Glasgow Priest Attributes Survival to Intercession of Venerable Margaret Sinclair

Surgeon assures Msgr. Peter Smith that there is ‘no medical explanation’ for the remarkable recovery.

Venerable Margaret Sinclair
Venerable Margaret Sinclair (photo: Boston Catholic Journal via CNA)

GLASGOW, Scotland — A Glasgow priest says he firmly believes he survived a recent near-fatal health scare thanks to the miraculous intercession of Venerable Margaret Sinclair, the poor Edinburgh girl-turned-nun who died in 1925.

“For 32 years of priesthood, I’ve been preaching the resurrection of Christ, and this is a sign for me that I am doing something which is true and not wasted,” said Msgr. Peter Smith, parish priest of St Paul’s in Whiteinch, during an exclusive interview with this month’s edition of Flourish, the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Glasgow.

“I don’t want to be the center of attention, but if I’ve been granted this favor, then I have to let it be known and allow the Church to judge it.”

Since being diagnosed with cancer last May, the 58-year-old monsignor has been urging friends and family to pray to Venerable Margaret to aid him. His request was enthusiastically supported by his neighboring Glasgow priest, Father Joe McAuley, who is in charge of promoting Venerable Margaret’s cause for beatification.

Two months ago, though, Msgr. Smith’s health took a turn for the worse, when medics discovered a blood clot on his lung and a deadly infection attacking body tissue from his hips to shoulders. Doctors decided not to operate, as it would kill him. They suspected the Glasgow priest wouldn’t survive 48 hours.

Incredibly, he did, with his surgeon assuring him that there is “no medical explanation” for the remarkable recovery. Msgr. Smith, however, believes that it was the work of Venerable Margaret, something he now wants to tell the world about.

“When you ask someone for a favor, and they grant it, it is only right to say thank you,” he said.

“We don’t expect miracles — and I’m not sure I expected one either — after all, my cancer hasn’t gone away – but I’ve been around long enough in ministry not to be surprised. I’ve seen it happen.”

“If this helps people, in the light of faith, grow closer to the Gospel, then I am doing my job. In illness, I am able to live my priesthood and help other people.”

Venerable Margaret Sinclair was born in Edinburgh’s Cowgate in 1900, one of six children who grew up in poverty in a two-room basement. Her father was a dustman, and she left school at 14, whereupon she worked as a French polisher and became a trade-union activist.

In 1923, she entered a convent of the Order of Poor Clares in London, becoming Sister Mary Francis of the Five Wounds, where she helped the poor before dying of tuberculosis in 1925. She now lies in rest in her home parish of St. Patrick’s in the Cowgate.

“Margaret Sinclair is a wonderful example of an ordinary Scottish woman, close to our time, who lived the Gospel in the everyday, in a poor family home in Edinburgh, at school, in St. Patrick’s parish, the word of industry and into the convent,” said Msgr. Smith.

In 1978, Pope Paul VI declared Margaret Sinclair to be “Venerable.” If the Catholic Church now authenticates Msgr. Smith’s cure to be truly miraculous, it could pave the way for Margaret to become “Blessed,” just one step away from sainthood, which would, normally, require a further miracle.

“Firstly, I am delighted to learn of Msgr. Smith’s dramatically improved health and assure him of my continued prayers in his ongoing battle with cancer,” said Archbishop Leo Cushley. “Potentially, though, this could be a major landmark in the bid to beatify Margaret Sinclair, a great contemporary witness to the desirability and possibility of daily holiness.”

Read more at Flourishnewspaper.co.uk.

For more information on Venerable Margaret, go to: MargaretSinclair.scot.

Titus Brandsma as rector magnificus of the Catholic University of Nijmegen in 1932.

Who Was Titus Brandsma?

Father Brandsma’s beatification cause opened in the Dutch Diocese of Den Bosch in 1952. It was the first process for a candidate killed by the Nazis.