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Pope John Paul the Great, from your heavenly throne, shower your love and be our great intercessor from your heavenly throne. Pope John Paul the Great, pray for us! Items Relating to John Paul II (future saint) Click and wait a moment. Pope John Paul II was born Karol Jozef Wojtyla. He was the second son of Karol Wojtyla and his wife Emilia. He was born in Wadowice, Poland. His boyhood friends called him Lolek. His mother died before he was 9, and his older brother, a doctor, died when Lolek was 12. He and his father lived in a one-room apartment behind a church. The father often had Lolek study in a chilly room to toughen him and develop his concentration. Lolek enjoyed poetry, religion and the theater. He and his father moved to Krakow in 1938. He enrolled at Jagiellonian University studying literature and philosophy. There he joined a theater, read poetry and discuss books. He was becoming know as a good actor and singer. He escaped deportation and imprisonment by the Nazis in late 1940 by working as a stone cutter in a quarry. Wojtyla's father died in February 1941, not seeing his son commit to the priesthood, which he had desired for his son. Eighteen months later Wojtyla began studying at an underground seminary in Krakow and registered for theology courses at the university. In 1944, he was hit once by a streetcar and again by a truck in 1944 while a college student..
He continued his studies, acted and worked in a chemical plant until August of 1944. As the Germans began rounding up Polish men, Wojtyla took refuge in the archbishop of Krakow's residence. He stayed there until the war ended.. In 1946 he was ordained a priest. He earned two masters degrees and a doctorate. He served at a church next to the Jagiellonian University in Krakow. He then earned a second doctorate. He shuttled between Lublin and Krakow. Teaching in Lublin and studying in Krakow. He helped families with marital problems and addiction problems in particular.. In 1958 he was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Krakow. He was appointed a cardinal by Pope Paul VI in 1967. The Polish government seemed happy about the appointment, because they thought he would be flexible to them. In fact, he was quite the enemy of the Communists. He demanded permits to build churches and ordaining priests to work underground. In 1976, he gave the Lenten spiritual exercises for Pope Paul VI. When Pope John Paul I died in September 1978, , Wojtyla was elected on the October 16th on the eighth round of conclave voting. In 455 years there was a non-Italian as the pope. He was 58 years old. Pope John Paul the Great died on April 2, 2005 so as to celebrate the great feast of Divine Mercy in Heaven. Items Relating to John Paul II (future saint)
JOHN PAUL II'S SPIRITUAL TESTAMENT
VATICAN CITY, APR 7, 2005 (VIS) - Following is the text of the
spiritual testament of John Paul II, which was released today in an
Italian translation of the original Polish. The translation from
Italian into English has been done by VIS:
The testament of 6.3.1979
(and successive additions)
"Totus Tuus ego sum"
In the Name of the Most Holy Trinity. Amen.
"Watch therefore, for you do not know on what day your
Lord is coming" (cf. Mt 24, 42) - these words remind me of the
last call, which will happen at the moment the Lord wishes. I desire
to follow Him, and I desire that everything making up part of my
earthly life should prepare me for this moment. I do not know when the
moment will come, but like everything else, I place it too in the
hands of the Mother of my Master: Totus Tuus. In the same maternal
Hands I leave everything and everyone with whom my life and vocation
have linked me. In these Hands I leave, above all, the Church, as well
as my Nation and all humanity. I thank everyone. Of everyone I ask
forgiveness. I also ask for prayer, that the Mercy of God may appear
greater than my weakness and unworthiness.
During the spiritual exercises I re-read the testament of the
Holy Father Paul VI. That reading prompted me to write this testament.
I leave no property behind me of which it is necessary to
dispose. As for the everyday objects that were of use to me, I ask
they be distributed as seems appropriate. My personal notes are to be
burned. I ask that this be attended to by Fr. Stanislaw, whom I thank
for his collaboration and help, so prolonged over the years and so
understanding. As for all other thanks, I leave them in my heart
before God Himself, because it is difficult to express them.
As for the funeral, I repeat the same dispositions as were
given by the Holy Father Paul VI. (Here is a note in the margin:
burial in the bare earth, not in a sarcophagus, 13.3.92).
