Pope Francis has deemed the first known Black Roman Catholic priest in the United States to be “venerable,” positioning the former slave for possible sainthood.
The pontiff’s designation of the Rev. Augustine Tolton as venerable, meaning the church intensely scrutinized his life and recognizes it as one of “heroic virtue,” puts Tolton two steps away from possible canonization, the Diocese of Springfield explained in announcing the designation on June 12.
Born to a Missouri slave in 1854, Tolton, his mother and two siblings, with help from Union soldiers, eluded Confederate guns and escaped across the Mississippi River into Illinois in 1862, settling in Quincy, a river city about 110 miles (177 kilometers) northwest of St. Louis.
Baptized a Catholic, the faith of his family’s Missouri owners, Tolton studied for the priesthood in Rome because his race precluded his acceptance to a U.S. seminary.
“Father Tolton’s story, from slave to priest, is an incredible journey that shows how God has a plan for all of us,” Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Springfield Diocese said in a statement. “Father Tolton overcame the odds of slavery, prejudice and racism … (and) carried his crosses in life quietly and heroically.”
Work continues on Tolton’s history. If a miracle can be attributed to his ministry, the pope may declare him “blessed.” A second miracle would make him eligible for sainthood. The Springfield Diocese, which includes Quincy, and the Archdiocese of Chicago, where Tolton ministered to the poor before dying at 43 in 1897, have been working on his canonization since 2003.
Michael Patrick Murphy, director of Catholic Studies for Loyola University Chicago’s Department of Theology, said for Tolton to move from “Servant of God” in 2011 to “venerable” just eight years later indicates the seriousness of the church’s review.
Reaching the “venerable” stage “kicks the machine into gear” as researchers search for miracles, a weighty and fact-reliant process, he said.
“Miracles by definition interrupt the laws of nature,” Murphy said. “But there are such strenuous, intellectual processes that are so normative- and so protocol-driven that there can’t be a retroactive, ‘Let’s make this happen’ type-of-thing.”
Tolton assumed he would work in Africa, but once ordained at age 31, he was sent back to Quincy. A biographer recounted Tolton’s conversation with another cleric shortly before departing in which he wondered whether America deserved being called by many “the world’s most enlightened nation.” “If America has not yet seen a Black priest,” Tolton said, “it must see one now.”
He endured three years of racism in Quincy before “Good Father Gus” moved to Chicago. He is buried in Quincy.
Paprocki said the diocese is exploring establishing a shrine to Tolton, perhaps in a now-closed Quincy church.
“From slave to priest. That’s an amazing American story,” Murphy said. “He went from having lived amid the greatest sin in American culture to being a minister that would address that kind of moral crime, a fully scoped life. Prisoner to liberator.”
Tolton is one of six Black Americans currently being considered as candidates for sainthood, Bishop Joseph N. Perry of the Archdiocese of Chicago told The Columbia Missourian newspaper. Although he is considered to be the first black Catholic priest in the United States, there were earlier priests of known African descent.
Tolton, however, was the first to to identify as black and endure the treatment blacks suffered during his lifetime, Perry said.
His predecessors include the three Healy brothers, sons of an Irishman and mixed-race woman. The brothers had skin light enough to let them pass as white, and they achieved positions of leadership in the church. James Healy, ordained in 1854, went on to become the bishop of Portland.
“Their skin color tone presented them fair enough to move within majority society,” Perry said. “They did not consider themselves African-American, they did not move in African-American circles … the family ignored those terms regarding their own heritage.”
Tolton is revered today for the courage and resolve he displayed while pursuing a calling as a priest against formidable odds, Perry said.
For black Catholics, Tolton has become a role model and a symbol of the church’s diversity. There were 74.3 million practicing Catholics in 2017 in the U.S, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. But only 3 million of them are Black, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops reported.
“In African-American Catholic circles, he has been known quite well,” Perry said. “His name was always enunciated as being a pioneer amongst us, as the first link in a long chain of other African-American priests and religious folk in service to the church.”