APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO POLAND
EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
Lowicz
14 June 1999
1. Grace to you and peace from God the Father and our Lord
Jesus Christ (Gal 1:3).
With the words of the Apostle Paul I warmly greet all who have gathered
here for this Eucharist. I am grateful to Divine Providence for the grace
of this meeting. Before this altar and in your midst, I wish to be one
with all who have come here, as well as with those who gather around their
priests every day in church, bearing witness to their faith, hope and
love. In the Eucharist Christ has revealed in the most perfect way Gods
infinite love for man: Greater love has no man than this, that a man
lay down his life for his friends (Jn 15:13).
I greet the young Church of Lowicz, together with its Pastor, Bishop
Alojzy, and Auxiliary Bishop Józef. I also greet the diocesan and
religious clergy, the religious brothers and sisters and all the faithful
of this Diocese, and in a special way the many children and young people
gathered here. I greet the pilgrims who have come for this meeting from
the neighbouring Archdioceses of Warsaw and Lódz, as well as from
the Dioceses of Plock and Wloclawek, together with their Pastors, and the
pilgrims who have come from other parts of Poland and from abroad.
I greet you, land of Lowicz, with your rich history. It was in fact
here, in the city of Lowicz, that for centuries the Archbishops of
Gniezno, Primates of Poland, lived. Many of them found their place of
eternal repose in the crypt of the ancient collegiate church of Lowicz,
now the Cathedral.
I greet you, land of Blessed Maria Franciszka Siedliska, foundress of
the Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth; land of Blessed Boleslawa
Lament, foundress of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Family.
Here, through the efforts of Father Stanislaw Konarski, the reform of the
Scolopian schools took place. From history we know how important this was
in the period of the Polish Enlightenment, and what great fruits of this
reform were gathered by the generations of Poles living under the
partitions.
I greet you, land so abundantly rich in Christian tradition and in the
faith of your people, which despite the storms of history has always
persevered, unchanged, beside Christ and his Church.
2. I therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, beg you to lead a
life worthy of the calling to which you have been called (Eph
4:1).
Saint Paul writes this in the Letter to the Ephesians. Today the same
words could be addressed to us, his fellow countrymen, by Bishop Michal
Kozal, a prisoner in the concentration camp at Dachau. Today is the
liturgical memorial of this faithful witness to Christ. The grace which
God gave him was not in vain (cf. 1 Cor 15:10) and
continues to bear fruit today. Blessed Bishop Kozal exhorts us to behave
in a manner worthy of our human and Christian vocation, as sons and
daughters of this land, the same homeland of which he was a son. Saint
Paul shows the greatness of this vocation. We are members of the Body of
Christ, the Church, which he instituted and of which he is the Head. In
this Church the Holy Spirit continually distributes the gifts necessary
for various services and tasks. These make up the great richness of the
Church and serve the good of all.
Recalling these words, I think especially of you, dear parents. God has
given you a special vocation. To preserve human life on earth, he
instituted the family. You are the first guardians and protectors of the
life which has not yet come into the world but is already conceived.
Accept the gift of life as the greatest grace of God, as his blessing for
the family, for the nation and for the Church. Here, from this place, I
say to all the fathers and mothers of my homeland and of the whole world,
to all men and women without exception: every child conceived in the womb
of its mother has the right to life! I repeat once again what I have
already said many times: Human life is sacred. No one, in any
circumstance, can claim the right to directly destroy an innocent human
life. God is the absolute Lord of the life of man, made in his image and
likeness (cf. Gn 1:26-28). Human life is thus given a sacred and
inviolable character, which reflects the inviolability of the Creator
himself (cf. Evangelium Vitae, 53). God protects life with
the firm prohibition proclaimed on Sinai: You shall not kill (Ex
20:13). Remain faithful to this commandment. Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski,
Primate of the Millennium, once said We wish to be a nation of the
living, not of the dead.
The family is also called upon to educate its children. The first place
where the educational process of a young person begins is the family home.
All children have the natural, inalienable right to have their own family,
parents, brothers and sisters, among whom they come to the realization
that they are a persons needing love and capable of loving others. May the
Holy Family of Nazareth always be the example for you, the family in which
Christ grew up with his mother Mary and putative father Joseph. Since
parents give life to their own children, they have the right to be
recognized as the first and principal educators. They also have the duty
to create a family atmosphere, filled with love and respect for God and
neighbour, which favours the personal and social education of their
children. What a great task the mother has! Thanks to the particularly
deep bond which unites her to her child, she can draw her child close to
Christ and the Church in an effective way. However, she always expects the
help of her husband, the father of the family.
Dear parents, you know well that in these days it is not easy to create
the Christian conditions necessary for educating children. You must do
everything to ensure that God is present and honoured in your families. Do
not forget daily family prayer, especially in the evening, keeping Sunday
holy and going to Sunday Mass. You are your childrens first teachers
of prayer and Christian virtue, and no one can take your place in this.
Observe religious customs and cultivate Christian tradition, teach your
children to respect everyone. May your greatest desire be to educate the
younger generation in union with Christ and the Church. Only in this way
will you be faithful to your vocation as parents and provide for your
childrens spiritual needs.
3. In this responsible duty of education, the family must receive
assistance. It needs help and expects it from the Church and the State. It
is not a matter of replacing the family in its duties but of harmoniously
uniting everyone in this great task.
I therefore speak to you, my brother priests, and to all who are
involved in catechesis: open wide the doors of the Church so that
everyone, and in particular the young, can draw abundantly upon and profit
from her enormous spiritual wealth. In our country today, the Church can
teach religion in the schools without hindrance. The times of struggle for
freedom of catechesis are past. Many of us know what sacrifices and what
courage this cost Catholic society in Poland. One of the wrongs done to
the faithful in the times of the totalitarian system has been righted.
