By Scott Neuman ~ National Public Radio ~ March 7, 2018
Salvadoran Archbishop Óscar Arnulfo Romero, who was gunned down by a right-wing death squad in 1980 at the start of the country's civil war, will be canonized as a Roman Catholic saint, the Vatican said in a statement Wednesday.
Romero, who had denounced a crackdown on leftist opponents of the country's military government, was killed while celebrating Mass in March 1980. He will be made a saint along with Pope Paul VI, whose canonization was announced last week.
When Vatican theologians declared Romero a martyr in 2015, they said he was killed in odium fidei — "in hatred of the faith."
Francis ruled that Romero could be declared a saint after a Vatican commission certified a miracle attributed to him. Canon law dictates that martyrs require only one verified miracle to become a saint instead of the normal two.
"The long delay in recognizing the obvious fact that Romero was obviously a martyr was shameful," Father James Martin, editor-at-large of the Jesuit magazine America said in a tweet on Wednesday.
The National Catholic Register writes that "Apart from his role in the Council, Paul VI is most widely known for his landmark encyclical Humanae Vitae, which was published in 1968 and reaffirmed the Church's teaching against contraception in the wake of the sexual revolution."

The Register said both of Paul VI's certified miracles were intercessions "involving the healing of an unborn child."
The nature of Romero's miracle has not been made public. However, last year, Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, who was overseeing the canonization process, reportedly told an Italian radio station that the "healing of a pregnant woman that at first glance seems inexplicable" had been attributed to Romero.
No date has been set, but the Register says Paul VI and Romero are expected to be canonized together at the Synod of Bishops in October.
Source: Scott Neuman ~ National Public Radio ~ March 7, 2018