Faithful flock to Missouri convent to see intact remains of exhumed nun: 'The hand of God at work'


Hundreds of people have descended on a rural Missouri town to flock to a convent that recently exhumed the remains of its founder.

Four years after the death and burial of Sister Wilhelmina Lancaster at age 95, The Benedictine Sisters of Mary, Queen of the Apostles made a surprising discovery after sisters exhumed her wooden coffin on May 18 and found her remains to be remarkably intact.

She was originally entombed in the outdoor convent cemetery in Gower, Missouri, and was being relocated to a shrine to St. Joseph in their chapel, according to Catholic Key magazine.

In Catholicism, a body that resists normal decay after death is considered incorrupt, and “incorruptible saints give witness to the truth of the resurrection of the body and the life that is to come,” according to the Catholic News Agency.

The process to pursue sainthood has not been initiated “in this case yet,” Bishop Johnston, the Diocese of Kansas City–St. Joseph, said in a statement.

Catholics have flocked to Gower, Missouri, to visit the recently exhumed body of Sister Wilhelmina Lancaster, OSB, whose intact with no signs of decomposition remains have shocked believers.
Lancaster, the founder of the Benedictine Sisters of Mary, Queen of Apostles, died in 2019 at 95.

In an email to USA TODAY, Lori Rosebrough of Overland Park, Kansas, who stood in line to see the remains, said the incorrupt body is a testimony to Sister Wilhelmina Lancaster’s holiness, and that she hopes this will give cause to the Catholic Church to raise the nun’s title to Saint.

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