The Portal May 2014 | Page 4

THE P RTAL May 2014 T he canonisation of St John Paul brought its own special message for the Ordinariate. His visit to Britain in 1982 with that dramatic gathering at Canterbury Cathedral was a pivotal moment in the history of Christianity in Britain, and a central part of the back-story to the creation of the Ordinariate by his successor Benedict XVI. The ecumenical hopes of 1982 gave way in turn to the C of E Synod vote of 1992 which closed a door firmly…and this in turn set in motion the events which led to the formation of the Ordinariate, and the adventure and work-inprogress with which we are all involved. John Paul broke through so many barriers. The election of a Polish Pope was perhaps the single most powerful event which sparked the collapse of Communism (although, in the great reality of things, the prayers and sufferings of so many martyrs, known and unknown, over some six decades, taken together, surely played the greatest role). Auntie Jo a n Canonisation of St John Paul Page 4 na wri tes not fail to excite interest: having lost all his immediate family by the time he left his teens, he also lost his country and his plans for the future with the Nazi invasion of Poland and the closure of the country’s universities. Studying theology while working in a stone quarry, joining a secret seminary, and finally being ordained after the war ended and a new totalitarian government had taken over his country…this is the stuff of which adventure is made, and Britain’s wartime links with Poland (and sense of guilt at the terms of the Yalta agreement?) added zest to the mix. He made great strides in ecumenism, reaching out across denominations and appealing in fresh ways to generations anxious to overcome past divisions. He spoke with frankness and depth about human sexuality, presenting a new approach with what came to be known as the “theology of the body”. His missionary journeys, celebrating Mass with vast crowds – at one point, in the Philippines, the numbers at Mass were estimated at five million – presented a vision of the Petrine ministry that was at once compelling, authentic, and revolutionary. The canonisation of this great man, and his close working bond with the man who was to become his successor as our beloved Benedict XVI and gave us the Ordinariate, places Saint John Paul in a special way in our hearts. Canonisation seals him into the life of the Church for ever - “what is bound on earth is bound in Heaven” – and into history. For those of us who had the privilege of meeting him, photographs and treasured mementoes now have a richer significance. As we grow older, so the memory of this great man will slip from vivid anecdote to formal recollection, and thence into a sort of folklore. There will be family His visit to Britain came just exactly at a time when stories and cherished, slightly muddled, anecdotes. British people were ready for it. The old image of the And all of this will be mixed in with the booklets and Papacy (Lewes Bonfire traditions and all that) was statues and holy cards that are part of the everyday fading, with travel, tourism, and TV all playing their texture of Catholicism. role in that. Various events drew together Christians from different denominations on a fairly regular basis, For a moment, though, and with the canonisation from carol services and Remembrance Day events fresh in our minds, let’s just pause and take stock and to mutual visits for installations of clergy or similar. say a quiet thank-you to St John Paul. The Polish Pope was a man whose life-story could Joanna Bogle DSG contents page