Pope John Paul II
Today, April 2, the Church commemorates the twentieth
anniversary of the death of St. John Paul II in 2005, whose feast is celebrated
on October 22. He was canonized by Pope Francis along with St. John XXIII in
2014.
The article below is taken from the website of the Saint John Paul II National Shrine
Introduction
“Everyone knows John Paul II: his face, his characteristic
way of moving and speaking; his immersion in prayer and his spontaneous
cheerfulness. Many of his words have become indelibly engraved in our memories,
starting with the passionate cry with which he introduced himself to the people
at the beginning of his pontificate: ‘Open wide the doors to Christ, and be not
afraid of him!’ Or this saying: ‘No one can live a trial life; no one can love
experimentally.’ An entire pontificate is condensed in words like these. It is
as though he would like to open the doors for Christ everywhere and wishes to
open up to people the gate that leads to true life, to true love.”
(Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI)
The life of a saint is one in which the Gospel is luminous.
In this way, the Church has received an inestimable gift in St. John Paul II.
Through his life, he has shown the radiation of the fatherhood of God in
humanity, or what St. Paul calls the "newness of life in Christ" (Cf.
Rom. 6: 4).
Childhood
“I had not yet made my First Holy Communion when I lost my mother: I was barely nine years old.”
(Karol Wojtyła)
Karol Józef Wojtyła was born on May 18, 1920, in Wadowice,
Poland, the youngest of three children. Although he was born into a loving
family, his early life was marked by suffering and loss. His older sister,
Olga, died in infancy and, by the time Karol was twelve, his mother Emelia had
died of kidney failure and his older brother, Edmund, had died heroically
serving those stricken with scarlet fever. Known to his friends as Lolek, and
growing under the loving guidance of his father, he was a vibrant youth,
athletic, studious and a gifted theatrical performer.
Young Man
“My father’s words played a very important role because
they directed me toward becoming a true worshiper of God.”
Karol Wojtyła
“After her death and, later, the death of my older brother,
I was left alone with my father, a deeply religious man. Day after day I
was able to observe the austere way in which he lived …his example was in a way
my first seminary, a kind of domestic seminary.”
(Karol Wojtyła)
Young Karol attended Kraków’s Jagiellonian University in
1938 where he studied Polish language, literature, theatre and poetry. He also
performed in local theatrical productions, co-founding the Rhapsodic Theatre of
Kraków. It was during this time that he met his spiritual mentor, Jan
Tyranowski, and was introduced to the Carmelite mysticism of St. John of the
Cross. This meeting profoundly changed the course of his life, leading him to
the priesthood. However, his studies were interrupted when Nazi Germany invaded
Poland in September 1939.
In order to remain in the country, Karol was forced to work
in a stone quarry as well as night shifts at the Solvay chemical plant. During
this time, Karol suffered the loss of his father, who died of a heart attack on
February 18, 1941. In 1944, he miraculously survived being hit by a German
truck. Through all this, he recounts the maturing of his vocation and the
formation of his priestly identity.
Priest / Bishop
“As a young priest I learned to love human love… If one
loves human love, there naturally arises the need to commit oneself completely
to the service of ‘fair love,’ because love is fair, it is beautiful.”
(Pope John Paul II)
Karol joined a clandestine seminary headed by Cardinal
Sapieha and was ordained alone on the Feast of All Saints in 1946. He then travelled
to Rome to continue his doctoral studies. Upon his return to Poland he was made
assistant pastor of a parish in Niegowic, where he began his vital work with
young people.
After teaching in the Jagiellonian University for
approximately five years and having been appointed to the Chair of Ethics at
the Catholic University of Lublin, Fr. Wojtyła was consecrated auxiliary bishop
of Kraków on July 4, 1958 - the youngest bishop in the history of Poland. Among
the first to hear of his election were the young people who had accompanied him
on many camping and hiking trips.
Constantly concerned with the question of man, Bishop
Wojtyła encouraged a spiritual and cultural resistance to the Communist
occupation of Poland, giving his countrymen hope in the face of grave
oppression.
Bishop Wojtyła attended the Second Vatican Council
beginning in 1962, where he provided a vital support to the seminal documents
of the Council. His insight and gifts were also central in the final
formulation of Humanae Vitae, which was promulgated by Pope Paul VI
in 1968. Soon after, he was elevated to the College of Cardinals.
The Early Papacy
“Do not be afraid! Open wide the doors for Christ…. Christ
knows ‘what is in man.’ He alone knows it.”
(Pope John Paul II: Inaugural Address, St. Peter’s Square, October 22, 1978)
Cardinal Wojtyła was elected Pope on October 16, 1978, and
took the name John Paul II. He was the 263rd successor to Peter, and was to
have one of the longest pontificates in the history of the Church, lasting
nearly 27 years. He retained his Episcopal motto, drawn from the profound
insight of St. Louis de Montfort, “Totus Tuus – I am completely
yours.” It would become increasingly clear to the world that this papacy was an
incarnation of that motto and a direct response to Divine Love, which was
profoundly expressed in his love for man.
Immediately, John Paul II went out to the entire world with
a vigorous missionary spirit. He embarked on 104 apostolic journeys to 129
different countries, “to the uttermost parts of the earth” (Acts 13:47),
beginning with the West, Mexico and the United States, for the sake of the
Gospel. His love for young people led him to establish World Youth Day,
celebrated 19 times during his pontificate, which attracted millions of young
people from all over the world. The Pope’s concern for marriage and the family was
clearly expressed in the establishment of the World Meeting of Families, his
Wednesday catechesis on human love and the founding of the Pontifical John Paul
II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family.
The Pope’s presence on the world stage began the gradual
and peaceful removal of Communism from Eastern Europe, averted war between the
nations of Chile and Argentina, and began the restoration of peace and the
healing of division between the major world religions.
