Posted on 09/16/2003 6:14:01 PM PDT by Coleus
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Elsewhere in Asia, the pope visited East Timor and spoke of human rights, freedom of religion, and self-determination of peoples. Bishop Carlos Belo was the leader of the repressed Catholic community when the pope visited in 1981 and the territory was still under the grip of Indonesian rule. Bishop Belo won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1996 and helped lead East Timor to independence in 2002. The pope taught Bishop Belo to keep his eye on the prize too. CASTROS CUBA |
Guevara on another. The pope, who lent Castro a hand during the trip by condemning the U.S. embargo, said later he hoped that his visit would inspire opponents of communism as his first trip to Poland had in 1979. It has not yet happened. Five years after the historic visit, the Vatican expressed concern that reforms had not moved ahead quickly enough in Cuba, and, in some cases, things seemed to be moving backward. The popes seven trips to the United States, and his many trips to other highly developed nations such as Canada, Australia and the post-Christian countries of Western Europe, have always been a particular challenge for him. He reminds Americans that they have been blessed with many things, including the privilege of being the standard-bearers of freedom. Hoping his pronouncements could have long-term positive effects, he has pulled no punches in warning Americans to beware of the deep decay in moral values that often accompanied prosperity. He aired particular distress about how a society as wealthy as that of the United States could have so much social inequality and poverty within its borders. INTO AFRICA |
backwardness, civil strife, war and corruption that the pope began denouncing in 1980, when he made the first of his 12 visits there. Still, he has never stopped speaking about Africas problems before an international community that often considered the continent beyond repair. The Vatican likes to issue numbers every time the pope travels. At the end of his trip to Croatia in early June his 100th overseas we were told he had visited 129 countries at least once; had traveled 720,800 miles or the equivalent of 29 times the circumference of the earth and more than three times the distance between the Earth and the moon. He had spent 575 days and 12 hours a whopping 6.4 percent of his pontificate outside Italy. But the numbers meant little to the 4 million people who turned out to see him in the Philippines in 1995, or to the fewer than 200 Catholics in all of Kazakhstan, where he visited in 2001. For them, the important thing was that he came. Philip Pullella, a correspondent for Reuters in Rome, is associate editor and lead writer of the recent book Pope John Paul Reaching Out Across Borders, published in the United States by Prentice Hall. He has traveled on 79 of the Holy Fathers 101 trips. |
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JOHN PAULS FIGHT FOR PEACE For John Paul II, peace is a gift of truth, to which all people are entitled and from which the identity of all people comes. For this reason, John Paul IIs fight for peace starts by reminding us that the return to truth is like the return to ones family home. Yet there are men who bend the truth to advance their own interests and who will resort to violence. Consequently, those who fight for truth to bring about peace must learn how to suffer for |
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justice. Justice meets peace within love: the Lord will speak peace unto his people mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other (Ps 85). Love, therefore, must also know how to suffer. The road to truth, freedom and peace leads through the Beatitudes, the blessings of the Sermon on the Mount. The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon two years ago this Sept. 11 remind us that we live not in peace but in a state which St. Augustine called the shadow of peace (umbra pacis). It is the peace of evil men (pax iniquiorum). This shadow of peace affects the lives of individuals and societies. It functions as if it were the peace that people dream of and desire. But this shadow becomes longer as men move farther from the sun of truth, freedom, love and justice. In the process they alter the very meaning of these concepts, severing their connection with reality. Men become dependent on personal interests and, without much resistance, mere opinions come to rule their lives. Within such a society, any opinion can function as if it were truth, any judgment can be deemed just, and any manipulation of another can be defined as love. Some may insist that when men repeatedly call a lie the truth, the lie becomes the truth. That this way of thinking is a source of war is apparent in the ascendancy of the Nazi regime in Germany. But peace can occur only where all men look toward the same truth a truth that unites them as one pilgrim nation. The truth of each person exists within that person and shapes the drama of his or her identity and personal history. This unique personal truth meets the truth of all other persons in the consciousness of God. As such, each human life and human destiny is present to God who is ordering it into a meaningful and beautiful whole. In this divine landscape, everything aims to the One. As St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, The ultimate end of the universe is Truth. From this truth derives all duties and rights of man and especially the duty to seek peace. John Paul II understands that wars are conceived inside of us. The man who would create peace must fight for it especially within himself. That is why peace is so difficult. When a man is defeated in this fight within himself, he becomes an ally of the strong who continue to wage war, using arms as well |
