
A Veiled Secret 
The Affinity Between Pope John Paul II and
the Carmelites

Karol Wojtyla, as a young factory
worker,
wearing his brown scapular. |
It does not appear very often in the biographies
of Pope John Paul II, but when
he was a young
adult trying to discern his vocation,
Karol
Wojtyla thought seriously of
becoming a Discalced
Carmelite. The only reason he
did not join
the novitiate in Czerna, Poland
was because
the Carmelites were not accepting
novices
because of the war.
In Guam we have a very significant
presence
of the Carmelites. In Malojloj,
a community
of twelve sisters live a life
of prayer and
penance as Discalced Carmelites.
They offer
their cloistered life for the
salvation of
souls. Archbishop Anthony Sablan
Apuron calls
them 'the powerhouse of the Archdiocese'
because through their life of
prayers they
are bolstering all the initiatives
of our
local Church.
In Saipan the Cathedral itself
is dedicated
to Our Lady Of Mount Carmel.
The Carmelites
are the only religious Order
founded in the
East that has settled in the
West.
In 1942, when Karol Wojtyla was
22 years
old, he borrowed the works of
St. John of
the Cross from the Provincial
of the Carmelites
and asked to enter the novitiate
in Czerna.
In 1945, while studying in the
major seminary
in Cracow he made a second attempt
to enter.
We have his own words: "For
some time
I thought about the possibility
of becoming
a Carmelite. My uncertainties
were resolved
by Archbishop Cardinal Sapieha,
who - in
his usual manner - said briefly:
'You should
first of all finish what you
started'. And
that is what I did" (Gift
and Mystery,
p. 35).
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In 1948 in Rome, he wrote his doctoral
thesis
in divinity on Faith in Saint John
of the
Cross. In 1982, in a meeting at the
Casa
Generalizia in Rome, he told us, "And
I must add that from a youngster onwards
I used to go always to confession to
the
Carmelite Church…" In 1986, while
receiving
a group of Polish Carmelites in his
private
chapel, on the occasion of his 40th
anniversary
of priesthood, he shared with them:
"I
was so close to being one of you…"
His love for the Carmelites was obvious
during
his pontificate. He beatified as many
as
twenty Carmelites, canonized four Carmelite
saints and nominated fourteen Carmelite
Bishops.
He visited Carmelites convents and
Churches
all over the world (among them Lisieux)
and
managed to have a Discalced Carmelite
community
in the Vatican grounds.
On many occasions he acknowledged his
personal
devotion to the Carmelite Scapular
and his
belonging -"since I was a child"
- to the confraternity. On the 23rd
November
1958, as auxiliary bishop of Cracow,
he made
his first public testimony: "I
wear
the Scapular all the time which I received
on the day of my first holy communion
from
Fr. Silvestro…"
A Carmelite priest, Father Mariano
Cera,
testified that following the assassination
attempt in May 1981, the Pope insisted
with
the doctors not to remove the brown
scapular
when they did surgery. In the letter
he wrote
commemorating the 750th anniversary
of the
giving of the scapular to Saint Simon
Stock,
he wrote, "I also carry the scapular
on my heart... for the love that it
nurtures
toward the common Heavenly mother,
whose
protection is continually springing
forth."
I was present when on the 7th of 1985,
he
shared his thoughts with the participants
of the General Chapter, "My discovery
of the works of the two saints, above
all
St. John of the Cross, gave me a great
spiritual
insight, especially while I was studying
theology. Thus what I have said has
been
influenced by what I read. Carmelite
spirituality
has strongly influenced me during certain
experiences of my life and in the different
periods of my life."
And in 1991 in another General Chapter
where
again I was present, he recommended
to us,
"Be faithful to your Founders…Always
love the Church above all else…"
In 1997 he declared St. Therese of
the Child
Jesus Doctor of the Church and in 1999
St.
Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith
Stein)
Co-Patroness of Europe.
This is the reason perhaps why in the
"Rogito",
a summary of his life and main achievements,
written on parchment and placed in
a metal
cylinder as a perpetual memorial to
his Pontificate
and placed in his wooden coffin, are
mentioned
the names of two Carmelite saints:
John of
the Cross, in remembrance of his Licentiate
completed at the Angelicum (Rome) and
Therese
of Lisieux, whom he had proclaimed
Doctor
of the Church.
Pope John Paul II, we shall keep loving
you.
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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