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John Paul II — The Face of Love
e3mil.com ^ | 8/6/02 | James Bemis

Posted on 08/06/2002 5:10:58 PM PDT by nickcarraway

One picture told it all: At Toronto's airport, the world's eye caught little ten-year-old Georgia Rae Giddings as she emotionally burst into tears after Pope John Paul II embraced her. For the next hour, she recalled the moment repeatedly before crowds of journalists. "When I stood in front of the Pope, I just got dizzier and dizzier," she said.

"Out of Step" with the Contemporary World

She's not the only one. Many of the million or so attending the World Youth Day celebrations reported the same phenomenon.

Most people would be astonished to hear that the Holy Father might be the most beloved person in the world among young people. After all, we're always told the Catholic Church's message is irrelevant, outmoded and - worst of all - square. Cynics charge it has nothing meaningful to say to today's fun-loving, hedonistic youth.

According to the press, polls repeatedly show the Pope's relentless opposition to contraception, abortion, homosexuality, pornography, pre-marital sex, easy divorce and other fruits of the sexual revolution is anathema to the modern and fashionable. (It goes without saying that no one knows the mind of the modern and fashionable like the media.) The Holy Father, they conclude, is out of step with the contemporary world.

A Rebuke to the Modern Age

Okay, then how do you explain nearly a million kids at the Pope's World Youth Day? And where else would the gathering of that many youngsters be termed a "disappointing" turnout?

Perhaps it's because young people's love for the Holy Father is a direct rebuke to the modern age, and thus to its primary megaphone, the modern journalist. No institution has been a more powerful force for secularism, materialism or sexual freedom than the media.

Most reporters today are alienated from religion, looking at faith as little more than an ancient superstition. They don't understand it, so they don't cover it - unless a "religious" story involving scandal or human weakness pops up. That they comprehend.

In listening to World Youth Day participants speak, their deep affection for the Holy Father is clear. The same words keep popping up over and over to describe him - "radiance," "hero" "world's role model," "leader of youth," "our rock," "following in St. Peter's footsteps," and "the person closest to Jesus."

Thus, reasons for the Pope's youthful legions are quite simple: When young people see the weary, lined, rugged, leathern visage of the Holy Father, they see the face of love. Not love the way Hollywood loves them - as walking wallets, rear ends in movie theaters, pairs of ears to listen to the latest CDs - but real affection, from someone who sees them rightfully as precious individuals with eternal souls. And when the Vicar of Christ's deep, aged, honeyed voice is intoned, it seems they're hearing the very Words of God.

An Inexhaustible Treasure of Grace

This, then, is the Papal appeal to the young: faith, as the steadfast leader of the Church, the eternal Bride of Christ; hope, offering refuge for the restless heart; and love, from a elderly man walking in persona Christi. Of these, as St. Paul says, the greatest is love.

This is what Georgia Rae Giddings reacted to. After telling the Pope she loved him, he tenderly stroked her head and whispered gently that he loved her too, the perfect personification of Cardinal Newman's great motto of "Heart Speaketh to Heart." It's hard to imagine any other world leader reacting this way to the presence of an unexpected young stranger - so fearless, so compassionate, so Christlike.

No wonder kids love him.

Catholicism may be known as the Old Faith, it's the Young Faith too, with a remarkable, time-tested ability to outlive every fad that mocks it as passe. Each Catholic generation discovers anew the richness and power of their ancient religion, finding within it an inexhaustible treasure of grace and beauty, boundless as the sea. Once that discovery is made, as a million young pilgrims recently learned, no worldly interest can ever again quite satisfy.


TOPICS: General Discusssion
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist
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To: Catholicguy
All ecumenical counsels ARE NOT infallible by their nature. This is because the Holy Spirit only protects from error that which is intended to be declared as doctrine--and Vatican II specifically stated it did not wish anything it said to be taken dogmatically. Its purpose was pastoral. Otherwise we might ask why its insistence that Gregorian chant be retained was given such short shrift by liturgists. Tell me, what are the Vatican II dogmas you think we are bound to assent to?
281 posted on 08/08/2002 12:11:26 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: Catholicguy
And you can have your quasi-Protestant one.
282 posted on 08/08/2002 12:13:33 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: ultima ratio
Ecumenical Councils. Read it and weep, Ace

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04423f.htm
283 posted on 08/08/2002 12:18:02 PM PDT by Catholicguy
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To: Bud McDuell
Lefebvre signed. Read it and weep, Ace.

http://www.petersnet.net/browse/857.htm
284 posted on 08/08/2002 12:24:35 PM PDT by Catholicguy
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Comment #285 Removed by Moderator

To: ultima ratio; Catholicguy
ultima: Can you at least accept that, for all the grief that has come in its wake, Vatican II is a legitimate Ecumenical Council? That not all of the fruits of the Council have been bitter?

Catholicguy: Can you at least accept that papal infallibility, as it has been defined dogmatically by Vatican I and upheld by Vatican II, does not extend to all papal decisions? That not all of the fruits of the Council have been sweet?

