Illinois-born Archbishop Fulton Sheen receives Vatican's blessing for beatification

Family shares story of birth miracle that paved way for Sheen's steps to Catholic sainthood
Sunday, April 5, 2026
PEORIA, Ill. (WLS) -- As Catholic conversions rise this Easter, a local faith icon nears sainthood.

Illinois-born Archbishop Fulton Sheen, who inspired countless conversations, now has the Vatican's blessing to be beatified.

ABC7 spoke with the family behind the miracle that paved the way.



Archbishop Sheen, once known for bringing faith into millions of homes, is one step closer to sainthood, thanks in part to the story of the birth of one Illinois boy.



In the early days of television, Archbishop Sheen built a following that spanned the nation earning the nickname "America's Bishop."



"If Fulton Sheen were alive today, you would find him on TikTok, and you would find him on Instagram, and you would find him on all the social media podcasts, because that's what he wanted to do," said Bishop Louis Tylka with the Diocese of Peoria.

The pioneer televangelist's radio and television programs reached millions in the 50s and 60s.

"Everybody was made to feel that they were the most important person with him," Bishop Tylka said. "He was able to speak truth to power. He spoke the truth of the gospel, and he did so with great wisdom and wit."

SEE ALSO | Catholic churches expecting largest number of new members in years this Easter

Decades later, the Vatican has cleared the way for his beatification, centered on one reported miracle.



"I just trusted that Fulton Sheen was praying for us," Bonnie Engstrom said.

In 2010, Engstrom's son was born without a pulse.

"There was a knot in James's umbilical cord... and it tightened so much that it cut off his blood supply and his oxygen supply so that when he was born, he was essentially a stillborn baby," Engstrom said.



Doctors tried to restart her son's heart, and Engstrom kept praying.

"I do remember very clearly in my head repeating Fulton Sheen's name over and over and over again," Engstrom said. "I kind of think it was like my cry for help."

Then, after more than hour, there was a miracle.

"Everyone took their hands off to call time of death," Engstrom said. "And it was at that moment after James not having a heartbeat for 61 minutes, that his heart started to beat again. And then it never stopped."

Engstrom named James Fulton after Sheen. Today he's a healthy 15-year-old boy.



Engstrom says doctors found no medical explanation. The Vatican later recognized it as a miracle tied to Sheen.

"It's something that we try to stress to our kids, like you should appreciate this," Engstrom said. "Our family has a special like footnote in all of church history in a way that most people do not like in the history of the world."

SEE ALSO | Faithful celebrate Easter Sunday, join worship services across Chicago area

"To have a Chicago-born pope, you know, be the one to finally sign off on moving forward... signing off on a remarkable individual who's another son of the land of Lincoln," Bishop Tylka said. "It's just kind of all those things line up."

The beatification Mass for Archbishop Fulton Sheen is set for September 24. in St. Louis, Missouri. The location was chosen to accommodate the anticipated large crowds.

More details about Sheen's ceremony from the Catholic Diocese of Peoria can be found here.
Copyright © 2026 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.