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The Conversation
The Conversation
Michael A. Di Giovine, Professor of Anthropology, West Chester University of Pennsylvania

Italian teenager Carlo Acutis’ upcoming canonization reflects the Vatican’s desire to appeal to a new generation of Catholics

Carlo Acutis souvenirs displayed in a shop window in Assisi in June 2023. Michael Di Giovine, CC BY

The Italian teenager Carlo Acutis, who died in 2006 of a rare form of leukemia at age 15, will soon become the Catholic Church’s first “millennial saint.”

Acutis was a computer programmer who created virtual exhibitions and databases on Eucharistic miracles – when the bread and wine are believed to change into the physical body and blood of Jesus – and the reported sightings of the Virgin Mary. Although the specific date has not been announced, the Vatican indicated that his canonization will occur in 2025 when the church celebrates its jubilee, or holy year that occurs every quarter century.

Canonization is the official term for declaring a person a saint. It requires the verification of a faithful life through an often lengthy research process. This includes confirming two miracles. Acutis’ first miracle was attributed to a Brazilian child who could not eat solid food because of a pancreatic disorder, but was inexplicably healed in 2013 after praying to the teenager. The second involved a Costa Rican student who, after suffering a head injury, awoke from her coma after her mother prayed at Acutis’ shrine in 2022.

Described by the bishop of Assisi as an “ordinary” teenager with extraordinary faith, Acutis’ upcoming canonization reflects the Vatican’s interest in making a more modern church that appeals to a new generation of faithful.

This is a trend that began at the turn of the millennium with another charismatic saint, Padre Pio of Pietrelcina – one of the world’s most prayed-to saints – whose devotion I’ve studied for over a decade.

Born in Pietrelcina, Italy, in 1887 and originally named Francesco Forgione, the Capuchin Franciscan priest was hailed by the Vatican as a “saint for the millennium” when he was canonized in 2002. Pio was arguably the first saint of the 21st century to speak to the culture of the time.

Padre Pio: Living saint of the 20th century

A poor friar, Pio was believed to have had the stigmata, or bleeding wounds of Jesus’ crucifixion. Considered a living saint, he reportedly had mystical visions of Jesus and could know beforehand what people came to confess.

In his lifetime, Pio used devotees’ donations to set up a research hospital at the shrine in San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy, to couple medical healing with spiritual healing.

When he died in 1968, the Italian air force dropped flowers on his funeral procession attended by an estimated 100,000 people, and his 2002 canonization ceremony had a record 300,000 attendees. His extraordinary veneration in 2008-2009 drew upward of 9 million pilgrims to the town of San Giovanni Rotondo. That year, he was exhumed and exhibited before being moved into a new ultramodern basilica designed by globally recognized architect Renzo Piano and adorned with work from leading contemporary artists.

A saint's body, dressed in a black robe, lies inside a glass case and visitors extend their hands to touch it.
Children touch the tomb of Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, in San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy, in 2018. Michael A. Di Giovine, CC BY

In 2016, Pope Francis brought his body to Rome to be the centerpiece for his special Jubilee Year of Mercy. Tens of thousands watched his procession through the city of Rome to the Vatican.

Pio’s “rock star” popularity was – and continues to be – fueled by global media that includes over five multilingual magazines, a publishing house, a radio station, a satellite TV station and a website, which together net the shrine over US$150 million per year.

Such modern media was rare for the turn-of-the-millennium, but were considered necessary for circulating photos and videos of his stigmata, something people had to see to believe.

Acutis: An everyday saint

Yet as Pio’s devotees get older, the church seems to be turning to Acutis to appeal to a new, more worldly demographic.

The body of a young boy with black, curly hair, dressed in jeans and sneakers, seen through  a glass-covered opening in a sarcophagus.
The body of Carlo Acutis, dressed in jeans and Nike sneakers, lying in his modern tomb, Church of the Spoliation, Assisi, June 2023. Michael Di Giovine, CC BY

Like Pio, Acutis enjoys widespread appeal among a new generation in search of contemporary models of holiness, according to journalist Rhina Guidos, who interviewed Latin American teens in 2023. The appeal of Acutis lies in being an ordinary person who models everyday faith – whom Pope Francis calls a “saint next door.”

What sets Acutis apart from other saints is that “none of these individuals thus far have used cell phones, played PlayStation videogames, or searched for information on Google,” writes the Rev. Will Conquer in his biography, “A Millennial in Paradise.” Indeed, the media is already lauding Acutis as “God’s influencer” and the “patron saint of the Internet.”

In January 2024, Pope Francis urged young people to use their modern, everyday interests for the church as Acutis did: “Since he was very good at getting around on the internet, he used it in the service of the Gospel, spreading love for prayer, the witness of faith and charity toward others.”

His story is also marketed through media the new generation uses, especially TikTok, Instagram and YouTube. His biographies take the form of comics or young adult novels. Biographies with titles such as “A Saint in Sneakers” and “God’s Computer Genius” mix stories of his holiness with discussions of his love of Nutella and struggle with weight, his interest in soccer, hiking and searching for information on Google, and his passion for Pokémon and Halo video games.

His online exhibitions also have gotten an old-school makeover: A physical version has been created and is exhibited in parishes throughout Europe and the U.S. – a way to bridge younger and older generations. Located in Pennsylvania, the Malvern Retreat House, one of the oldest and largest spiritual centers in the U.S., boasts a permanent exhibition of Acutis’ Eucharistic miracles in its Blessed Carlo Acutis Shrine and Center for Eucharistic Encounter.

A modern pilgrimage

On his deathbed, Acutis asked to be buried in Assisi, Italy – the birthplace of St. Francis, the founder of the Franciscan religious order and the patron saint of Italy, since he was attracted to his teachings.

Acutis was first buried in a cemetery in Assisi, but once his canonization process opened in 2019, his body was exhumed and dressed in jeans and sneakers; it was placed in a modern, see-through sarcophagus in the small church of the Sanctuary of the Spoliation in a little-visited area of the town.

That next year, 2020, over 117,000 pilgrims visited despite COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, according to the Diocese of Assisi. It continues to be popular; when I visited in June 2024, long lines of people, especially children, from as far away as the United States and Sri Lanka were lining up for a chance to pray at his tomb.

A long line of people walking past a sarcophagus, with some touching it.
Visitors from around the world visiting the tomb of Carlo Acutis in Assisi in June 2023. Michael A. Di Giovine, CC BY

Indeed, the town of Assisi has enjoyed a makeover of sorts, thanks to Acutis. A modern chapel holding Acutis’ heart was created in Assisi’s cathedral, San Ruffino. He is given equal billing as St. Francis in guided tours. Even souvenir stands incorporate a modern look, as ubiquitous images of St. Francis now share space with key chains, photos and pictures of Acutis in jeans, Adidas and a backpack.

Acutis is continuing the trend started by the Catholic Church with Padre Pio’s sainthood to modernize devotion. As a perpetual “teenager in heaven,” laid to rest in Nikes, jeans and a warmup jacket, a tech-savvy and socially conscious generation of young Catholics may very well see themselves in him.

The Conversation

Michael A. Di Giovine does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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