All Holy Heroes
Souls the Church is
testing for sainthood.
Servants of God, Venerables, Blesseds — and a few whose cause has not yet opened. Pick one and stay with them.
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Pick your Holy Hero
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Pray together
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Tell us what happens
45 Holy Heroes
Archdeacon Bartholomew Cavanagh
Parish Priest of Knock during the 1879 apparition, who chronicled hundreds of cures and helped establish Knock as Ireland's foremost Marian shrine.
Sister Clare Theresa Crockett
Northern Irish former actress turned religious sister with the Servant Sisters of the Home of the Mother, killed in the 2016 Ecuador earthquake aged 33.
Frank Duff
Dublin civil servant and lay Catholic who founded the Legion of Mary in 1921, growing it into a worldwide apostolate of millions of evangelising laity.
Canon James O'Neill
Belfast canon and parish priest who founded the Knights of Saint Columbanus in 1915 to defend and promote Catholic faith, education and culture in Ireland.
Patrick Joseph Peyton, C.S.C.
Irish-born Holy Cross priest, known as the Rosary Priest, who led the Family Rosary Crusade and coined 'The family that prays together stays together.'
Cardinal John Francis D'Alton
Cardinal Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland (1946-1963), classics scholar and Maynooth president who led the Irish Church through the post-war era and the opening of Vatican II.
Monsignor James Horan
Visionary Parish Priest of Knock who built the Basilica, hosted Pope John Paul II in 1979 and dreamed Knock Airport into existence on a 'foggy boggy site' in west Mayo.
Blessed John Sullivan, S.J.
Dublin-born Jesuit, son of a Church of Ireland Lord Chancellor, convert to Catholicism and teacher at Clongowes Wood College, beatified in Ireland in 2017.
Father Slavko Barbarić, O.F.M.
Bosnian-Herzegovinian Franciscan priest, psychotherapist and author who served as a spiritual director at Medjugorje from 1984 until his sudden death in 2000.
Pope Leo XIII
Italian-born Vincenzo Pecci reigned as the 'Social Pope' from 1878-1903, transforming Catholic social teaching with Rerum Novarum and earning the title 'Rosary Pope' for his Marian devotion.
Father William Joseph Gabriel Doyle, S.J.
Irish Jesuit and decorated World War I chaplain, killed at Passchendaele in 1917 while giving last rites to wounded soldiers under heavy shellfire.
Servant of God Sister Marie of St Peter and of the Holy Family, O.C.D.
French Discalced Carmelite of Tours whose locutions originated the modern devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus and the Golden Arrow prayer of reparation against blasphemy.
Blessed Marie of the Incarnation (Barbe Acarie), O.C.D.
French Carmelite who, as the laywoman Madame Acarie, brought the Discalced Carmelite reform of Teresa of Ávila to France; entered Carmel as a widow and was beatified by Pius VI in 1791.
Blessed Maria Pierina De Micheli
Italian religious sister of the Daughters of the Immaculate Conception who promoted devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus and originated the Holy Face Medal; beatified by Benedict XVI in 2010.
Venerable Léon Papin-Dupont
French Catholic layman known as the 'Holy Man of Tours'; promoted devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus and nightly Eucharistic adoration; declared Venerable by Pope Pius XII.
Edel Mary Quinn
Irish Legion of Mary envoy to East and Central Africa, who founded hundreds of praesidia across the continent while dying slowly of tuberculosis.
Alphonsus 'Alfie' Lambe
Young Irish Legion of Mary envoy to South America, who established Legion praesidia across five nations before dying in Buenos Aires at twenty-six.
Ellen Organ, 'Little Nellie of Holy God'
Irish child mystic of Cork who, dying of tuberculosis at age four, received Holy Communion before age seven; her story moved Pius X to lower the age for First Communion in 1910.
Matthew 'Matt' Talbot
Dublin labourer who broke a sixteen-year addiction to alcohol and lived forty years of hidden penance, prayer and quiet charity until his death in 1925.
Father Michael Ross SDB
Cork-born Salesian priest who pioneered Catholic media in Ireland, founding Radio Maria Ireland and serving as director of the Divine Mercy Conference and the Legion of Mary.
Sister Ruth Maria O'Callaghan
Dublin-born Servant Sister of the Home of the Mother who led the order's first Irish community in Roscommon and offered her cancer suffering for the Church before her death at 43.
Father Henry Kowalczyk, SHM
American priest of Polish descent of the Servants of the Home of the Mother who died ministering to a Carmelite community in Amposta, Spain, during the 2020 pandemic.
