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Karol Wojtyla – a life in pictures
The Tablet is running a special series of articles on Pope
John II as his beatification approaches. They are available to
subscribers and appear in the print edition, which you can buy at
selected branches of WH Smith.
‘Rock of reassurance'
In the first of a series of articles marking the beatification of John Paul II, a
Veteran Vatican-watcher recalls one of the giants of his age
Richard Owen
9 April 2011
'Prophet and liberator'
John Paul II's native Poland prepares to celebrate the soon-to-be beatified Pope with a devotion that has provoked controversy
Jonathan Luxmoore
16 April 2011
Should he be santo a little less subito?
Canonisation is expected to follow fairly swiftly for John Paul II after his beatification on 1 May. But should popes be raised to the altars? Here, a biographer of two popes argues that it is near impossible to scrutinise their lives objectively
John Cornwell
23 April 2011
Wojtyla's vision
The very different thinking of John Paul II and Benedict XVI was influenced by Europe's struggles against totalinarianism
Fergus Kerr
30 April 2011
In search of real freedom
For the priest-philosopher Karol Wojtyla, life was a drama in which a person had to choose between God and false gods
Tracey Rowland
30 April 2011
Hope will be his legacy
The harmony and accord between Christians and Jews sought by John Paul II throughout his papacy have continued, albeit unevenly
Edward Kessler
30 April 2011
Truth and reconciliation
One of the late Pope's missions was to engage in dialogue with people of other faiths and none while still rejecting relativism
Alana Harris
30 April 2011
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John Paul II travelled more than any other pope in history, visiting 129 countries in all. This map shows where he travelled and which countries he visited the most.
‘Unseemly haste?'
When the date of the beatification was announced in January, The Tablet published
two polemical articles for and against beatifying the late pope only
six years after his death, which you can read extracts from here. In the
first, historian Michael Walsh takes issue with Rome's apparent rush in
beatifying the late Pope, while John Paul II's biographer George Weigel
finds much to celebrate in his legacy.
John Paul II ... was undoubtedly a charismatic figure, and at his
funeral there had been shouts of "Santo subito", writes Michael Walsh.
But that is scarcely enough on its own for the traditionally cautious
Congregation for the Causes of Saints to have hurried through the
process with what seems like unseemly haste. The ceremony of
beatification on 1 May, just half a dozen years since John Paul's death,
would not be happening had not his successor particularly wished it to
happen. One has to ask, what is the message?
It is not hard to find. When he was elected Pope in April 2005, Benedict
XVI announced his desire during his pontificate was to make the
teachings of his predecessor better known. The remark was just a touch
disingenuous because, as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, he was already closely associated with the Magisterium of
his predecessor who in 1981 had appointed him to that post. But that
apart, nothing adds the seal of approval to a person's teachings quite
like being made a saint.
... Because of the late pontiff's own reforms, there is no longer a
devil's advocate, no longer someone whose task it is to urge the case
for the prosecution. The Vatican, Western Europe's last dictatorship,
has no independent civil service. All its officials hold their post at
the will of the pontiff. All will have been promoted by him. In
canonising their former employer a little reflected glory will no doubt
be theirs. (from "Glow of his shadow", Michael Walsh)
In 1978, no one expected that the defining figure of the last quarter of
the twentieth century would be a Polish priest and bishop, writes
George Weigel. Christianity was finished as a world-shaping force,
according to the opinion-leaders of the time; it might endure as a
vehicle of personal piety, but Christian conviction would play no role
in shaping the twenty-first-century world. Yet within six months of his
election, John Paul II had demonstrated the dramatic capacity of
Christian conviction to create a revolution of conscience that, in turn,
created a new and powerful form of politics - the politics that
eventually led to the revolutions of 1989 and the liberation of Central
and Eastern Europe.
Then there was his evangelism. John Paul II made Catholicism compelling
and interesting in a world that imagined that humanity had "outgrown"
its need for God, Christ and the Church ... And then there was John
Paul's social doctrine, which, again against all expectations, put the
Catholic Church at the centre of the world's conversation about the
politics, economics and public culture of the post-Communist future. In
1978, did anyone really expect that papal social encyclicals would be
debated in the pages of The Wall Street Journal, or that a pope would
rivet the world's attention in two dramatic defences of the universality
of human rights before the General Assembly of the United Nations?
... His evangelical Catholicism demonstrated both the beauty of
Christianity and its importance for the human future. That demonstration
was his greatest "miracle"; it was his greatest gift to the Church and
the world; and it is the reason why the Church was right to recognise
his heroic virtues in declaring him to be among the blessed. (from "Miraculous legacy", George Weigel)
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