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- <text id=94TT1808>
- <title>
- Dec. 26, 1994: Essay:Kitchen Pope, Warrior Pope
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/MAN OF THE YEAR, Page 79
- Essay: Kitchen Pope, Warrior Pope
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Paul Johnson
- </p>
- <p> [Paul Johnson, the British journalist and historian, is the author
- of the bestselling Modern Times (1992) and A History of Christianity
- (1983)]
- </p>
- <p> The modern Roman Catholic Church has been shaped by two men:
- Angelo Roncalli, Pope John XXIII, and Karol Wojtyla, Pope John
- Paul II. The enormous changes that have swept Catholicism over
- the past 36 years cannot be understood without grasping the
- characters, beliefs and work of these two men--both great
- Popes but very different Popes. John XXIII, TIME's 1962 Man
- of the Year, was nearly 77 when he came to the throne of St.
- Peter, and his reign lasted less than five years, from 1958
- to 1963. John Paul II was by papal standards a comparatively
- young man when he was elected in 1978--only 58, making him
- the youngest Pope in 132 years. He has already reigned a decade
- and a half and, despite his recent physical troubles, is making
- plans into the 21st century.
- </p>
- <p> The opportunities to reshape the church enjoyed by these two
- men were thus conditioned by quite different time spans. Nonetheless,
- their main achievements--John's in introducing the Catholic
- reformation and John Paul's in terminating it--are similarly
- weighty. It is also vital to grasp that despite their huge differences
- in character and temperament, the two men have much in common.
- </p>
- <p> Roncalli was born in the first ridge of mountains east of Lake
- Como, and looked to the great Renaissance city of Bergamo, not
- Rome, as his capital. He thought of himself all his life as
- Bergamese. Donizetti was his favorite composer; he got another
- Bergamese, Giacomo Manzu, to design one of the great bronze
- doors of St. Peter's, and he liked to surround himself, as Pope,
- with Bergamese clergy.
- </p>
- <p> Wojtyla is another mountaineer, from the Carpathian foothills
- near Cracow. This splendid medieval and Renaissance city, with
- its ancient Jagiellonian University--which Wojtyla attended--was the center of his youthful universe. Warsaw, the modern
- capital of Poland, meant little to him, and the summit of his
- clerical ambition was reached when he became Cardinal-Archbishop
- of Cracow. As Pope, he is a Pole, as Roncalli was an Italian.
- But both men, as instinctive regionalists, have repudiated modern
- nationalism and have tended to see Europe as an amalgam of historic
- regions--a microcosm of a world of peoples rather than of
- nations. A regionalist finds it much easier to develop true
- internationalism than a nationalist, and this is one reason
- why both men were at ease as head of a global organization,
- speaking urbi et orbi--to the city and to the world.
- </p>
- <p> Both men were by temperament religious traditionalists. It is
- true that Pope John under the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit
- (this is the only way I can rationalize his decision to summon
- the Second Vatican Council) was capable of making startling
- and creative decisions. But his family background, training
- and career were totally unadventurous. He was steeped in old-style
- Catholicism. This made him, like the famous 19th century reformer
- W.E. Gladstone, a "conservative in everything but essentials."
- His spiritual diary reflects an almost childish simplicity in
- his devotions. The rosary was hardly ever out of his hands.
- </p>
- <p> John Paul II is also a great man for the rosary. These days
- he appears to say it continuously and, when not actually talking,
- his lips move all the time in silent, repetitive prayer. Like
- Pope John, perhaps even more so, he loves holy pictures, relics,
- shrines, pilgrimages, saints and martyrs. Miracles, especially
- the possibility of a new one, fill him with delight. He reveres
- all the glittering--some would say tawdry--aspects of traditional
- Catholicism. Both John and John Paul would have found themselves
- at home in the pre-Reformation world of medieval Christianity.
- </p>
- <p> Then there are the differences between the two men, which in
- part reflect the times in which they came to maturity. The year
- John was born, Chester Arthur was President, Disraeli had just
- died, and Picasso had just been born. In many ways John was
- a Victorian, and the church in which he rose to be Cardinal-Patriarch
- of Venice had not changed much since the 16th century. John
- was perfectly well adjusted to this old-fashioned church, but
- there were aspects to it he found stifling and frustrating.
- </p>
- <p> His frustrations were increased by his career. He was not an
- intellectual at all. He had none of the instincts of an administrator
- or clerical politician. By nature he was a pastoralist--that
- is, he loved the care of souls. People meant everything to him.
- His greatest delight--and temptation, as he freely admitted--was to sit in the kitchen of a teeming, pulsating Italian
- household, chatting to the women as they went about their work,
- telling stories to the children, cracking jokes with the men.
- Instead, his superiors made him spend most of his life as a
- diplomat, culminating in the grandiose post of papal nuncio
- in Paris.