Elisabeth 'Mamie' Van Keerbergen
Belgian laywoman and Servant of Suffering, spiritual mother to Fr Rafael Alonso and the priests of the Home of the Mother, who offered her long illness for the sanctification of clergy.
Blessed Pope John Paul I (Albino Luciani)
The 'Smiling Pope' whose 33-day pontificate in 1978 left a lasting impression of humility and warmth; beatified by Pope Francis in 2022.
Venerable Nano Nagle (Honora Nagle)
Eighteenth-century Irish foundress who defied the Penal Laws to open clandestine schools for poor Catholic children in Cork and founded the Presentation Sisters.
Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice
Irish merchant turned religious founder who, after widowhood, opened free schools for the poor and established the Christian Brothers and Presentation Brothers.
Daniel O'Connell
Kerry-born lawyer and statesman known as 'The Liberator', whose peaceful campaign won Catholic Emancipation in 1829 and reshaped the place of Catholics in the British Isles.
Blessed Dominic Barberi (Domenico Barberi, C.P.)
Italian Passionist missionary to England known as the 'Apostle of England's Conversion'; received Saint John Henry Newman into the Catholic Church at Littlemore in 1845.
Father Patrick Murray CSsR
Irish Redemptorist who served as Superior General of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer for thirty-eight years (1909-1947), the longest tenure in the order's history.
Mary Beirne (later Mary O'Connell)
The principal eyewitness of the 1879 Knock apparition; her detailed deposition described the three figures, the altar, the Lamb and cross. She lived until 1936 and reaffirmed her testimony on her deathbed.
Patrick Hill
Schoolboy of about thirteen and one of the principal witnesses of the 1879 Knock apparition; his deposition is among the most detailed and is regularly quoted in accounts of what the villagers saw.
Maria Valtorta
Italian Catholic writer and visionary, bedridden for decades in Viareggio, author of 'The Poem of the Man-God'; her writings have not been recognised by the Church as supernatural.
Gilberte Degeimbre
Youngest of the five Beauraing visionaries and the last surviving witness; she died in 2015 at age 91 after a lifetime of quiet testimony at the sanctuary.
Blessed Solanus Casey (Bernard Francis Casey, O.F.M. Cap.)
American Capuchin friar and 'simplex' priest renowned in Detroit and New York for his counsel, miraculous healings and tireless service to the poor through the Great Depression.
Blessed Thaddeus McCarthy (Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh)
Fifteenth-century Irish bishop who, prevented by politics from ever ruling his sees of Ross and Cork, died on pilgrimage at Ivrea; the 'White Martyr of Munster'.
Liam Coyne
Irish solicitor and district justice who, with his wife Judy, founded the Knock Shrine Society in 1935 to promote and organise pilgrimage at the Marian shrine in County Mayo.
Judy Coyne (Dame Judy Coyne)
Irish lay Catholic and co-founder of the Knock Shrine Society; the first Irish woman ever made a Dame of the Order of St Sylvester for her work at Knock.
Guido Schaffer
Brazilian medical doctor and seminarian known as the 'Surfer Angel', who served the poor of Rio de Janeiro and drowned at age thirty-four; declared Venerable by Pope Francis in 2024.
Venerable Catherine McAuley, R.S.M.
Dublin laywoman who inherited a fortune and built a House of Mercy for poor women and children, founding the Sisters of Mercy in 1831 — now one of the largest women's congregations in the world.
Venerable Alfred Pampalon, C.Ss.R.
Quebec Redemptorist priest who died at twenty-eight after a short, prayer-soaked life. Today invoked across the Americas as a powerful intercessor for those battling addiction.
Jim Browne
Irish lay evangelist from Killadoon, County Mayo, who turned a personal conversion at Medjugorje into thirty years of leading others there. Founder of the Ark of Mir apostolate.
Reggie Donnelly
Belfast layman who founded Our Lady Queen of Peace Pilgrimages in 1986 and led thousands of pilgrims to Medjugorje while raising millions for Mother's Village orphanage.
Father Patrick Aloysius Murray
Irish Catholic priest and dogmatic theologian who taught at St Patrick's College, Maynooth, defending papal authority and ecclesiology before Vatican I.
J. R. R. Tolkien
Oxford philologist and author of The Lord of the Rings; a daily communicant whose mother’s death as a Catholic convert and lifelong devotion to the Blessed Sacrament shaped a profoundly Catholic literary vision.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
English journalist, novelist and lay theologian — best known as G. K. Chesterton — who entered the Catholic Church in 1922. A giant of a man whose joyful, paradoxical faith fills books like Orthodoxy, The Everlasting Man, and The Innocence of Father Brown, where argument becomes hospitality and reason an act of thanksgiving.
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