Hopefully this should grow naturally out of your extraordinary life and works. This will get the ball rolling, but you have a long way to go before the canonization process is complete. A postulate will pour over the details of your life, works and your writings. Any miracles attributed to you will also be thoroughly and skeptically investigated. Make sure everything is squeaky clean—nothing is off the table for this investigation, and a "devil's advocate" will be around arguing against your case. " This is simply an acknowledgement that you lived an especially holy life, or were martyred, but it is the first step on the canonization process. After that you will be called "blessed," and a feast day will be dedicated to you in your home diocese, your religious order, and in places significant to your life works. If the Vatican recognizes a second miracle attributed to you, the pope may then name you a Saint. You will be assigned a feast day that can be celebrated by Catholics everywhere, and churches can be named in your honor. Now that Catholics are officially permitted to venerate you, they can ask you to speak with God on their behalf.
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One-sentence summary -- Develop a local "devotion" of people who remember your holiness and pray to you. Have your local bishop initiate a "cause" with the Vatican's Congregation for Sainthood Causes. Get investigated by the church. Be recognized by the pope as "venerable. Have your first miracle verified and be "beatified" by the pope. Get that second miracle verified and become a saint. Answer prayers.

Article: When the kiln is firing, it will be extremely hot, so avoid touching it directly. Use the following casting schedule on your kiln to fuse the glass:  Turn the temperature to 250 °F (121 °C) for 10 minutes. Raise the temperature to around 1,465 °F (796 °C) and leave it on that temperature for 10 minutes. Turn the heat down to 950 °F (510 °C) and leave the kiln at that temperature for 1 hour. Decrease the temperature to 850 °F (454 °C) and wait for 15 minutes. Turn the heat to 100 °F (38 °C). Leave the kiln closed and wait a day before you open it. Don't touch the mold or reach into the kiln until the outside is cool to the touch. The time it takes the kiln to cool will vary. Measure the temperature of the kiln an hour after it fired. This difference between the temperature it fired at and the temperature an hour later is the cooling rate per hour for the kiln. For example, if your kiln fired at 1,500 °F (820 °C) and an hour later the temperature is 1,250 °F (677 °C), the cooling rate is 250 °F (121 °C) per hour. Put gloves on when removing the glass from the kiln as it still might be quite warm. Place the glass on a steady work surface. Use a diamond pad or a grinding stone to make it smooth and get rid of any blemishes. Rub uneven or imperfect areas of the glass with the diamond pad or grinding stone to smooth out the imperfections. Hold the mold gently as you rub it with the diamond pad or grinding stone. Kilns are programmed to turn off after they're finished firing. If you want to, you can force the kiln to turn off by using the on/off switch on the kiln. When you're finished with the kiln, plug it out to cut off the electrical supply reaching it.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Fire your kiln to fuse the glass. Let the kiln fully cool down. Take your mold out of the kiln and refine it. Unplug the kiln when you're finished using it.