The teaching of religion in the schools, which is a great good, requires
sincere and responsible commitment. We should make the best possible use
of this good. Thanks to catechesis, the Church can carry out her own
evangelizing activity with still greater efficiency and in this way widen
the scope of her mission.
I also speak to you, dear teachers and educators. You have taken on the
great task of handing on knowledge and education to the children and young
people entrusted to you. You are faced with a difficult and serious call.
Young people need you. They look for models as points of reference. They
expect answers to the many questions of life which trouble their minds and
hearts, and in a special way they demand from you an example of how to
live. You must be their friends, faithful companions and allies in the
struggles of youth. Help them to build the foundations for their future.
I am pleased that in Poland many new Catholic schools are being
established. This is a sign that the Church is present in a practical way
in the area of education. These schools are to be supported, and
conditions must be created to enable them to contribute to the common good
of society in cooperation with the entire educational world in Poland.
Particular sensitivity is needed on the part of all those involved in
schools in order to create the climate for friendly and open dialogue. A
spirit of familiarity and mutual respect should prevail in all schools;
this was and is characteristic of the Polish school. The school should be
a source of the social virtues which our country so greatly needs. Such a
climate needs to contribute to enabling children and young people to
declare their religious convictions openly and behave in accordance with
them. Let us seek to develop and strengthen in the hearts of children and
young people patriotic feeling and a bond with the homeland. Let us seek
to make them aware of the common good of the nation and teach them a sense
of responsibility for the future. The education of the younger generation
in a spirit of love for the homeland is of great importance for the future
of the nation. In fact, it is not possible to serve the nation well
without knowing its history, its rich tradition and its culture. Poland
needs people open to the world, who love their own country.
Dear teachers and educators, I wish to express to you my appreciation
for your efforts in the education of young people. I warmly thank you for
this particularly important and difficult work. I thank you for your
service to the country. I myself owe a personal debt of gratitude to
schools, and to my teachers and educators, whom I remember to this day and
for whom I pray every day. What I received in my school years continues to
bear fruit in my life today.
May the good of the younger generation be the concern of your life and
educational work. Saint Paul says: I beg you to lead a life worthy
of the calling . . . for building up the body of Christ (Eph
4:1, 12). Could there be a vocation greater than the one God has given to
you?
4. Grace was given to each of us according to the measure of
Christs gift (Eph 4:7). Saint Paul teaches us
today and at the same time reminds us that grace is the gift by which God
gives us his life, making us his children and partakers of his nature. The
question therefore arises: how should I live, so that the power of Gods
grace will be manifest in me in the fullest possible way, like the
mysterious power of a grain of wheat which produces a hundredfold?
Dear boys and girls, pupils of the primary and secondary schools of the
Diocese of Lowicz and the neighbouring Dioceses, and also from other parts
of Poland: it is good that you are here today. I am very happy to have
this meeting. What you have just heard concerns you and your education in
a special way. I want to assure you: the Pope loves you very much and has
your future very much at heart, so that you will prepare yourselves well
for the tasks which await you.
You know that we are coming close to the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000.
In this regard, many of you are probably asking: the new millennium which
is about to arrive, what will it be like? Will it be better than the one
which is about to end? Will it bring important and positive changes for
the world, or will it be the same as before? I want to tell to that to a
great extent the future of the world, of our country and of the Church
depends on you. You will be the ones to shape it, on you depends the great
task of building up the times which are coming. Now you understand why I
first spoke so much about the education of the young.
Do not be afraid to follow the path of your vocation, do not be afraid
to seek the truth about yourselves and the world around you. How much I
would like you all to have in your homes an atmosphere of real love! God
has given you your parents and for this great gift you should often thank
him. Respect and love your parents. They brought you into the world and
they are educating you. Your parents are in fact your dearest friends, and
you should seek their help and advice in the problems of your lives. At
this moment I think with sadness and great concern about all those young
people of your own age who do not have a family home, who are deprived of
the love and warmth of parents. Tell them that the Pope remembers them in
his prayers and that he wishes them very well.
Your age is the most profitable time of life for sowing and preparing
the ground for future harvests. The more you commit yourselves to your
duties, the more efficiently you will carry out your mission in the
future. Devote yourselves to your studies with great enthusiasm. Learn to
know new things. Knowledge opens new horizons and helps mans
spiritual growth. The person who always wants to learn something new is
truly great.
Youth seeks models and examples. Christ himself comes to your aid, he
who dedicated his entire life to the good of others. Look to him. May he
be present in your thoughts, in your games and in your conversations. You
should always live in friendship with him. The Lord Jesus wishes to help
you. He wishes to be your support and to strengthen you in your youthful
struggles in order to attain the virtues such as faith, love, honesty,
purity and generosity. When you have to face some difficulty, when you
experience lack of success or disappointment in your life, may your
thoughts go straight to Christ, who loves you and helps you to overcome
every difficulty. Know that you are not alone. At your side there is
someone who will never disappoint you. Christ understands the most secret
desires of your heart. He awaits your love and your witness.
5. You have one teacher and you are all brethren (Mt
23:8).
Dear Brothers and Sisters, let us turn our hearts to Christ, the
true light that enlightens every man (cf. Jn 1:9). He is the
Teacher, the Risen One who has life in himself and who remains ever
present in the Church and the world. It is he who reveals to us the will
of the Father and who teaches us how to live out the vocation which we
have received from God through the power of the Holy Spirit. Let us
entrust to Christ the great work of education. Only he fully knows man and
knows what is hidden in the depths of the human heart. Today Christ says
to us: Without me you can do nothing (Jn 15:5)
I, your Teacher, I wish to be your way and your light, your life and truth
always, to the close of the age (Mt 28:20). Amen.
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Vaticana