Posted on 03/04/2005 8:17:11 AM PST by NYer
Pope John Paul II never ceases to rock our world.
As he burst out of the Gemelli hospital last week and rode triumphantly through the streets of Rome back to the Vatican, he resembled the Roman generals of old marching back from war, blood-stained and battle-scarred, but victorious once again.
The throngs of journalists and paparazzi that had been waiting for hours to steal a glimpse of the Pope as he was whisked back to the Vatican nearly keeled over in surprise as John Paul appeared not in an armored limousine with tinted glass to conceal his condition, but on full display in the familiar transparent popemobile.
Far from hiding his age and ailments, the Holy Father practically flaunts them. He wears them as a badge of honor. Just when we would expect him to modestly retire from view, he steps out on the public stage.
Yet despite speculation to the contrary, Pope John Pauls attitude toward his suffering and even the reality of death cannot be attributed to inveterate stubbornness and much less to stoic resignation. His behavior is suffused with Christian hope that embraces life as a gift but is equally ready to step into eternity when God sees fit to call him home.
The Holy Father has been called the Great Communicator. Now that his voice begins to fail him, he speaks more and more through symbols.
His Thursday afternoon ride through Rome sent a multi-layered message to the world, a message of comfort and of hope: The Pope is still with you! Do not be afraid!
Elderly and infirm people, you whom the world considers useless, remember your dignity! Suffering and death do not have the final word in the Christian journey! Life is always worth living!
Pope John Paul II struggles on because he believes that he still has a mission to fulfill. He is convinced that this moment in his papacy is every bit as important as the first years when he was traveling the world, helping to topple communism and reaching out to millions with his teaching and preaching. In his 1999 Letter to the Elderly John Paul wrote that "at every stage of life the Lord can ask each of us to contribute what talents we have. The service of the Gospel has nothing to do with age!" (No. 7).
Moreover he adds: "The Spirit acts as and where he wills, and quite frequently he employs human means which seem of little account in the eyes of the world. How many people find understanding and comfort from elderly people who may be lonely or ill and yet are able to instill courage by their loving advice, their silent prayers, or their witness of suffering borne with patient acceptance! At the very time when their physical energies and their level of activity are decreasing, these brothers and sisters of ours become all the more precious in the mysterious plan of Providence" (No. 13).
The Holy Fathers reflections help us understand both the importance of this moment of his papacy and our own aging and ailments. He manifests the truth of the Psalmists words: "The just will flourish like the palm-tree, and grow like a Lebanon cedar, ... still bearing fruit when they are old, still full of sap, still green, to proclaim that the Lord is just" (Psalm 92).
And yet, along with the solace this undoubtedly brings, the Holy Fathers message makes us uncomfortable as well. Human suffering makes us feel uneasy, ashamed, naked and vulnerable before the world. We instinctively wish to cover it up. Glossy magazines shine with images of the young and the beautiful, sleek bodies sporting fashionable clothes. Old age and suffering are anything but fashionable.
Twenty one years ago last week, on Feb. 11, 1984, Pope John Paul brought this reality home in his encyclical letter on human suffering, Salvifici Doloris. He wrote that human suffering provokes three reactions in those who witness it: compassion, respect, and fear (No. 4). And who of us does not experience all three of these emotions when we look upon the Holy Father?
We feel intense compassion for him as he struggles through his discourses and falters in his endeavor to express himself. We profoundly admire his courage, his valor, his heroism, as he pushes inexorably forward, refusing to grant himself a respite in his mission as pastor. But we also feel intimidated and frightened at this icon of the human condition in all its frailty. In the Popes suffering, we come face to face with our own weakness.
This is perhaps the greatest gift of an aging Pope. His condition obliges us to recall a central reality of our Christian faith, expressed in the words Christ spoke to Saint Paul: "My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness." This awareness led Paul to profess: "I am content with weaknesses ... for whenever I am weak, then I am strong" (2 Corinthians 12:9-10).
For Christians, Jesus Christ is represented most often not in moments of glory walking on the waters or multiplying loaves and fishes but on the cross. Pope John Paul did immense good for the Church and the world in the vigor of his youth; in Gods providential plan he continues to do good, in a more mysterious way, through his union with Christ crucified. Let us not look away.
Legionary Father Thomas D. Williams is Dean of the Theology
School at Romes Regina
Apostolorum Pontifical University.
Catholic Ping - Come home for Easter and experience Gods merciful love. Please freepmail me if you want on/off this list
Nice piece for NCR.
Oh, and if it's okay with everyone I'm just going to copy and paste the inevitable Catholic-bashing posts so we can just get them out of the way.
Oh - National Catholic REGISTER.
In the humble opinion of this Catholic, Pope John Paul II has been a disaster to the Catholic Church. During his 25-year plus reign, the Church has deteriorated in the West as the pope has either tolerated or turned a blind-eye to modernists and other heretics within the Church.
This is why things like Mass attendence is off and vocations in America are but a fraction of what they were before JPII's Vatican II "reforms."
JPII is popularly thought of as a traditionalist and conservative. This is not so. The pope can only be viewed as such in that he has not totally compitulated to the modern world by approving homosexuality, women priests, equality of all religions, etc.
I wish the Pope well but fear that the one replacing him will be even worse.
Wow...
It didn't take that long for the bashfest to start...
Thanks for the ping. Excellent article!
Great quote!
I even tried to pre-empt it.
Did someone say there's a thread of Anti-Catholicism on FR?
He is a great Christian witness and an extraordinary man. I believe he is animated by the Spirit. He is a traditionalist - read his encyclicals - he has also supported bringing back the Tridentine Mass in certain circumstances.
It's true that the Church has deteriorated - but that is in spite of JPII's strenuous efforts, not because of them. Just one of many examples: when he came to the U.S. in '79, he told the bishops there was a serious problem in the American Church (the abusers) - they told him, in effect, you don't know what you're talking about, go back to Rome. 25 years later, we are still reaping the whirlwind.
Most liberal "progressive" Catholics I know despise this pope because he is so "backward."
And you are probably right - the next pope is not likely to strengthen Catholic tradition. Just read what the various Cardinals are saying about their priorities for the future of the Church - it's scary.
Life is indeed a gift and in this era of abortion and euthanasia, he holds to it with faith and that wonderful Polish characteristic which they call "upor." Positive stubbornness is what has carried that indomitable people through centuries of travail.
One of the positive fruits of this papacy has been the return of most of the Pope's great encyclicals to a firm basis in the Bible.
This has always been the case in Catholicism, but it has not always been so directly apparent.
The strength of this article is that it, too, keeps returning to the underlying biblical texts.
"The Holy Fathers reflections help us understand both the importance of this moment of his papacy and our own aging and ailments. He manifests the truth of the Psalmists words: "The just will flourish like the palm-tree, and grow like a Lebanon cedar, ... still bearing fruit when they are old, still full of sap, still green, to proclaim that the Lord is just" (Psalm 92)."
He now bestows upon us his final and greatest gift as he demonstrates to us how to face with grace and dignity our mortal end. This man is truly of the Spirit.
There are some excellent candidates, amongst which is
Francis Cardinal Arinze
And if you have access to cable tv, you won't want to miss extracts from Raymond Arroyo's recent interview with this Vatican Cardinal. They will be repeated tonight at 8pm on EWTN's The World Over Live.
In the event you can't watch it, here is some of what the Cardinal discussed previously.
Vatican Cardinal Ends Debate: No Communion for Pro-Abortion Politicians or Rainbow Sashers
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.