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Pope John Paul II looks at the faithful gathered at the Colosseum
during the traditional Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) Good Friday
service in Rome in this
A pril 18, 2003, file photo. C
NS photo/Max Rossi, Reuters
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Pope Benedict:
John Paul's ministry, agony
showed his love of Christ
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY
(CNS) -- Pope John Paul II's intense pastoral ministry, "but even
more, the Calvary of agony and the serene death of our beloved pope let
all people of our age know that Jesus Christ really was his everything,"
Pope Benedict XVI said.
Pope Benedict marked the second anniversary of Pope John Paul's death
by celebrating a memorial Mass the evening of April 2 in St. Peter's Square.
The pope said his predecessor truly fit the biblical description of a
"servant of God," which is the way the church officially refers
to him while "his process of beatification quickly progresses."
Pope Benedict, who had set aside the five-year waiting period usually
required before a sainthood cause begins, told tens of thousands of people
in St. Peter's Square that the initial, diocesan phase of Pope John Paul's
cause had concluded earlier in the day.
While the church has not solemnly proclaimed Pope John Paul a saint in
heaven, Pope Benedict said he is certain that "our beloved John Paul
II" continues to accompany the church with his prayers.
At the same time, he offered prayers that Pope John Paul, "our father,
brother and friend," would enjoy eternal rest and peace in the company
of God.
The pope praised his predecessor's ability to share with the world his
faith, hope and charity, even as Parkinson's disease gradually made it
impossible for him to walk and, ultimately, to talk.
"Especially with the slow, but relentless progression of his illness,
which little by little stripped him of everything, he made himself an
offering to Christ, a living proclamation of his passion, in a hope filled
with faith in the resurrection," Pope Benedict said.
"Like his divine master, he lived his agony in prayer," the
pope said. "He died praying. Truly, he fell asleep in the Lord."
Sitting near the front of the crowd was Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre, the
46-year-old French nun who believes she was healed of Parkinson's disease
through Pope John Paul's intervention.
Guy Murphy of the Chicago-based Totally Yours Pilgrimages was at the Mass
with 45 pilgrims from the United States.
"We are big John Paul II fans," he said.
Murphy said he was not concerned that the church was taking its time officially
proclaiming the late pope a saint -- "sometimes it takes hundreds
of years" -- but he has no doubt that "John Paul is one of the
greatest saints ever."
Earlier in the day, during a ceremony marked by prayers, song and formal
oaths in Latin, officials of the Diocese of Rome concluded the initial
phase of Pope John Paul's sainthood cause.
The process had included interviews with more than 120 people who knew
Pope John Paul and a study of his ministry, the way he handled suffering
and how he faced his death, said Cardinal Camillo Ruini, papal vicar of
Rome.
"In the certainty of being loved by God and in the joy of responding
to that love," the late pope "found the meaning, unity and aim
of his life," Cardinal Ruini said during the prayer service in the
Basilica of St. John Lateran.
The documents from the investigation were placed in five chests, latched,
tied with a red ribbon, then sealed with red wax. They will be delivered
to the Congregation for Saints' Causes for further study.
"The pope suffered in his flesh and he suffered in his spirit, finding
himself increasingly obliged to reduce his commitments," Cardinal
Ruini said. His occasional "signs of impatience" were not the
result of pain, but of his frustration at not being able to continue the
ministry to which he felt called, the cardinal added.
Cardinal Ruini described Pope John Paul as a man of continuous, intense
prayer, "concrete and radical poverty" and great freedom, which
allowed him to stand up to Poland's communist government.
His love for God was lived as love for human beings, leading the pope
to be an insistent voice for peace and for the defense of human life from
conception to natural death, the cardinal said.
Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre, a member of the Little Sisters of Catholic
Motherhood, was at the prayer service, as were Polish Cardinal Stanislaw
Dziwisz of Krakow, Pope John Paul's personal secretary for almost 40 years,
and Polish President Lech Kaczynski.
Celebrating a televised Mass early in the morning at Pope John Paul's
tomb in St. Peter's Basilica, Cardinal Dziwisz called the late pope an
"extraordinary witness" of Christ.
"John Paul II was a member of the friends of Jesus, that is, the
group of saints. Membership in this group was what gave meaning and direction
to his life, to all he did and said," Cardinal Dziwisz said.
"The people of God clearly recognize his sanctity," he said.
Cardinal Dziwisz and others have pointed out that Pope Benedict could
beatify or even canonize Pope John Paul immediately, without waiting for
the Congregation for Saints' Causes to conclude its work.
Portuguese Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins, congregation prefect, said that
unless or until he hears otherwise from the pope the congregation will
continue the process according to established church law: first, studying
the documentation gathered by the Diocese of Rome and assisting with the
drafting of a "positio," or position paper, outlining how Pope
John Paul heroically lived the Christian virtues.
The 15 cardinals and 15 bishops who are members of the congregation will
study the "positio" and forward their opinion to the pope, he
told the newspaper La Repubblica.
At the same time, he said, "an ad hoc commission of experts with
scientists and physicians of every religious orientation, even nonbelievers,"
will be convoked to study the records and testimony collected in the case
of Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre.
"It will be up to them to establish whether or not it is a healing
that is scientifically inexplicable," the cardinal said. "Only
in the light of this scientific pronouncement will a later commission
of cardinals declare whether it is a miracle that can be attributed to
the intercession" of Pope John Paul.
A declaration of heroic virtues and recognition of a miracle usually are
needed before beatification. In the usual process, canonization requires
another miracle attributed to the candidate's intervention after the beatification.
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