† Saint of the Day †
(October 22)
✠ St. John Paul II ✠
264th Pope:
Birth name: Karol Józef Wojtyła
Born: May 18, 1920
Wadowice, Poland
Died: April 2, 2005 (Aged 84)
Apostolic Palace, Vatican City
Denomination: Catholic (Latin
Church)
Beatified: May 1, 2011
Pope Benedict XVI
Canonized: April 27, 2014
Pope Francis
Feast: October 22
Patronage:
Archdiocese of Kraków
World Youth Day (co-Patron)
World Meeting of Families 2015
(co-Patron)
Young Catholics
Families
Świdnica
Trecastelli
Borgo Mantovano
Rivignano Teor
Pope John Paul II, born Karol Józef
Wojtyła, served as 264th Pope and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 1978
to 2005.
He was elected by the second Papal
conclave of 1978, which was called after Pope John Paul I, who had been elected
in August to succeed Pope Paul VI, died after thirty-three days. Cardinal
Wojtyła was elected on the third day of the conclave and adopted his
predecessor's name in tribute to him. John Paul II is recognised as helping to
end Communist rule in his native Poland and eventually all of Europe. John Paul
II significantly improved the Catholic Church's relations with Judaism, Islam,
the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Communion. He upheld the Church's
teachings on such matters as artificial contraception and the ordination of
women, but also supported the Church's Second Vatican Council and its reforms.
He was one of the most travelled world
leaders in history, visiting 129 countries during his pontificate. As part of
his special emphasis on the universal call to holiness, he beatified 1,340
people and canonised 483 saints, more than the combined tally of his
predecessors during the preceding five centuries. By the time of his death, he
had named most of the College of Cardinals, consecrated or co-consecrated a
large number of the world's bishops, and ordained many priests. A key goal of
John Paul's papacy was to transform and reposition the Catholic Church. His
wish was "to place his Church at the heart of a new religious alliance
that would bring together Jews, Muslims and Christians in a great religious
armada".
“Open wide the doors to Christ,”
urged John Paul II during the homily at the Mass where he was installed as pope
in 1978.
Born in Wadowice, Poland, Karol
Jozef Wojtyla had lost his mother, father, and older brother before his 21st
birthday. Karol’s promising academic career at Krakow’s Jagiellonian University
was cut short by the outbreak of World War II. While working in a quarry and a
chemical factory, he enrolled in an “underground” seminary in Kraków. Ordained
in 1946, he was immediately sent to Rome where he earned a doctorate in
theology.
Back in Poland, a short assignment as
assistant pastor in a rural parish preceded his very fruitful chaplaincy for
university students. Soon Fr. Wojtyla earned a doctorate in philosophy and
began teaching that subject at Poland’s University of Lublin.
Communist officials allowed Wojtyla
to be appointed auxiliary bishop of Kraków in 1958, considering him a
relatively harmless intellectual. They could not have been more wrong!
Bishop Wojtyla attended all four
sessions of Vatican II and contributed especially to its Pastoral Constitution
on the Church in the Modern World. Appointed as archbishop of Kraków in 1964,
he was named a cardinal three years later.
Elected pope in October 1978, he
took the name of his short-lived, immediate predecessor. Pope John Paul II was
the first non-Italian pope in 455 years. In time, he made pastoral visits to
124 countries, including several with small Christian populations.
John Paul II promoted ecumenical and
interfaith initiatives, especially the 1986 Day of Prayer for World Peace in
Assisi. He visited Rome’s main synagogue and the Western Wall in Jerusalem; he
also established diplomatic relations between the Holy See and Israel. He
improved Catholic-Muslim relations, and in 2001 visited a mosque in Damascus,
Syria.
The Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, a
key event in John Paul’s ministry, was marked by special celebrations in Rome
and elsewhere for Catholics and other Christians. Relations with the Orthodox
Churches improved considerably during his papacy.
“Christ is the center of the
universe and of human history” was the opening line of John Paul II’s 1979
encyclical, Redeemer of the Human Race. In 1995, he described himself to the
United Nations General Assembly as “a witness to hope.”
His 1979 visit to Poland encouraged
the growth of the Solidarity movement there and the collapse of communism in
central and eastern Europe 10 years later. John Paul II began World Youth Day
and traveled to several countries for those celebrations. He very much wanted
to visit China and the Soviet Union, but the governments in those countries
prevented that.
One of the most well-remembered
photos of John Paul II’s pontificate was his one-on-one conversation in 1983,
with Mehmet Ali Agca, who had attempted to assassinate him two years earlier.
In his 27 years of papal ministry,
John Paul II wrote 14 encyclicals and five books. In the last years of his
life, he suffered from Parkinson’s disease and was forced to cut back on some
of his activities.
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