
Bishop Louis Tylka of Peoria, Illinois reflected on Archbishop Fulton J. Sheenâs scheduled September beatification and what it means for the Catholic Church in an exclusive interview with the Daily Caller News Foundation.
The Vatican approved Sheenâs beatification â the step that immediately precedes sainthood â in February, and the ceremony is set to take place on Sept. 24 in St. Louis, Missouri. Tylka, who presides over the diocese in which Sheen was born, raised and ordained to the priesthood, shared how the pioneering the Emmy-winning televangelist and his âtimelessâ ability to share the Gospel is still resonating with people more than 46 years after his death in 1969.
âSheenâs ability to communicate is timeless, just like the Gospel is timeless, because what he was teaching and what he was saying is all rooted in the relationship he had with the Lord and in the Gospel that he committed himself to preach and to live out each and every day as a Catholic,â Tylka told the DCNF.
The Archbishopâs successful TV show âLife Is Worth Livingâ ran from 1952 to 1957 and garnered an estimated 30 million weekly viewers at its height, according to the Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen Foundation. Sheenâs positio â Â a comprehensive document arguing his case for sainthood to the Vatican â credits him with the conversion of more than 42,000 people to the Catholic Faith, Our Sunday Visitor News reported.
âAnd so I think, as we introduce new generations of people into what his life and legacy was all about, what people are discovering is that he was simply effective,â Tylka continued. âBecause you knew when you saw him, when you heard him speak, when you saw him on TV, or especially if you encountered him in person, you knew this was a man who was living off his Faith, witness his Faith, because it was the core of who he was: starting his day with prayer, committing himself to be close to the Lord in the Eucharist, his devotion to the Blessed Mother and his desire to bring all people to an encounter with Christ.â
âAuthentic Christian Witnessâ
Given the recent uptick in conversions to Catholicism among Generation Z Americans â particularly young men â Tylka said he thinks Sheenâs life especially attractive to young people in 2026 as it âwas so authentic and genuine.â
âI think younger generations, we look at the world, and we see people in all different parts of society that are inauthentic and calling us to values that are not, you know, that are worldly values versus the timeless values and the eternal values of the Gospel,â the Peoria bishop told the DCNF. âAnd Sheen is a great example of somebody who says, âNo, Iâm going to live an authentic Christian witness life rooted in the gospel of Jesus Christ, and Iâm going to do that with clarity and conviction and with compassion and with love.â And that witness is attractive to anybody.â
Sheenâs show aired amid a changing American political and cultural landscape, coinciding with rapid post-World War II growth and the Cold Warâs onset. The archbishop was a vehement opponent of communism, denouncing the destructive ideology as âthe final logic of the dehumanization of man,â adding that it âdeny Godâ and âreduces man to a robot,â in his 1948 book âCommunism and the Conscience of the West.â
The DCNF asked Tylka what Sheenâs impending beatification means as socialism and communism ascend in popularity among American youth and when the current mayor of New York City â where the archbishop had lived for 25 years â openly identifies as a socialist.
âHe saw that not all political ideologies are in concert with the Gospel. And what he did was he preached the gospel ⌠whether it was against communism or even against capitalism,â Tylka said. âWhen capitalism loses sight of profit over people, weâve lost our way there.â
âSo, I just think that we are in a time when there are many different political viewpoints and thereâs polarization, both in society and in the Church, I think Sheenâs voice in that department can call us to reason, call us to communion, call us to reflect the Gospel values that uphold the dignity of humanity and to find ways to work together so that we can build the kingdom of heaven here on earth,â he continued. âI think Sheenâs voice is one that is desperately needed for all of us to reflect about how we interact with one another as brothers and sisters in the human family.â
âFor The Worldâ
Tylka touched on the now-concluded intense legal battle between his Diocese of Peoria and the Archdiocese of New York â where Sheen served as auxiliary bishop for 15 years â over the late archbishopâs final resting place. Sheenâs birth diocese eventually prevailed in the dispute in 2019 when the New York archdiocese agreed to transfer his remains to Peoria.
âThe reality is that Fulton Sheen is for the world,â Tylka told the DCNF. âHeâs not for the Diocese of Peoria. Heâs not for the Archdiocese of New York. Heâs not for the Diocese of Rochester. Heâs for the world.â
Sheen served as the Catholic bishop of Rochester, New York for three years from 1966 to 1969 immediately following his lengthy tenure in New York City. The Diocese of Rochester successfully petitioned the Vatican in 2019 to postpone Sheenâs beatification pending a review of âhis role in priestsâ assignmentsâ during his tenure there. The ensuing investigation found no wrongdoing on Sheenâs part.
â said that the world was his parish,â Tylka noted. âIn my six years as serving as bishop, Iâve been blessed to travel to different parts of the world. And Iâm amazed that no matter where I go, whether it be in Tanzania or in Italy or in France or all across this wonderful country, when I say that I am the Bishop of Peoria, Fulton Sheenâs name comes into the conversation.
Tylka recounted a pilgrimage he led to France with his dioceseâs vocations office âa few years back.â
âWe were in the town where St. Margaret Mary Alacoque had the apparitions of the Sacred Heart. I was in the back of the room. It was January. It was cold, so I had my coat on. There was an 83-year-old priest who had come to give a talk to our pilgrims,â he said. âThey showed us a little movie on St. Mary Margaret Alacoqueâs life and the meaning of the Sacred Heart.â
When the film ended, the priest asked his group where they were from. After someone said Peoria, the elderly priest immediately said âFulton Sheen,â Tylka told the DCNF. He added that one of the pilgrims from his diocese told the priest âWell, our bishop is hereâ prompting the octogenarian to come ârunning upâ to him.
