presence of
Pope John Paul II the miracle decree for the "rapid, complete and lasting healing of Peter Chungu Shitima by polyineuritis and cachexia in positive HIV subject. ==References==