(Reuters) - The
late Pope John Paul II will be made a saint, the Vatican said on Friday,
announcing that Pope Francis had approved a second miracle attributed
to the Polish pontiff, who led the Roman Catholic Church from 1978 to
2005.
The Vatican said Pope John
XXIII, who reigned from 1958 to 1963 and called the Second Vatican
Council - which enacted sweeping reforms to modernize the Church - would
also be made a saint.
No dates for the canonization ceremonies were immediately given but the Vatican said they were expected by the end of the year.
John
Paul had already been credited with asking God to cure French nun Marie
Simon-Pierre Normand of Parkinson's disease, which helped lead to his
beatification in 2011, when he was declared a "blessed" of the
Church.
Two confirmed miracles are usually required under Vatican rules for the declaration of a saint.
The
second miracle attributed to John Paul's intercession is the
inexplicable curing of a woman from Costa Rica who prayed to him for
help with her medical condition on the day of his beatification. Details
of that miracle were due to be announced in Costa Rica on Friday.
In
the case of Pope John XXIII, who was known as the "good pope", Francis
waved the customary rules which require a second miracle after
beatification, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said. John
XXIII was beatified in 2000.
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