âFulton Sheenâs Bishopâ
âThis 83-year-old priest came running up to me at the back of the room, finding me to tell me, since I am âFulton Sheenâs bishop,'â the current Peoria bishop said. âAnd I thought, Iâm not Fulton Sheenâs bishop, but I am the Bishop of the diocese that he was from.â
The priest went on to tell Tylka that listening to Sheen as a young boy âopened his heart to explore vocation.â
âAnd now, 83 years old, was still active in his priesthood,â Tylka added. âIâm so blessed to be able to hear those stories time and time again. People want to share how Sheen impacted their life.â
He told the DCNF that Sheenâs road to beatification and potential canonization makes him and his diocese âimmensely proud, in a good way.â
âNot proud as a sin, but proud as a native sonâ the bishop clarified. âAnd I speak in my confirmation homily to the young people today that lest you think only somebody far away or a long time ago can become a saint, we need only look at our brother who was born and raised and ordained a priest here in our diocese.â
âWhen we made the decision to move the beatification from the diocese â because we donât have a venue that could host 70,000 people in our diocese â to St Louis, there were some who were really kind of upset, because they think that he belongs to us, and as I said earlier, he belongs to the world because he was a bishop of the Church, a priest of the Church,â Tylka continued.
âAnd so, we have a responsibility to share him with the world. And thatâs why, not only do we want the beatification to be a grand celebration of his own witness, is why we are working on developing our Sheen Experience, transforming the high school he went to into a new museum and immersive experience, so that people from around the world who will come and visit can have an encounter through him with the Lord,â he added.
The Sheen Experience is planned massive, interactive museum in Peoria dedicated to exploring and honoring the late archbishop and media pioneerâs life. It is scheduled to be completed in 2027.
âRichest Soilâ
Tylka said that as much as his largely rural Downstate Illinois diocese is proud for its native son, âwe also know that we have had to share him with the world, and thatâs a great blessing to us.â
âI think Sheen would also point back to some of the lessons he learned as he grew up in this area: Lessons of hospitality, responsibility, service,â he said. âThese are the values that we uphold, even to this day. And so people, they can learn more about this wonderful part of the country through him and all of that will experience the life of the Church and the life of the Gospel.â
âI grew up in the south suburbs of Chicago. I was a priest of Chicago before coming downstate,â Tylka pointed out. â the heart of America. We have some of the richest soil in the world for growing, and I joke, thereâs more corn and soybeans in my diocese than there are actual people there.â
âBut thereâs also rich soil here of Faith, and I believe, as I have come to love and know the diocese over the last six years serving as bishop here, he added. âThereâs so much good going on here, and thereâs a clear feeling that the spirit is alive and well in the church, and thereâs better days for the Church. So, itâs a great part of the country. And when you come across the country and come through Illinois, you know the heart of Illinois is also in the Diocese of Peoria.â
61 Minutes
The Catholic Church requires as a prerequisite for beatification that one confirmed miracle devoid of scientific or natural explanation be attributed to a candidateâs intercession. For canonization, this threshold is two confirmed miracles.
TyĹka shared with the DCNF the story of the one confirmed miracle brought about by a motherâs prayer to Sheen in his diocese back in 2010.
âYoung boy was born. The birth was planned to be taking place at home, and the young boy was born without a heartbeat, with no pulse. And the family â very devout and had a devotion to Fulton Sheen â as the birth was happening and the complications were becoming evident, began praying for the intercession of Fulton Sheen,â the bishop said.
âAnd of course, the baby was transferred from the home to the hospital, and doctors were, of course, trying to revive the child. After 61 minutes, when the doctors were ready to basically call everything off and say that the child was not going to survive is when the heart started beating and the pulse became stronger,â he added.
Tylka noted that the boy, fittingly named James Fulton Engstrom, is now a healthy teenager.
âLike any other normal 15-year-old kid in high school and plays sports, and part of a loving family. So, itâs truly remarkable to know this young manâs life literally came about with the intercession of Fulton Sheen helping his heart to start,â he told the DCNF.
When asked by the National Catholic Register how he felt about Sheenâs announced beatification in February, Engstrom said âI feel pretty darn good about it.â
âWeâre grateful we already have potential miracles that weâll begin to investigate once the beatification is done. So, maybe that second miracle wonât be too far off,â Tylka added.
âOnly Scratched The Surfaceâ
Tylka told the DCNF that he is âamazedâ that while âFulton Sheen wrote over 66 booksâ gave âcountless talks and homilies, and you have all the video from the show,â he has âonly scratched the surface in my own personal reading and understanding of him. â
âWhat I find most remarkable, personally, is the fact that he touched so many lives. And when I say again, anywhere in the world, when I say that I am from Peoria, somebody starts talking about Fulton Sheen,â he went on. âHeâs got so many quotes. I read a little Sheen every morning at My Holy Hour, and I come away almost every day with something that I find powerful and reflective on. But Iâm just amazed at the breadth of the impact heâs had on people around the world.â
âIf you donât know Sheen, get to know him. Read a book, watch a video, learn more about this remarkable American bishop who is now going to be Blessed,â Tylka concluded.
Readers can visit celebratesheen.com to stay up to date on news regarding Archbishop Sheenâs beatification as well as for information about the Diocese of Peoriaâs forthcoming Sheen Experience.
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