- </p>
- <p> As it happened, John made himself into a conscientious and accomplished
- diplomat. But he never particularly liked the work, and it gave
- him a huge distaste for the Vatican court as it existed under
- the long-reigning Pius XII (1939-58). He found it artificial
- and impersonal--and undemocratic. He wanted to bring into
- the running of the church the thousands of bishops, hundreds
- of thousands of priests and the countless millions of ordinary
- Catholics throughout the world. Hence, in 1959, only a year
- after he became Pope, he summoned the Second Vatican Council.
- He compared the idea to a flinging open of windows, an airing,
- an exposure of a musty institution to fresh breezes.
- </p>
- <p> John seems to have decided on holding a council, which began
- in 1962, without a clear idea of what exactly it would do. His
- saying was, "The Holy Spirit will provide." The council, which
- outlived him, proved a typical '60s event, sending one of the
- most traditional institutions on earth on a roller coaster of
- fashionable innovation and change for the sake of change. But
- while he lived, John's interventions in the council's work were
- well judged and effective.
- </p>
- <p> The real trouble started after his death, when Giovanni Battista
- Montini, Archbishop of Milan, became Pope Paul VI. In theory,
- Paul was better qualified to be Pope, by training and experience,
- than any other 20th century Pontiff. In practice, he proved
- nervous, hesitant and indecisive. He simply could not make up
- his mind. John had foreseen this; he had a word for his successor:
- Amleto (Shakespeare's Hamlet). Under this wavering and unlucky
- Pope, the postconciliar church went off the rails. All over
- the world, but particularly in the Americas and Europe, discipline
- became shaky or even broke down. Thousands of priests gave up
- their vocations and married. Nuns took to feminism. Quasi heresies
- like Liberation Theology became the mode. Some hierarchies,
- such as the Dutch, virtually broke free of Rome. The Vatican
- began to allow annulments of marriage by the thousands--amounting
- to a Catholic sanction of divorce. Its finances were out of
- control. By the time Paul died in 1978, the church was in its
- worst crisis since the Protestant Reformation.
- </p>
- <p> John Paul II has never repudiated the legacy of John XXIII.
- On the contrary, no senior prelate had taken more pains to implement
- the decisions of Vatican II in his archdiocese than Wojtyla.
- Moreover, he had worked very closely with Paul VI, to whose
- memory he has remained conspicuously loyal, in trying to enforce
- what the council had actually decided, as opposed to what the
- ultraliberals claimed it had decided. But coming as he did from
- a church that had been notably successful in maintaining congregations,
- recruiting clergy, building churches and enforcing discipline,
- he was appalled by what was happening in the church, especially
- in Western Europe and the Americas.
- </p>
- <p> What John Paul proceeded to do amounted to a restoration of
- the church on the scale of that carried out by the Council of
- Trent in the 16th century but in this case put through by the
- willpower of a single personality. Unlike John XXIII, who had
- led a sheltered life in seminaries and nunciatures, John Paul
- was a man of the world who had suffered under Nazism and communism.
- He was a philosopher, poet and dramatist, but also a very experienced
- fund raiser and administrator. His pastoral experience was determinative.
- In Poland he had founded and run perhaps the most successful
- marriage institute in Christianity, set up to deal with the
- problems of marital discord, family planning, illegitimacy and
- venereal disease, alcoholism, wife beating and child abuse.
- </p>
- <p> Again unlike John, John Paul did not wait for the inspiration
- of the Holy Spirit: he acted himself, quickly and purposefully.
- This sometimes meant summoning and hectoring an entire hierarchy,
- as in the case of the Dutch bishops. More usually it involved
- inviting to Rome difficult or disobedient bishops for a quiet
- but firm admonition--"an awesome experience," as one of them
- put it to me, "a premonition of being received by St. Peter
- at the Last Trump." John Paul has also taken more trouble than
- any of his recent predecessors to ensure that all new bishops
- appointed are loyal, orthodox and reliable. Over the past 16
- years, virtually the entire episcopate has been renewed on the
- lines of the new traditionalism.
- </p>
- <p> In the light of eternity, the work of John XXIII and of John
- Paul II is of comparable importance. Both men will be treated
- by history as great Popes. John has a more humane face, in some
- ways a more attractive face: a Pope for the home and the fireside
- and joyous festivals of the church. John Paul is a Pope for
- the public forum, for the vast congregation and the open battlefield,
- where the forces of Christianity fight for survival in an often
- hostile world. He is an intellectual Pope and a warrior Pope.
- But he is also, and increasingly, a praying Pope, a man rarely
- off his knees. He is even coming to resemble Pope John physically:
- an old, increasingly frail gentleman, still doing his formidable
- best to pray for and guide a suffering humanity and save it
- from the consequences of its weaknesses and follies.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-