Excerpt from The Denver Post
By Electa Draper
The wheels of canonization grind slowly, but a German nun who lived 100 years  ago could be  named a saint because the Vatican believes a Colorado Springs boy  experienced a miracle in 1999.  Mother Theresia Bonzel, who founded the Sisters  of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration in Olpe, Germany, in 1863, is scheduled  for beatification in November —  a step toward sainthood —  as a result of the  boy's  miraculous recovery. Two  Colorado Spring nuns    prayed to Bonzel  on  behalf of  4-year-old Luke Burgie, and the  events that followed — over the next  14 years — have been  closely scrutinized and investigated by church officials  and doctors.
Sister Margaret Mary Preister and the late Sister Evangeline Spenner  had  just recited a  series of prayers  over nine straight days asking Mother Bonzel,  who died in 1905, to intercede for Luke.
Doctors couldn't explain Luke's   sudden recovery, and the Vatican machinery  for investigating alleged miracles began to churn.
Journalist Bill Briggs, who wrote in depth about Catholic Church  investigations into such supernatural occurrences  in his book "The Third  Miracle," said the process is, in a word, "rigorous."
"I think what would surprise people outside the church is how very dubious  investigators are," Briggs said. "To  examine these claims, they look at  hundreds, if not thousands, of medical records and other pieces of evidence.  It's the furthest thing from a rubber stamp."
Briggs said the situation or illness doesn't have to be terminal or even  dramatic. The cure  simply has to be rapid, complete and utterly inexplicable by  ordinary means. The church interviews the original doctors in the case, and a  team of independent medical experts then pore over all the records.
Colorado Springs Bishop Michael Sheridan on Friday congratulated the  local  motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration on the Vatican  pronouncement of a miracle in the Burgie case.
Read more: Vatican Declares Healing a Miracle
 
 