Assassination Attempt
“In everything that happened to me on that day, I felt (the
Mother of God’s) extraordinary motherly protection and care, which turned out
to be stronger than the deadly bullet.”
(Pope John Paul II)
On May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul II was the victim of an attempted assassination in St. Peter’s Square. Shocking the world, he exhibited extraordinary love and forgiveness when he made a personal visit to his attacker, Ali Agca, in Rebibbia Prison in 1983.
Following his recovery, Pope
John Paul II continued with his missionary activity, meeting with more than
17,600,000 pilgrims during General Audiences and countless millions of faithful
during his subsequent pastoral visits throughout the world. He continued to
meet with numerous government leaders during 38 official visits and 738
audiences and meetings held with heads of state, including two landmark
speeches at the United Nations and 246 audiences with prime ministers.
Legacy
“The answer to the fear which darkens human existence at
the end of the twentieth century is the common effort to build the civilization
of love…. With the help of God’s grace, we can build in the next century and
the next millennium a civilization worthy of the human person, a true culture
of freedom. We can and must do so!”
(Pope John Paul II: Address to the United Nations)
John Paul II’s doctrinal legacy is one of the richest in
the history of the Church. He tirelessly guarded the deposit of faith and the
tradition of the Church from errors, promoting authentic theological, moral and
spiritual doctrine.
St. John Paul II was also a prolific writer; among his
principal documents are many treasures of the Church. His writings included 14
encyclicals, 15 apostolic exhortations, 11 apostolic constitutions and 45
apostolic letters in addition to the catechises delivered in the general
audiences, lectures and homilies given during his many travels.
For a collection of his Papal writings click here
With his emphasis on the universal call to holiness, he
beatified 1,338 people and canonized 482 saints, more than all of the popes in
the last 500 years combined.
The Great Jubilee
“The whole of the Christian life is like a great pilgrimage
to the house of the Father, whose unconditional love for every human creature,
and in particular for the ‘prodigal son’, we discover anew each day…. The
Jubilee…should encourage everyone to undertake…a journey of conversion.”
(Pope John Paul II)
Throughout his pontificate, Pope John Paul II guided and
prepared the Church to celebrate the Great Jubilee, a celebration of the mercy
of God and the forgiveness of sin, which began with the opening of the Holy
Door of St. Peter’s Basilica. Eight million pilgrims came to Rome to pray
during the Year 2000, as the Church and the whole of humanity passed into the
third millennium since the birth of the Redeemer.
During this time, Pope John Paul II prayed for God’s
forgiveness and for the forgiveness of those wounded by the sins of Christians
throughout the past two millennia.
John Paul II successfully encouraged dialogue with the Jews
and inaugurated a time of healing between Jews, Muslims and representatives of
other religions. Several times he extended an invitation for these groups to
participate in worldwide meetings to pray for peace.
With the Year of the Redemption, the Marian Year and the
Year of the Eucharist, he devoted himself to the spiritual renewal of the
Church. He was convinced that the Church would receive courage and refreshment,
even in the face of the great trials of humanity experienced in the last
century, by drawing near the Heart of Christ in the Eucharist. He stated,
“...The gaze of the Church is constantly turned to her Lord, present in the
Sacrament of the Altar, in which she discovers the full manifestation of his boundless
love” (John Paul II, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 2003).
The love of Christ, “that love which goes to the end,”
proclaimed by St. John Paul II with his entire life, was made increasingly
comprehensible to the world as the day of his return to the Father’s House drew
near.
Death and Beatification
“Death itself is anything but an event without hope. It is
the door which opens wide on eternity and, for those who live in Christ, an
experience of participation in the mystery of his Death and Resurrection.”
(Pope John Paul II)
Suffering from the debilitating effects of Parkinson’s
disease, the aftereffects of the wounds from the attempted assassination,
multiple surgeries, and the loss of his voice, Pope John Paul II expressed in
his last days the mystery of the Crucified Lord.
With hundreds of thousands of young people beneath the
window of the papal apartment keeping candlelight vigil during the pope’s final
agony, John Paul II whispered in response, “I have looked for you and you have
come to me. Thank you.” Pope John Paul II died during the first vespers of
Divine Mercy Sunday, April 2, 2005, at 9:37 p.m., soon after he had uttered his
final audible words, “Let me go to my Father’s house.”
More than three million pilgrims travelled to Rome to pay homage to the pope, some standing in line for over 24 hours to pray in thanksgiving for their beloved Holy Father.
On April 28, 2005, Pope Benedict XVI announced that the
normal five-year waiting period before beginning the cause of beatification and
canonization would be waived for John Paul II. On May 1, 2011, Pope Benedict
XVI beatified Pope John Paul II, and Pope Francis canonized Saint John Paul II
alongside Saint John XXIII on April 27, 2014.
“We can be sure that our beloved Pope is standing today at
the window of the Father’s house, that he sees us and blesses us.” —
(Pope Benedict XVI: Funeral Mass for Pope John Paul II, April 8, 2005)
A pope who might consider taking the name John Paul III, and with it the responsibility, could be a blessing indeed.
ReplyDeleteGadjo
In all the speeches made by Abraham Lincoln, he never mentioned Christ once. He invoked the name of God on countless occasions, but never that of Christ. It's a fact that I came upon several years ago and which stuck with me. I was never sure why.
ReplyDeleteJohn Paul invoked Him as though he could physically see Him. "But He's standing right here beside me. Don't you see Him?"
We don't, though. God the Father is easy to believe in, or at least to defend in debate. Christ is quite another thing. I'm really not sure of the significance of this, but the loss of Christ is the loss of civilization as well as faith. Everything in THIS world changes without Him.