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A
Tribute to
Pope John Paul II
Statement by Mother Rose Marie
Reprinted from Origins, April 14, 2005Pope John Paul II had a refreshing vision
in which religious life was not "liberal" and "conservative" factions, but
an intimate relationship with Christ. He saw the priesthood, the lay
faithful and consecrated religious life all complementing each other in a
great spiritual symphony. He was an especially great friend of
religious men and women. He praised our life in the highest terms in
Vita Consecrata as "mirror[ing] Christ's
own way of life" (32).
He had so much to say about consecrated
life, and a great deal to say to us. In the first five years that he
was pope, he called religious communities back to the authentic living of
our charisms - this was a tremendous lift to our morale, since we too were
seeking a genuine renewal of the Dominican charism without losing the
essentials. Then he developed the same idea much more deeply in
Vita Consecrata that consecrated life has a privileged relationship
with the Trinity, making us daughters of God the Father, guided by the
Holy Spirit in intimacy with Christ. He saw every aspect of the
consecrated life as derived from this relationship
with God: our community life and our contemplative prayer life translated
into Christian action in a language of love.
The pope saw the Catholic Faith as a vision
of each person's God-given beauty and unity with God lived together in the
Mystical Body of Christ. He tried to make people see consecrated
life in terms of gift to the Church, of the beauty of this gift when a
person allows herself to give all in order to belong only to God.
On a personal note, I was privileged to
study in Rome during the first years of Pope John Paul's pontificate and
so was able to see the Holy Father on numerous occasions. The first
time I saw him he was speaking to religious on the feast of St. Francis.
I remember his words, The measure of your
effectiveness will depend on the degree of your love for God. He
was captivating and the power of his words and his eyes revealed both
passion and mysticism. No matter how many times I later saw him, the
moment when I would glimpse his appearing was always fresh, riveting, and
humbling to be in his presence, like that first time I saw him.
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