"apud Dominum misericordia
et copiosa apud Eum redemptio"
John Paul pp. II
Rome, 6.III.1979
After my death I ask for Masses and prayers. 5.III.1990
Undated sheet of paper
I express my profound trust that, despite all my
weakness, the Lord will grant me all the grace necessary to face
according to His will any task, trial or suffering that He will ask of
His servant, in the course of his life. I also trust that He will
never allow me - through some attitude of mine: words, deeds or
omissions - to betray my obligations in this holy Petrine See.
24.II - 1.III.1980
Also during these spiritual exercises, I have reflected on the
truth of the Priesthood of Christ in the perspective of that Transit
that for each of us is the moment of our own death. For us the
Resurrection of Christ is an eloquent (added above: decisive) sign of
departing from this world - to be born in the next, in the future
world.
I have read, then, the copy of my testament from last year,
also written during the spiritual exercises - I compared it with the
testament of my great predecessor and Father, Paul VI, with that
sublime witness to death of a Christian and a Pope - and I have
renewed within me an awareness of the questions to which the copy of
6.III.1979 refers, prepared by me (in a somewhat provisional way).
Today I wish to add only this: that each of us must bear in
mind the prospect of death. And must be ready to present himself
before the Lord and Judge - Who is at the same time Redeemer and
Father. I too continually take this into consideration, entrusting
that decisive moment to the Mother of Christ and of the Church - to
the Mother of my hope.
The times in which we live are unutterably difficult and
disturbed. The path of the Church has also become difficult and tense,
a characteristic trial of these times - both for the Faithful and for
Pastors. In some Countries (as, for example, in those about which I
read during the spiritual exercises), the Church is undergoing a
period of such persecution as to be in no way lesser than that of
early centuries, indeed it surpasses them in its degree of cruelty and
hatred. "Sanguis martyrum - semen christianorum.". And apart
from this - many people die innocently even in this Country in which
we are living.
Once again, I wish to entrust myself totally to the Lord's
grace. He Himself will decide when and how I must end my earthly life
and pastoral ministry. In life and in death, Totus Tuus in Mary
Immaculate. Accepting that death, even now, I hope that Christ will
give me the grace for the final passage, in other words (my) Easter. I
also hope that He makes (that death) useful for this more important
cause that I seek to serve: the salvation of men and women, the
safeguarding of the human family and, in that, of all nations and all
peoples (among them, I particularly address my earthly Homeland), and
useful for the people with whom He particularly entrusted me, for the
question of the Church, for the glory of God Himself.
I do not wish to add anything to what I wrote a year ago - only
to express this readiness and, at the same time, this trust, to which
the current spiritual exercises have again disposed me.
John Paul II
Totus Tuus ego sum
5.III.1982
In the course of this year's spiritual exercises I have read (a
number of times) the text of the testament of 6.III.1979. Although I
still consider it provisional (not definitive), I leave it in the form
in which it exists. I change nothing (for now), and neither do I add
anything, as concerns the dispositions contained therein.
The attempt upon my life on 13.V.1981 in some way confirmed the
accuracy of the words written during the period of the spiritual
exercises of 1980 (24.II - 1.III).
All the more deeply I now feel that I am totally in the Hands
of God - and I remain continually at the disposal of my Lord,
entrusting myself to Him in His Immaculate Mother (Totus Tuus)
John Paul pp.II
5.III.82
In connection with the last sentence in my testament of
6.III.1979 ("concerning the site / that is, the site of the
funeral / let the College of Cardinals and Compatriots decide") -
I will make it clear that I have in mind: the metropolitan of Krakow
or the General Council of the Episcopate of Poland - In the meantime I
ask the College of Cardinals to satisfy, as far as possible, any
demands of the above-mentioned.
1.III.1985 (during the spiritual exercises)
Again - as regards the expression "College of Cardinals and Compatriots": the "College of Cardinals" has no obligation to consult "Compatriots" on this subject, however it can do so, if for some reason it feels it is right to do so.
JPII
Spiritual exercise of the Jubilee Year 2000 (12-18.III)
(for my testament)
1. When, on October 16, 1978 the conclave of cardinals chose
John Paul II, the primate of Poland, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski told
me: "The duty of the new Pope will be to introduce the Church
into the Third Millennium." I don't know if I am repeating this
sentence exactly, but at least this was the sense of what I heard at
the time. This was said by the Man who entered history as the primate
of the Millennium. A great primate. I was a witness to his mission, to
his total entrustment. To his battles. To his victory. "Victory,
when it comes, will be a victory through Mary" - The primate of
the Millennium used to repeat these words of his predecessor, Cardinal
August Hlond.
