Truth to the World: The Life of John Paul
II
By Rev. Robert Sirico
ROME -- It is with a heavy heart that I write these reflections
on the life and legacy of Pope John Paul II.
You will hear, over the coming days and weeks, an endless
number of commentators analyze his monumental contribution
to human dignity and betterment. One can only affirm this.
John Paul’s ministry was ecumenical in the best sense
of the word: He reached out to people of all faiths and they,
in turn, perceived in him a boundless compassion and love.
There are a variety of ways in which the legacy left by
the pope to the Church and the world is being articulated.
In some versions, there is a downright inaccurate view of
the pope’s social teaching.
For some, it is simply impossible to conceive of John Paul
II favoring free markets and limited government as the normative
way to help the poor rise from their poverty, while at the
same time understanding that he decried a culture of materialism
and consumerism. In their minds, to side with the poor means
simply to advocate some form of socialistic economic planning.
Likewise, it has almost become a predictable fashion of
the "Vatican expert" to observe that, yes, while
the person of John Paul II was charismatic, and in many respects
innovative and exciting, his legacy contains an essential
contradiction. With an approving smile, they point out that
he was "progressive" in his understanding of "social
justice." But the smiles turn into frowns when they observe
that the pope was "regressive and conservative"
in his moral theology.
Fr. Sirico & Pope John Paul II
Having studied the writings of John Paul II over the years,
and having met the man and worked with his associates, I can
tell you that such approaches fail to grasp the richness of
the pope’s mind and the orthodox faith which inspired
his actions and teaching.
The greatest mistake in analyzing this pontificate is made
in assuming that simply because its teachings are counter-cultural
(which indeed they were and are) that they must be “antiquated”
or some such thing. One left-wing nun bemoaned the fact that
John Paul's view of morality was derived from somewhere in
the 13th century.
Actually, it is much older that. It goes back to the 1st
century and, indeed, farther back than that – to Sinai.
Something can be out of sync with the contemporary culture
because it is outdated; but it can also seem out of sync because
it is prescient. Besides, since when does modernity become
the standard of truth?
One of the most important lessons that John Paul has left
us is a renewed understanding that things are not worthless
simply because they are old (whether people or values). He
showed us why we do not hold to things simply because they
are old, but because they are true.
One of the marks of John Paul's greatness was his rejection
of ideological categories and limitations and his ability
to hold complex thoughts together as a result. For him, there
was no contradiction between celebrating the vocation of business
leaders, as he does so innovatively in his 1991 encyclical
Centesimus Annus, while upholding and defending the
rights and dignity of simple peasants. In his view, both positions
flowed, not from some poll he took, but from the intrinsic
dignity and eternal destiny of the human person: a being at
once unique, unrepeatable and immortal.
To John Paul it made no difference if the human life in
need of protection and affirmation was in the womb or a hospital
ward, in a bean field or in a board room.
This is not a contradiction. This is coherence -- a coherence
that has been fractured largely as the result of the continued
fascination with an outmoded understanding of class class
conflict which still grips the hearts of too many of our elites.
In opposition to this, John Paul called for and believed in
an essential harmony in the universe, which has its origin
in the One Creator God.
It is one of the greatest honors of my life to have met
and served this man who was at the same time larger than life,
and yet intimately personal.
All of us will be able to bless the fact and tell the next
generation that we were honored to walk the earth at the same
time as he.
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