To His Holiness John Paul II
On the 25th Anniversary of his Pontificate.
John Paul II shows an esteem for the human rarely found in other
personalities of our times, who hold power and yet are dissatisfied
with what they
have; human intelligence and will are in fact burnt away by the power
that seems to fill and satisfy their research. In John Paul II this
is not the case: in his figure Christianity defines the human
condition,
it is the road for the fulfillment of man’s happiness and it expresses
man’s lordship over things.
Following the Pope’s life over these last 25 years, what is most
noticeable is that Christianity tends to be truly the realization of
the human. All his travels, like a long march towards death, have had
as their reason the evident unity that corresponds to the genius of Christianity: “Gloria
Dei vivens homo”. The glory of God is man who is alive …in
the truth of light: God present in the history of mankind. Man who
is alive, as the Pope witnesses to before us, finds its rationality
in the
identification of Christianity with the human: Christianity is man
realized! Our Lady is the prime example of this realized humanity and
this is why
John Paul II is right in the affection he has for Mary of Nazareth.
The importance of this Pope lies in the fact that for a quarter of a
century he has spoken of Christianity and this is why he has a polemic
relationship with the whole of post-eighteenth-century culture, especially
with that founded on the French Revolution. In an era of defeats he has
spoken of Christianity as a victory, over death, over evil, over unhappiness,
over the nothingness that looms in every human whisper, and he did it
by documenting how his Christian faith pivots on a well-motivated rationality,
faced with the collapse of a world produced by ideology, he has given
the faith an explanation full of rationally persuasive evidence. He has
documented His faith with clear reasons, so much so that the enthusiasm
of many, of millions of persons who have listened to him cannot find
in arguments on which they can dissent the pretext for diminishing admiration
for him.
Thus his humanity, though physically wounded, has continued to triumph
in its positive affirmations and in its power of proposal.
Your Holiness, I wish you as long a life as possible, so that you go
on being a coherent witness of this supreme form of challenge that, out
of love for Christ, you represent for the whole world. And the more this
word, Christ, is heard, and heard again the more it will show its persuasive
capacity.
John Paul II’s Christianity reflects all the "secular" essence
of the Christian message, in other words an identity between humanity
and Christian faith. “Each man confusedly perceives a good/ in
which his soul can be at rest / and he desires it and strives to attain
it.” (The Divine Comedy, Purgatory XVII). Dante is the
perfect definition of a rational existence. And the greatest and most
evident
sign of this humanity, of this identity between humanity and Christian
faith, the sign that not even all the distortions and forgetfulness
have deleted from the human heart, the most complete and universally
known
sign is marriage.
In the Pope’s teaching woman for man and man for woman are the
visual, visible aspect of triumph, of the flower that “germinated” as
Dante says in his Hymn to the Virgin: the identity between
humanity and faith. The beauty and the capacity for goodness of this
unity is revealed
in that sacramental act that most values the human: marriage, and is
documented in John Paul II’s speeches.
So love is man’s greatest value, and therefore the example of the
man and the woman is the formula that represents the ideal. The Pope
carries this ideal, in which man lives only in love, in a true love.
The human becomes true in love, so much so that it’s hard to agree
with for example, the Spanish poet Juan Ramon Jimenez, when he writes, “Now
it is true. But it has been so false that it still goes on being impossible”.
In John Paul II’s thought humanity is realized in a real love,
that has no fear of desperation, what Dante sings in his Vita Nova: “When
love finds me close to you it makes me so bold and confident that I change
into someone else”. It is interesting to note that like Dante,
when the Pope looks at human love he is conscious of that approximation
to the ideal that is there in every human moment. So Man, in his earthly
life, has a piece of him that is in expectation, but this never prevents
him recognizing, even with anguish, that nature (or the Creator?) lives
for the ideal accord, as the verses of Vita Nova express it, “A
gentle spirit full of love,… keeps telling the soul: Sigh”.
Thank you, Your Holiness.
Luigi
Giussani