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We are all responsible for peace. The motto of St. Benedict written in the prologue to his Rule Seek peace: pursue it! is directed to us all. John Paul II observes: Peace can be decided by a few men, but it presupposes a joint work of all. The solidarity required for peace requires each person to create interior peace. The person who is not at peace within himself cannot further peace among others. Peace is each person |
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living for the other. For John Paul II, the person of Christ is a peace of all living for all. Where this communion of persons is not present, no one can be sure of another, and no nation can rely on another. When John Paul II says, Open up new doors to peace. Do everything in your power to make the way of dialogue prevail over that of force, he asks politicians to guarantee the right as well as the duty of citizens to seek the truth. He |
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peace when he asked God to forgive those who were stoning him. Only by forgiving can we hope that we also will be forgiven. But to forgive does not mean to forget. If we forget the tragic day of Sept. 11, we may not even notice when we will start hurting others. Those who forget Auschwitz or the Siberian camps risk building them again. But memory alone is also dangerous. During Mass at the site of the Nazi concentration camp at Birkenau on June 7, 1979, John Paul II said: I go down on my knees in this Golgotha of todays world. We have to remember the Golgothas of every murder while on our knees. Any other type of memory can be a source of war. A prayerful memory is born in |
hearts that are rooted, as the Holy Father says, in a spirit that believes in the possibility of reconciliation and in peace. Peace is our promised future. We work toward it in times of war, following in our hope the words of the prophet: They will hammer their swords into ploughshares and their spears into sickles. Nation will not lift sword against nation, no longer will they learn how to make war. But each man will sit under his vine and fig tree with no one to trouble him (Mic 4:3-4). For God is a God not of disorder but of peace (1 Cor 14:33). Stanislaw Grygiel is a professor at the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in Rome. |
n 1962 Karol Wojtyla wrote a poem entitled Marble Floor. One of its verses says, Peter, you are the floor, that others may walk over you not knowing where they go. You guide their steps. For 25 years, Pope John Paul II, as Peter, has been the solid foundation that has guided the steps of the Church. In no area has this been truer than in his ministry to families. Institutional advancements have been many and profound the Pontifical Council for the Family; the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family (now with campuses around the world, one of which in Washington, D.C., we support); four World Meetings of Families with the pope; and historic documents on the dignity and rights of the family including Familiaris Consortio, the Letter to Families and the Charter of the Rights of the Family. This enhanced concern for the welfare of families comes at a moment in history in which families are under unparalleled attack not only from legal changes regarding abortion, divorce and marriage, but also from economic and tax treatment of families and the diminished role of parents in the education and moral upbringing of their children. Pope John Paul IIs key insight is that concern for the family must be at the center of the new evangelization. While this has been a consistent theme to pastors of the Church, in too many places more still needs to be done to give priority to the care of the family. Recently, the pope again emphasized the need to rediscover the truth about the family as an intimate communion of life and love. This truth, of course, is that the community of the family finds its source in the divine communion of life and love that is the Trinity. The family is truly the primary model for all human associations including the larger society itself. The Christian family becomes a unique mirror of the Trinity that radiates through neighborhood, city and country. It is the first school of faith, love and community. It teaches the lessons that make society possible. The pope is right when he says that the future of humanity passes through the family. And he is right to say the family must have the highest priority in the Churchs pastoral mission. John Paul II means this in two ways. First, the family must be an object of evangelization families must be given greater pastoral assistance at every level. Second, the family must also be a subject of evangelization families must themselves take up the mission of evangelization regarding their own members as well as of their neighbors. |