In this way I was prepared in some manner for the duty that
presented itself to me on October 16, 1978. As I write these words,
the Jubilee Year 2000 is already a reality. The night of December 24,
1999 the symbolic Door of the Great Jubilee in the Basilica of St.
Peter's was opened, then that of St. John Lateran, then St. Mary Major
- on New Year's, and on January 19 the Door of the Basilica of St.
Paul's Outside-the-Walls. This last event, given its ecumenical
character, has remained impressed in my memory in a special way.
2. As the Jubilee Year progressed, day by day the 20th century
closes behind us and the 21st century opens. According to the plans of
Divine Providence I was allowed to live in the difficult century that
is retreating into the past, and now, in the year in which my life
reaches 80 years ('octogesima adveniens'), it is time to ask oneself
if it is not the time to repeat with the biblical Simeone 'nunc
dimittis'.
On May 13, 1981, the day of the attack on the Pope during the
general audience in St. Peter's Square, Divine Providence saved me in
a miraculous way from death. The One Who is the Only Lord of life and
death Himself prolonged my life, in a certain way He gave it to me
again. From that moment it belonged to Him even more. I hope He will
help me to recognize up to what point I must continue this service to
which I was called on October 16, 1978. I ask him to call me back when
He Himself wishes. 'In life and in death we belong to the Lord ... we
are the Lord's. (cf. Rm 14,8). I also hope that, as long as I am
called to fulfil the Petrine service in the Church, the Mercy of God
will give me the necessary strength for this service.
3. As I do every year during spiritual exercises I read my
testament from 6-III-1979. I continue to maintain the dispositions
contained in this text. What then, and even during successive
spiritual exercises, has been added constitutes a reflection of the
difficult and tense general situation which marked the Eighties. From
autumn of the year 1989 this situation changed. The last decade of the
century was free of the previous tensions; that does not mean that it
did not bring with it new problems and difficulties. In a special way
may Divine Providence be praised for this, that the period of the
so-called 'cold war' ended without violent nuclear conflict, the
danger of which weighed on the world in the preceding period.
4. Being on the threshold of the third millennium "in
medio Ecclesiae" I wish once again to express gratitude to the
Holy Spirit for the great gift of Vatican Council II, to which,
together with the entire Church - and above all the entire episcopacy
- I feel indebted. I am convinced that for a long time to come the new
generations will draw upon the riches that this Council of the 20th
century gave us. As a bishop who participated in this conciliar event
from the first to the last day, I wish to entrust this great patrimony
to all those who are and who will be called in the future to realize
it. For my part I thank the eternal Pastor Who allowed me to serve
this very great cause during the course of all the years of my
pontificate.
"In medio Ecclesiae".... from the first years of my
service as a bishop - precisely thanks to the Council - I was able to
experience the fraternal communion of the Episcopacy. As a priest of
the archdiocese of Krakow I experienced the fraternal communion among
priests - and the Council opened a new dimension to this experience.
5. How many people should I list! Probably the Lord God has
called to Himself the majority of them - as to those who are still on
this side, may the words of this testament recall them, everyone and
everywhere, wherever they are.
During the more than 20 years that I am fulfilling the Petrine
service "in medio Ecclesiae" I have experienced the
benevolence and even more the fecund collaboration of so many
cardinals, archbishops and bishops, so many priests, so many
consecrated persons - brothers and sisters - and, lastly, so very,
very many lay persons, within the Curia, in the vicariate of the
diocese of Rome, as well as outside these milieux.
How can I not embrace with grateful memory all the bishops of
the world whom I have met in "ad limina Apostolorum"
visits! How can I not recall so many non-Catholic Christian brothers!
And the rabbi of Rome and so many representatives of non -Christian
religions! And how many representatives of the world of culture,
science, politics, and of the means of social communication!
6. As the end of my life approaches I return with my memory to
the beginning, to my parents, to my brother, to the sister (I never
knew because she died before my birth), to the parish in Wadowice,
where I was baptized, to that city I love, to my peers, friends from
elementary school, high school and the university, up to the time of
the occupation when I was a worker, and then in the parish of Niegowic,
then St. Florian's in Krakow, to the pastoral ministry of academics,
to the milieu of....to all milieux....to Krakow and to Rome....to the
people who were entrusted to me in a special way by the Lord.
To all I want to say just one thing: "May God reward
you."
"In manus tuas, Domine, commendo spiritum meum."
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