Sunday, May 24, 2009

Archdiocese Investigates Seelos Miracle



The following excerpt is from an article written by George P. Matysek Jr. for The Catholic Review:

Go home and prepare to die.

That’s what Mary Ellen Heibel’s doctors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington told her May 11, 2004, after they discovered that the cancer that had attacked Heibel’s esophagus in 2003 and then a lymph node later that year had spread throughout her body.

At the suggestion of a Pittsburgh priest, Mary Ellen Heibel began praying a novena in 2005 to Blessed Francis X. Seelos – a 19th-century Redemptorist pastor of her parish who died of yellow fever in 1867 in New Orleans.

One week after she began the novena at her parish, Heibel’s cancer disappeared. Gone were tumors in both lungs, her liver, back and sternum. When Dr. Michael Gibson, her doctor at Hopkins, called with the news, Heibel couldn’t believe it.

“I was just so excited. I called everyone,” the 71-year-old mother of four remembered. “I never thought in a million years this would happen.”

Told by her doctors that the unexplained healing could not be the result of her chemotherapy, Heibel is convinced that Blessed Seelos interceded on her behalf. “I know this had to be a miracle,” she said.

Archdiocesan officials are now investigating whether Heibel might just be right.

2 comments:

  1. Hi, I was just browsing through of the articles on your blog. Very interesting articles about healing! I have a question: What is a novena?

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  2. In response to your question, a novena can be best described as a private devotion prayed for 9 successive days. It can also be prayed once a week for 9 consecutive weeks. The prayer is used to petition God for a specific need. In the Catholic Church, it’s a common practice to pray for intercessory help through a particular saint. For additional information, please visit the following link: http://www.mycatholictradition.com/

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