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And so we should say with the pope that the whole Church (ordained and lay) is meant to serve the family. One sure place to begin is by taking to heart the popes message in Familiaris Consortio and the Letter to Families, both now available from our Catholic Information Service. In this way, the marble floor that is Peter will go on guiding our steps for years to come. Vivat Jesus! n this issue of Columbia, we celebrate the 25th anniversary of the pontificate of our Holy Father, Pope John Paul II. With this in mind, it is important for us to recall the words of Pope St. Leo: Out of the whole world one man is chosen to preside at the calling of all nations and to be set over all the Apostles and all the Fathers of the Church. Our dear Holy Father is this man, for he is Peter and only through Peter has Christ willed to bestow on others what he has shared with him. We firmly believe: Peter is the first to confess his faith in the Lord and thus, is first in rank among the Apostles. He is called Blessed because he is Peter, the Rock of the Church against which no power can prevail. Peter, whom no chains can bind and whose words are the words of life for those who listen and profess them. We further believe that our dear Holy Father is Peter! Pope John Paul has interest only in being the servant of the servants of God. As his heraldry indicates in his episcopal motto, Totus Tuus, his life has been given over totally to God through Mary. He teaches us to do the same. In Scripture we read that Christ gave apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers roles of service for the faithful to build up the body of Christ, until we become one in faith and in the knowledge of Gods Son, and form that perfect man who is Christ come to full stature. For 25 years, who better, dear brother Knights and families, has filled these roles than the present Holy Father who in word and action seems ever conscious in forming that perfect man Christ come to full stature? We salute Pope John Paul II with love and respect. We are inspired by his fearless preaching of Gospel truth. We are ennobled by the example of his total dedication to fulfill Gods will. We rejoice with the whole Church on this the 25th anniversary of his pontificate and pray that he will always be the visible center and foundation of our unity in faith, in hope and in love, through Christ our Lord. Ad multos annos, Holy Father! |
Amen to that. As a convert to Catholicism, I have come to have a deep love and respect for this man and his selfless service to God, the Church, and mankind. Certainly an example for the rest of us.
While I was not Catholic at the time, I was deeply moved when the Holy Father visited his would-be assassin, Mehmet Ali Agca, in prison in 1983. An inspiring example of forgiveness and compassion in a world whose aggregate morality at times seems to lean more towards the vengeance of High Plains Drifter.
Columbia, September, 2003, Issue
Palm Sunday Address to Youth on the Passover
Pope John Paul used the Palm Sunday celebration, which fell in 1994 on the same weekend as the Jewish Passover, to invite people "to pause spiritually" at the site of "the temple of God's covenant with Jerusalem."
"Only a modest fragment of this remains," he said. "It is called the Wailing Wall because before its stones the children of Israel gather, recalling the greatness of the ancient sanctuary in which God made his dwelling and which rightly was the pride of all Israel."
The wall, he said, "is eloquent for the children of Israel. It is also eloquent for us because we know that in this temple God truly established his dwelling." [Catholic News Service]
March 27, 1994
Happy Anniversary Holy Father
It is said that Pope John Paul II is the most recognized man in the world. An ambitious travel schedule and uncanny skill with all forms of media have helped him maintain that high-celebrity profile. And while he has been transformed in office from a man of vigor to one slowed by illness and age, he has continued to travel tirelessly to spread the gospel throughout the world. He is the most widely-traveled pope in history.
St. Anthony Messenger has been privileged to be on the scene at many of John Paul II's visits to the Western Hemisphere. From his initial visits to the U.S. and Ireland, when Catholics worldwide were still getting to know their pope, to his more recent visits to Cuba and St. Louis, we have brought our readers eyewitness accounts of John Paul II among his followers. The following features from St. Anthony Messenger present John Paul II's papacy through the accounts of his travels.
