Our Saint of the Day ✝️ was canonized by Pope Francis in 2014.
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October 22, 2024

Dear John,

 

I was only 6 years old when St. John Paul II was elected to the papacy. And while, at the time, I wasn't aware of what he meant to the Church, I certainly came to find out in the following years.

 

When I was a teenager and a member of our parish's youth group, I remember being so excited about how the pope was focusing on the faith of us younger Catholics, especially by establishing World Youth Day. We saw this future saint as an ally on our faith journey.

 

All of the saints help us grow our faith, each through his or her own life and example. We at Franciscan Media love sharing stories of the saints, as well as other spiritual resources with you. And we want to continue to do so for many years to come. To help us in these efforts, we humbly ask you to consider a gift to Franciscan Media today.

 

May you find inspiration and comfort in the saints!

 

Peace,

Susan Hines-Brigger

Executive Editor

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for October 22: John Paul II

(May 18, 1920 – April 2, 2005)

 

Listen to Saint John Paul II’s Story Here

“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, canonized 482 saints and beatified 1,338 people. In the last years of his life, he suffered from Parkinson’s disease and was forced to cut back on some of his activities.

 

Pope Benedict XVI beatified John Paul II in 2011, and Pope Francis canonized him in 2014.

 

Reflection

Before John Paul II’s funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Square, hundreds of thousands of people had waited patiently for a brief moment to pray before his body, which lay in state inside St. Peter’s for several days. The media coverage of his funeral was unprecedented.

 

Presiding at the funeral Mass, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger—then dean of the College of Cardinals and later Pope Benedict XVI—concluded his homily by saying: “None of us can ever forget how, in that last Easter Sunday of his life, the Holy Father, marked by suffering, came once more to the window of the Apostolic Palace and one last time gave his blessing urbi et orbi (‘to the city and to the world’).

 

“We can be sure that our beloved pope is standing today at the window of the Father’s house, that sees us and blesses us. Yes, bless us, Holy Father. We entrust your dear soul to the Mother of God, your Mother, who guided you each day and who will guide you now to the glory of her Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.”

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Possessed Fully by the Spirit

 

The Holy Spirit is not an extra in Christian holiness. Rather the sending of the Spirit is the completing of the entire beautiful plan of God to share his Life with us. Jesus “emptied himself” and took our human nature. As our brother, he let himself be possessed fully by the Spirit. The Spirit powered him through a human life like ours, led him into a loving sacrificial death.

 

Because Jesus emptied himself totally in trust and love, he could be raised in victory to the eternal glory he had with the Father and the Spirit. But now—and only now, after his death—could the victorious God-man Savior send his Spirit, the Spirit of the Father, to complete his work on earth.

 

—from the book Live Like Francis: Reflections on Franciscan Life in the World
by Jovian Weigel, OFM

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PAUSE+PRAY
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Meet Me Where I Am

 

Reflect

When we have encountered great loss or trauma, sometimes it can feel like the world moves on while our hearts continue to ache. Let’s hold close to our hearts the reality of a humble God who bends low to meet us where we are. 

 

Pray

I’ve felt your presence on beauty’s edge,
in vibrant colors, in harmonious sounds.
I want to feel you in the darkness of the gulley,
in drab brown leaves, in lonely silence,
and know you still grieve with me.

 

Act

St. Francis of Assisi’s perception of God was largely formed by the incarnation. In the Christmas mystery, God humbly became a baby. In the Eucharist, God humbly becomes a piece of bread. As Francis wrote: “O wonderful loftiness and stupendous dignity! O sublime humility! O humble sublimity! The Lord of the universe, God and the Son of God, so humbles himself that for our salvation he hides himself under an ordinary piece of bread!” When we feel lost, alone, or saddened by grief, let us, like Francis, contemplate the humble God who will enter again and again into the messy corners of our hearts and lives.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Stephen Copeland. Learn more here!

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