Hello Family,
This
must be a great day for your mother. She had a special connection
with this Blessed man. In 1979, she and her mother visited his
birthplace and his house in Poland . She was delighted when I
called to tell her that he had just been elected Pope John Paul
ll. In addition, a number of years ago Father James Sucholet, son
of my receptionist and a patient, had an audience with him and gave us
a fine print of that meeting. Later, he gave us a large, framed
color photo of the Pope...which hangs outside our bedroom.
More
than any other man, including President Reagan, he brought the Soviet
Union to its knees and ended the Cold War as we then knew it.
Your
mother is a position to put in a good word for all of
us. Love, Dad
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ZENIT, The world seen from Rome
News Agency
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Excerpt of Decree for John Paul II's Beatification
Sign of the Depth of Faith and Invitation to a Fully Christian Life
VATICAN CITY , JAN. 14, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Here is an excerpt of the
decree written by the Congregation for Saints' Causes regarding the
beatification of Servant of God John Paul II, published today by
Vatican Radio. The prefect of the saints' causes dicastery is Cardinal
Angelo Amato.
The full text can be found on ZENIT's Web page:
www.zenit.org/article-31459?l=english
* * *
Beatification: Sign of the depth of faith and invitation to a fully
Christian life
The proclamation of a Saint or of a Blessed by the Church is the fruit
of putting together various aspects regarding a specific Person. First,
it is an act which says something important in the life of the Church
herself. It is linked to a "cult," i.e. to the memory of the person, to
his full acknowledgment of him in the awareness of the ecclesial
community, of the country, of the Universal Church in various
countries, continents and cultures. Another aspect is the awareness
that the "presentation on the altars" will be an important sign of the
depth of the faith, of the diffusion of faith in the path of life of
that person, and that this sign will become an invitation, a stimulus
for us all towards a Christian life ever more profound and full.
Finally, thesine qua non condition is the holiness of the person's
life, verified during the precise and formal canonical proceedings. All
this provides the material for the decision of the Successor of Peter,
of the Pope in view of th
e proclamation of a Blessed or of a Saint, of the cult in the context
of the ecclesial community and of its liturgy.
John Paul II's pontificate was an eloquent and clear sign, not only for
Catholics, but also for world public opinion, for people of all color
and creed. The world's reaction to his lifestyle, to the development of
his apostolic mission, to the way he bore his suffering, to the
decision to continue his Petrine mission to the end as willed by divine
Providence, and finally, the reaction to his death, the popularity of
the acclamation "Saint right now!" which someone made on the day of his
funerals, all this has its solid foundation in the experience of having
met with the person who was the Pope. The faithful have felt, have
experienced that he is "God's man," who really sees the concrete steps
and the mechanisms of contemporary world "in God," in God's
perspective, with the eyes of a mystic who looks up to God only. He was
clearly a man of prayer: so much so that it is from the dynamism of his
personal union with God, from the permanent listening to what God wants
to say in a
concrete situation, that the whole of "Pope John Paul II's activity"
flowed. Those who were closest to him have been able to see that, prior
to his meetings with his guests, with Heads of State, with Church high
officials or ordinary citizens, John Paul II would recollect himself in
prayer according to the intentions of the guests and of the meeting
that was to come.
1. Karol Wojtyla's contribution to Vatican II Council
After Vatican II, during the pontificates of Paul VI and of John Paul
II, the manner of presentation, and thus of self-presentation of the
papacy, has become quite expressive. On the occasion of the 25th
anniversary of the pontificate of John Paul II, the Italian Minister
for Foreign Affairs published in 2004 a book entitled "Go Forth in the
Whole World." Giancarlo Zizola, a "vaticanist," remarked on the fact
that "the papacy has conquered its citizenship in the realm of public
visibility, breaking away from the siege of worship marginalisation
where it had been kept by decree of secular society, in the name of a
militant vision of the liberal tenet of Separation of Church and State"
(p. 17). A German historian, Jesuit Klaus Schatz, speaking of Paul VI
and of John Paul II, underlined the meaning of the "papacy on the way"
-- thus in conformity with Vatican II -- more in the manner of a
missionary movement than as a static pole of unity. Schatz refers to
the manner of interpre
ting the papal mission as a challenge to "confirm the brothers in the
faith" (Luke 22:32), in a way tied to structural authority, but with a
strong spiritual and charismatic hint, in link with the personal
credibility and rooted in God himself.
Let us pause a moment to consider Vatican II. The young archbishop of
Cracow was one of the most active Council Fathers. He made a
significant contribution to the "Scheme XIII" which was to become the
Pastoral Constitution of the Council "Gaudium et Spes" on the Church in
the Modern World, and to the Dogmatic Constitution "Lumen Gentium."
Thanks to his studies abroad, bishop Wojtyla had a concrete experience
of evangelisation and of the mission of the Church, in Western Europe
or in other continents, but above all of totalitarian atheism in Poland
and in the other countries of the "Soviet Block." He brought all this
experience to the Council debates, which were certainly not like
drawing-room conversations, extremely courteous but void of contents.
Here was a substantial and decisive effort to insert the Gospel's
dynamism into the conciliar enthusiasm rooted on the conviction that
Christianity is capable of furnishing a "soul" to the development of
modernity and to the realit
y of the social and cultural world.
All this was to be of use in preparing for the future responsibilities
of the Successor of Peter. As John Paul II said, he already had in his
mind his first encyclical, "Redemptor Hominis," and brought it to Rome
from Cracow . All he had to do in Rome was to write down all these
ideas. In this encyclical, there is a wide invitation to humankind to
rediscover the reality of Redemption in Christ: "Man () remains a being
that is incomprehensible for himself, his life is senseless, if love is
not revealed to him, if he does not encounter love, if he does not
experience it and make it his own, if he does not participate
intimately in it. This, as has already been said, is why Christ the
Redeemer 'fully reveals man to himself.' [...] man finds again the
greatness, dignity and value that belong to his humanity. In the
mystery of the Redemption man becomes newly 'expressed' and, in a way,
is newly created. [...] The man who wishes to understand himself
thoroughly -- and not just in ac
cordance with immediate, partial, often superficial, and even illusory
standards and measures of his being -- he must with his unrest,
uncertainty and even his weakness and sinfulness, with his life and
death, draw near to Christ. He must, so to speak, enter into him with
all his own self, he must 'appropriate' and assimilate the whole of the
reality of the Incarnation and Redemption in order to find himself (No.
10). [...]
"This union of Christ with man is in itself a mystery. From the mystery
is born 'the new man,' called to become a partaker of God's life, and
newly created in Christ for the fullness of grace and truth. [...] Man
is transformed inwardly by this power as the source of a new life that
does not disappear and pass away but lasts to eternal life. [...] This
life, which the Father has promised and offered to each man in Jesus
Christ () is in a way the fulfilment of the 'destiny' that God has
prepared for him from eternity. This 'divine destiny' is advancing, in
spite of all the enigmas, the unsolved riddles, the twists and turns of
'human destiny' in the world of time. Indeed, while all this, in spite
of all the riches of life in time, necessarily and inevitably leads to
the frontier of death and the goal of the destruction of the human
body, beyond that goal we see Christ. 'I am the resurrection and the
life, he who believes in me ... shall never die'" (No. 18).