POPE JOHN PAUL II: 25 Years of Service
Five people who have worked with the pope offer personal reflections.
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Q U I C K S C A N When Outside Rome
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On October 16, 1978, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla was elected as the Bishop of Rome, choosing the name John Paul. This October 16th, he will have completed 25 years of service as the successor of St. Peter. Only three other popes have served longer. John Paul II: A Light for the World is a collection of texts and photos honoring this anniversary. The 256-page book, with pictures by official Vatican photographers, was edited by Sister Mary Ann Walsh, R.S.M., for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and published this month by Sheed & Ward, an imprint of Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. The following photos and five excerpts are reprinted with permission of the publisher. When Outside Rome
Watching Pope John Paul II in Rome and around the world, I realize that being pastor of the universal Church sometimes means being prepared for anything. Vatican officials have discussed, debated and tried to legislate the extent to which local cultural expressions, including dance and music, should be allowed at Mass. Yet Pope John Paul seems to accept and, most times, delight in the differences. While the pope was prepared for a choreographed offertory dance at the opening Mass for the Synod of Bishops for Africa, the sounds of joy were not scripted: Ululations sprang from the throats of African women, bouncing off the walls of St. Peter's Basilica, providing a totally natural "surround sound" effect. Native American pipe-smokers and incense smoke rising from clay pots rather than thuribles bring attentive looks, not scowls, from the pope. He places Communion on the outstretched hands of the faithful with the same reverently serious gaze as he has when he places Communion on someone's tongue. He did not hesitate leaving street shoes behind when visiting a mosque in Syria or a Hindu's tomb in India. Even before physical limitations led Pope John Paul to shorten his speeches and hold fewer public meetings, what often attracted young and old, believers and nonbelievers, to him was not just what the pope said, but what he did. Cindy Wooden is the senior Rome correspondent for Catholic News Service, where she has worked since 1989. She has covered some of the pope's travels. I've Lost the Holy Father!
In September of 1987, Pope John Paul made an extensive pastoral visit to the United States, beginning in Miami and concluding in Detroit. Two memorable days were spent in Los Angeles. On the first night of the pope's stay in our cathedral residence, after we had returned from a large public Mass in the Los Angeles Coliseum, the Holy Father was running a bit early on his schedule. It had been planned for him to have a late dinner in the small dining room on the third floor of the residence. When the Holy Father, then-Monsignor Stanislaw Dziwisz (his secretary) and I exited the elevator for dinner, we could smell the food cooking in the kitchen but there were no cooks, waiters or other personnel anywhere. Feeling that overwhelming sense of panic, I assured the Holy Father that the staff must be nearby somewhere, and invited him to be seated in the dining room while I searched for them. It seems that the Secret Service had brought everyone down to the first floor as part of their security protocol but had failed to inform the cooks and waiters that they could return to the dining room area. When I went back into the small dining room, the pope and Monsignor Dziwisz were nowhere to be found. I heard voices in the kitchen, and upon entering, I saw the Holy Father lifting the lids on various pots and pans on the stove. Before I knew it, they were serving themselves a nice helping of soup! The pope seemed so relaxed, truly enjoying his time in the kitchen, and made us all feel like mutual friends enjoying a meal together. Roger M. Mahony was named auxiliary bishop of Fresno (1975), bishop of Stockton (1980) and archbishop of Los Angeles (1985). He was appointed a cardinal in 1991. A Snub for the Pope
