2003-10-12 The year 1978 is remembered as “The Year of the Three Popes...”
October 12, 2003
The year 1978 is remembered as “The Year of the Three Popes.” When the
white smoke went up and the name Karol Wojtyla was announced, there was
a stunned silence. I happened to be in St. Patrick’s Cathedral at the
time and no one there had yet heard the news. A reporter rushed in with
the name hastily printed on a note pad and asked me how to pronounce
it. I had no idea, but did an interview broadcast nationally in which I
assumed the new pope was African. We only knew that to most people he
was unknown. Soon John Paul II appeared on the balcony of St. Peter’s
and said “Do not be afraid.”
It was easy to assume that he was speaking of the passing
world scene. The experience of these twenty-five years, which mark the
third-longest reign in papal history, has taught that the Pope was
referring to the tremendous events about to unfold. Looking back on the
social upheaval since then, not least of which was the collapse of the
Communist empire, totally unpredicted by so many wiseacres who had
mocked those who understood the spiritual implications of truly evil
social systems, we better appreciate the prophetic tone of the new
Pope’s words.
After a long and dramatic reign, it is convenient to identify the
papacy with one man. I suppose fifteen hundred years ago the Romans
thought that way about Gregory I. Surely the late nineteenth century
seemed inseparable from Pius IX. For many moderns, Pius XII was “The
Pope” and the impact of the brief reign of John XXIII moved many to ask
if anyone could follow him. I know a man who has lived through thirteen
papal reigns. We also have parishioners active in our catechetical
programs who, like many seminarians now, remember no other pope. But
the old Roman saying, tinged with cynicism and touched with hope, goes:
“One Pope dies, make another.” That is, after all, the Petrine
succession as our Lord willed it to St. Peter on the shore of Galilee.
And as it is the Divine Will, it is not a legacy but a living presence.
Vain is the presumption which thinks, contrary to sound theology, that
every papal election is the direct inspiration of God. But every
election is provided by God and there are times when He most powerfully
does intervene. God always keeps his promise that the Gates of Hell
will not prevail against His Church.
The next pope, whenever he appears on the world stage, will have to
address the many perplexities which have agitated the Church in our
generation. In all things, he will continue the succession of the Pope
from a Far Country, glorianter regnante, who said “Do Not Be Afraid” because Christ said it first when he rose from the dead.
Fr. George W. Rutler