286 posted on 08/08/2002 12:34:36 PM PDT by Loyalist
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To: Catholicguy; ultima ratio; JMJ333
Interesting article. I was surprised that it did not list Vatican II. Then I noticed the article was written in 1908.

One question: Are we Protestants heretics or errant brethren? I'll be printing business cards soon and need to know the right title.
:-)
287 posted on 08/08/2002 12:34:54 PM PDT by drstevej
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Comment #288 Removed by Moderator

To: drstevej
Would you look at the size of that broom she sits on? It looks like it is souped-up and maybe has anti-radar devices and whatnot.

See what ya miss in your recondite Communion? :)

289 posted on 08/08/2002 12:40:21 PM PDT by Catholicguy
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To: allend
always mining Church documents for incriminating quotes

Inspired metaphor. They definitely are in the dark...

290 posted on 08/08/2002 12:41:39 PM PDT by Catholicguy
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To: Catholicguy
Dang, CG... "recondite"? Catholic crossword puzzles must be tough. I'm still trying to figure out indult. I am whelmed (and almost overwhelmed).
291 posted on 08/08/2002 12:47:46 PM PDT by drstevej
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Comment #292 Removed by Moderator

Comment #293 Removed by Moderator

Comment #294 Removed by Moderator

Comment #295 Removed by Moderator

To: Loyalist
I think the counsel was legitimate, but unwise. Fr. Paul Wilson summed up our situation well: "The clergy sexual abuse problem is not the only cross we bear. We don't have ONE crisis, we have at least TWELVE of the damned things--and we have had them for FORTY YEARS, and no one seems to be doing a blessed thing about them. Our Liturgy is a risible shambles in most places; our catechesis is woefully inadequate; religious life, seminary formation, family life, moral theology, scriptural studies--crisis after crisis after crisis. Why is it that over the years the persistent cry of the Faithful has gone unheeded?"

Good question. Vatican II talked a lot about lay involvment--but putting a few females up on the altar as eucharistic ministers was about it in most places. The laity have resisted the radical innovations that have foisted upon them against their wills, and they have complained for decades to Rome about malfeasance and corruption--and have been greeted with silence. This is why I blame this Pope. He is a good man in many ways, but he has not cleaned house and he has not been as attentive to his flock as he might have been. He has instead appointed an unusual number of very bad prelates. Not one has been known for sanctity or wisdom in this country. Most are incredibly mediocre, some are outright scoundrels.

296 posted on 08/08/2002 1:20:02 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: Loyalist
Catholicguy: Can you at least accept that papal infallibility, as it has been defined dogmatically by Vatican I and upheld by Vatican II, does not extend to all papal decisions? That not all of the fruits of the Council have been sweet?

I agree that many things have been sour, bitter and rotten. The whole question of Infallibility is misunderstood by most Catholics and I am one of those like the Ward (Englishman, I forget his name) gentleman who desired to begin every day with a new Papal Bull on his desk :). Maybe a whole thread devoted to Infallibility would be an excellent idea. Not that it would be controversial or anything.

297 posted on 08/08/2002 1:25:51 PM PDT by Catholicguy
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To: Catholicguy
Read it and weep? I'm laughing my arse off. Tell me the point you're trying to make. Have you found the good Archbishop's signature on every single document?
298 posted on 08/08/2002 1:27:49 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: ultima ratio
Dear ultima ratio,

Your point was that the Church only cracks down on dissident "traditionalists" and not dissident "liberals". The excommunications of these seven women, in a matter of days from their offense, belies your argument.

In both cases, people defied the pope. In both cases, people were excommunicated.

In your eyes, these silly women did a bad thing, and Archbishop Lefebvre did a good thing. But that is only your point of view.

In some ways, what Archbishop Lefebvre did was worse.

The silly play-bishop (the gentleman who performed the "ordinations", from what I have read, is not a real Catholic bishop, obedient, disobedient, or otherwise) who performed the silly play-ordinations was not abusing a sacred trust (the power to ordain) because he had no sacred trust to abuse. These folks were guily of nothing more than bad play-acting.

Archbishop Lefebvre, on the other hand, took the sacred trust given to him (the ability to consecrate bishops), and defied the Vicar of Christ in abusing that authority, your arguments that he was preserving the Catholic tradition notwithstanding. Remember that no matter how much the late archbishop may or may not have believed that he was justified to do what he did, the Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church did not share that opinion. And it is the view of the Supreme Pontiff that will determine whether or not one's act of disobedience results in excommunication.

To reiterate, the Church acted swiftly and harshly against these anti-Catholic dissidents of the left, just as she has against anti-Catholic dissidents of the right.

sitetest

299 posted on 08/08/2002 1:35:29 PM PDT by sitetest
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To: sitetest; ultima ratio
***To reiterate, the Church acted swiftly and harshly against these anti-Catholic dissidents of the left, just as she has against anti-Catholic dissidents of the right.***

Help me understand why the RCC tolerates the hiring a witch/Wiccan/pagan at one of it's universities to help teach religion.
300 posted on 08/08/2002 1:39:16 PM PDT by drstevej
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