It was the end of a long day in Mexico City. The pope was running late; and when he trudged into a crowded hospital, he seemed exhausted. Then a little baby caught his eye and he lit up. I've seen it so many times over the years, but it's always amazing how small children and John Paul II connect in a special way. In this rundown clinic, he reached out and caressed the soft cheek, then traced a cross on the child's forehead. A blissful moment. In Rome, I've watched over the pope's shoulder as babies are passed up to him for a blessing. He lifts each one with extra care and a watchful eye. But not all kids react the same way to a papal embrace. Some smile, some coo and a few burst into tears. On a summer's day many years ago at his villa outside Rome, the pope reached out for our own baby daughter. It's all captured in our family photo album: the white-robed pontiff approaching, ready to plant a kiss on her cheek. The proud parents beaming. Then our three-year-old bailed out with a stiff-armed refusal. The pope took the snub in stride, still smiling. John Thavis has worked in Rome for Catholic News Service since 1983, heading the office since 1996. His coverage of the pope has won several awards from the Catholic Press Association. Calling on the Young
Leaders of all stripes emerged in the 20th century but only Pope John Paul II thought to convene young people and offer a vision to the leaders of tomorrow. Beginning in Rome in 1985 and continuing through to Toronto in 2002, John Paul has invited young people to join him for a series of World Youth Days. By 2002, he had drawn millions of young people to international gatherings in Buenos Aires, Argentina (1987), Santiago de Compostela, Spain (1989), Czestochowa, Poland (1991), Denver, Colorado (1993), Manila, the Philippines (1995), Paris, France (1997), Rome, Italy (2000) and Toronto, Canada (2002). The meetings showed the particular appeal of John Paul to young people. Speaking in the language of the country where each event took place, he tapped into their idealism with a message that they are the ones to bring peace to the world. He bantered with themto their chants of "John Paul II, we love you," he responded, "John Paul II, he loves you too." He called them to be holy, bringing tears to their eyes; his words touched their hearts and souls. He reminded them that there are no limits to what they can do with God. World Youth Day is for the hardy. It involves hiking for miles to a site for an all-night vigil marked by prayer with the pope, Scripture, community and song. The following day the young people participate in a Mass celebrated by the pope. Some years it has rained, leaving young people coated in mud. Other years it has been chilly. Other years, hot. Always, the event has inspired participants and observers. The pope's visit to Denver in 1993 amazed even the cynical. "It's like Woodstock, with all of the good and none of the bad," boasted a Washington Post page-one story. Viewers were amazed that hundreds of thousands of youth could gather for a lively five days of prayer and celebration of their faith. Even as the pope grew older, World Youth Day energized him. In 1993, organizers coined a new verb, youthen, to describe a phenomenon they saw; as in, the pope youthens when he meets young people. In Toronto, nine years later, a visibly aging pope gathered energy from his first glimpse of youth from the plane. Given his increasing difficulty in walking, organizers prepared a device to lift the pope down when he disembarked from the Alitalia plane. To everyone's surprise, the pope walked down the steps and headed for the microphones. Young people were calling him and he responded, as always, with the affection he feels especially for them. Sister Mary Ann Walsh, R.S.M., serves as the deputy director for media relations at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in Washington, D.C. She worked for Catholic News Service from 1983 through 1993. Sister Mary Ann coordinated media relations for the 1993 World Youth Day in Denver. Lost in Prayer
During the six years that I served in Rome as undersecretary at the Congregation for Consecrated Life (1987-1992), it was my privilege to have lunch with the pope once or twice each year. These were memorable occasions, providing opportunities to experience the pope's sense of humor, his ease in conversing and his interpersonal skills. The most profound experiences that I had were during the visits to his private chapel after the meal. I was very much struck by the profound sense of prayerfulness of the Holy Father. Pope John Paul II is able to so focus on his relationship with God that all other people and sounds and settings are blotted out. I came away from those times with a conviction that our Holy Father is truly a mystic. His relationship with the Lord is so total and consuming that to be in his presence when he is at prayer enables one to experience the presence of God. That conviction endures within me and I seek to imitate in my own poor way the example of a man of profound prayer. A true mystic in our day. Joseph A. Galante has served as auxiliary bishop of San Antonio (1992), bishop of Beaumont (1994) and coadjutor bishop of Dallas (1999). John Paul II: A Light for the World ($35.00, plus shipping and handling) can be ordered through 1-800-462-6420. |
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