The St. Blogs police issued me a warning in that I have not yet posted anything on the one year anniversary of Pope John Paul II’s death. This is of course mandatory for Catholic bloggers so here is my entry. On a more serious note I am tempted to give the quaint sayings about how times flies and so forth. At my parish they had a nice painting of Pope John Paul II placed by the side altar and it reminded me that I found it strange that I now feel closer to him now than when he was alive. I developed a devotion to him shortly after his death and frequently asked him for his intercession. That is the beauty of God’s plan and the Communion of Saints. That when we think we have lost someone we can also find them again within Christ’s mystical body. I truly can’t say I miss Pope John Paul II, because I know he is closer than ever. It was extremely unlikely that while he was alive I would ever had gotten a papal audience, but now I can get one anytime I want.
I was going to write up how he affected my life, but I found that I had pretty much said it before in a post last year shortly after his death. A couple of years after he was shot he wrote Salvifici Doloris on the Christian meaning of human suffering. This Apostolic Letter expounded on the subject of human suffering, but his whole life was more than just a footnote to the redeeming value of uniting our suffering with Christ. When he was unable to speak he was all the more eloquent in speaking what the world so desperately needed to hear and still needs to hear. We watched him throughout the years more and more succumb to the fragilities due to age and disease. The press took every opportunity to mock his condition and still the crowds showed up to listen to the Wednesday audiences. When he died the very man that was supposed to be so out of touch with the common person as decreed by the MSM drew streams of people into Rome to stand in line for hours on end just for the very brief seconds to pass by his tomb and to give their farewells.
Just one more thing to add. While I drew lots of theological nutrition from what he wrote (my sites name splendoroftruth.com is based on his encyclical Vertatis Splendor), I would like to especially thank him for encyclical on the Rosary Rosarium Virginis Mariae. Praying the Rosary I had come to the conclusion that there was something missing from it. It was like it had been fast forwarded from when he was 12 to when he was 33 with the agony in the Garden. The Luminous Mysteries were a great gift to the Church in that this whole was plugged perfectly and I found it to be great benefit to be pointed to and to meditate on this events. Though I found the reaction of some to this new mystery to be rather funny. That they were arguing against adding to the Rosary while at the same time starting their Rosary prayer with the relatively new Fatima prayer (which is why I wrote the Lidless Eye Mysteries just for them). So thank you Pope John Paul II for this and all of your other gifts to the Church and for those in the future through your intercession.
Here is just a small sampling of posts on JPII:
- Gerald has an excellent post which is a photo essay of the Pope’s life.
- A Catholic Life has been doing a series of posts on the Pope over the last couple of weeks.
- Julie at Happy Catholic loves John Paul II despite his choice of operating systems (she also has a roundup to other posts on JPII).
- Seminarian Jeff Geerling a JP2-Generation Catholics.
- Hymnography Unbound also has a photo montage.
- The Whapsters also have lots of photo and a link to a story that 10,000 people visit JPG’s tomb on an ordinary day.
- Amy Wellborn solicits comments from readers askingWhere were you.
- The Anchoress has an extensive roundup.
- Eric Scheske life changed after finding found a copy of John Paul II’s Redemptoris Hominis in a used book store for a quarter. Talk about cheap grace.
- Michael Barber has some of the Pope milestones.
- L’Osservatore Romano has an excellent Flash animation montage of JPII’s life [Via TCYML].
- Catholic Fire favorite quotes and a photo montage and reflection.
10 comments
One Year Later
Hard to believe it’s been a year since Pope John Paul II died. Even harder to believe that I really don’t have anything much to say about it, or any particularly fond memories to share. I think this is because…
glad you posted on his memory… I couldn’t pass it up either…
🙂 God Bless…
So many others having it done it so much better than I ever could I opted to write something I think he’d approve of, rather than something about him.
I’ll have to risk the wrath of the St. Blog’s Parish police.
I owe my awakening to the beauties and truths of the traditional Mass to John Paul II. I watched his funeral Mass live, and was incredibly moved by the use of Latin, the reverence, the Gregorian chant and polyphonic music. I felt the universal nature of the Church. I remember thinking at the time that we as Catholics had had our patrimony robbed. That Mass was not like any novus ordo Mass celebrated in any parish to which I have ever belonged. So, I decided to really give the traditional parish run by the Institute of Christ the King, Sovereign Priest, a try.
I fell in love with that traditional liturgy and I won’t, God willing, go back. My daughter is looking forward to her confirmation by Abp. Burke in the traditional rite this year.
JPII’s liturgy was the most effective attack on liturgical abuses that he ever made. Better than the wonderful things he wrote about the Eucharist, which were ignored by so many of the Bishops. It opened my eyes.
Oh sure, skip mine 😉
Pope John Paul II was the coolest. Viva la papa (in heaven). 😉
Thanks for the post and the links. It brought back so many happy memories of our dear Papa in heaven.
God bless you,
John Paul the Great, pray for us.
Chief, When was Pope John Paul officially declared “Venerable”?
Thanks for the link; I also love reflecting on the many writings of Pope John Paul II. His writings will continue to have a great impact on the Church and the World for many years… especially his Theology of the Body and phenomonological understanding of the world.
P.S. Dangit! That greek letter thing screws me up every time! I keep thinking, ‘D’oh! I’ll have to bring up the cyrillic alphabet thing to get those characters…’