By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 4.7.05 @ 12:08AM
Prayer and contemplation of God was the source of all Karol Wojtyla did in life.
WASHINGTON -- In the Spring of 1978 I was in Rome on a glorious
sunny morning, and after my matutinal coffee I strolled up the via
della Conciliazione to St. Peter's for a visit. As I recorded in
The Conservative Crack-Up over a decade later it was a
time of "idiot whirl." Suggestive of the whirl, that pert
ignoramus, Jimmy Carter, was dithering through the last years of
his idiot presidency. Inflation was singeing the dollars in our
pockets. Industries were failing. America was derided around the
world. There were new fanatics everywhere and crazy suicidal cults.
The Rev. Jim Jones had just led 900 or so of his faithful to their
poisonings.
The Piazza San Pietro was experiencing the whirl too. Yes, there
were great schools of pious Christians swimming across the Piazza's
old gray stones and into the great cathedral, but it seemed there
were lunatics everywhere. Seated next to a bored cop was a fat
greasy man in his early 30s dressed only in a T-shirt, a pink
diaper, and a baby's bonnet. A demented woman carrying a birdcage
was howling to the crowd. There were many others: dirty,
tired-looking hippies from earlier in the decade now burned out and
vacant. Several months later an obscure Polish cardinal would be
elected Pope. Over the next few years the chaos of the Piazza
receded. The idiot whirl of the Western world receded too. True,
the narcissistic contingent of American politicians about to
descend on St. Peter's to exploit John Paul II's funeral will
return zaniness to the Vatican for a few hours, but then it will be
back to normal.
After this Pope and all the history made since the late 1970s by
Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and their confused
Marxist-Leninist accomplice, Mikhail Gorbachev, the world is a
saner place, albeit still troubled. The day one Karol Wojtyla
became John Paul II, Richard Nixon, still in disgrace, was visiting
London. When informed of the Polish cardinal's surprising election
Nixon speculated to Members of Parliament in the House of Commons
that here might be the "spark" to ignite the forces of freedom
against Soviet domination throughout what was then called Eastern
Europe. John Paul did that and much more, as every obituary has
affirmed.
He revived the spiritual vigor of his Church, reinvigorated
ecumenism, acknowledged Christianity's debt to the Jews and the
wrongs committed against them, and raised the dignity of human life
for all to contemplate. Even in his last weeks he gave the
suffering of the very old meaning. He was a great proponent of
freedom but he insisted it was meaningless unless it pursued the
virtues. He was, after all, at bottom an Aristotelian-Thomistic
philosopher. He championed reason. John Paul II has been the
greatest Pope of the last 500 years, as well as one of the great
political figures of the 20th century. Franklin Roosevelt, Winston
Churchill, Ronald Reagan, and of course Hitler, Mao, and Stalin now
have a silver-haired man of God in their ranks.
Most of this has been dilated upon during the worldwide
spectacle of the Pope's death, a spectacle unlike anything that
might have been anticipated, we are told. His intellect, goodness,
and political acumen have all been remarked on, but few have noted
its provenance. Unlike any of the other historic figures of the
century, the Pope was a mystic. Prayer and contemplation of God was
the source of all he did in life.
During the Nazi occupation of Poland in 1940 the 20-year-old
Wojtyla came under the spiritual influence of a deeply religious
middle-aged layman, Jan Tyranowski, who presided over something
called the "Living Rosary." It consisted of groups of fifteen or so
young men devoted to prayer and contemplation. From this experience
Wojtyla gained his life-long interest in the mysticism of the
Carmelite order and the teachings of the 16th-century Spanish
Carmelite, St. John of the Cross. While the Nazis prowled Poland,
Wojtyla meditated and deepened his understanding of St. John's
mystical communion with God. All the rest of his life, no matter
the demands the world placed on him, his foremost concern was his
own communion with God.
This Pope would pray four hours a day, sometimes more. He had as
many responsibilities as any head of state, but all his decisions
depended on prayer and contemplation. That is what a mystic is,
even when he is the head of a 2,000-year-old institution comprised
of a billion constituents. Now all the politicians who have hustled
off to Rome to bid the Pope adieu surely want to be the best that
they can be and do the best job they can, but would any of them set
aside hours every day to pray when other responsibilities beckoned?
That sounds very unprofessional to me. But then I have missed
things over the years.
Reviewing that memorable 1978 morn in Rome as I wrote it up in
The Conservative Crack-Up, I noticed that nowhere in the
book did I mention John Paul II. I was writing about the condition
of conservatism in the late 20th century, yet somehow I missed the
Pope. After the huge sendoff the world has given him, it will be
difficult to repeat that omission.
topics:
Conservatism