John Paul II "the Great"?

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Here is the thread. Is or should John Paul II be called “the Great”?

Yes? No? Why? Why not?

What is even the basis of a Pope being “the Great?”

Pax Christi tecum.
 
I do not think so, he was a great Catholic, a loving man and a sincere witness to kindness.

I am not too sure he was a great Pope as being a Father requires discipline and authority which I believe his overall kindness fueled by his love led him to overlook many things in his Pontificate.

Time will tell though, I believe we should always be prudent and examine the results and details of his Pontificate. He was certainly well loved and admired almost all around, even by the press. The coverage of his funeral was amazing.

God Bless
Scylla
 
Well, like it or not, he’s being called “the great,” even by Pope Benedict XVI.
 
Well, like it or not, he’s being called “the great,” even by Pope Benedict XVI.
So…is the title “the great” just a popularity contest? If enough people like you enough, and if those “enough people” call you “the great” then you must be “the great?”

Pax Christi tecum.
 
So…is the title “the great” just a popularity contest? If enough people like you enough, and if those “enough people” call you “the great” then you must be “the great?”

Pax Christi tecum.
In the past sainthood was defined by popular acclaim/devotion too. I would not be so fast in discounting the response of the community of believers.
 
In the past sainthood was defined by popular acclaim/devotion too. I would not be so fast in discounting the response of the community of believers.
Yes but has the Church discerned in her wisdom to keep it that way? The Church doesn’t just say, “Yes well everyone thinks he/she was holy so he/she must be.” No, there is a process and the Church discerns it based on the persons life, miracles, etc. Canonization has not remained at the discretion of the community of believers opinions.

The difference here is when people just start calling him that, it doesn’t mean that it is necessarily the case - especially in this day and age.

Pax Christi tecum.
 
So…is the title “the great” just a popularity contest? If enough people like you enough, and if those “enough people” call you “the great” then you must be “the great?”
Like it or not, I think that is how it works.
 
Like it or not, I think that is how it works.
So the Church doesn’t confer it, the people do…some it could be a fitting title or not fitting title, but if the people call him it then it sticks. I can see that. Honestly I don’t know if enough people use it for it to stick beyond 5 or 10 years…

Pax Christi tecum.
 
Maybe once it sticks around for a couple hundred years, but I don’t see that happening.
When you look at Gregory the Great, we see that title stuck for centuries. Why? Because there was substance behind it. The things he did for the Church were very substantial.

I think most people refer to John Paul II as “the Great” because of his charisma more than anything else, which will fade with time.

Pax Christi tecum.
 
I do not think so, he was a great Catholic, a loving man and a sincere witness to kindness.

I am not too sure he was a great Pope as being a Father requires discipline and authority which I believe his overall kindness fueled by his love led him to overlook many things in his Pontificate.

Time will tell though, I believe we should always be prudent and examine the results and details of his Pontificate. He was certainly well loved and admired almost all around, even by the press. The coverage of his funeral was amazing.

God Bless
Scylla
That’s pretty much the way I look at John Paul II as well. Kind, gentle, wonderful man, but lacking the firm handedness needed to lead well.
 
That’s pretty much the way I look at John Paul II as well. Kind, gentle, wonderful man, but lacking the firm handedness needed to lead well.
Yes, I’d agree. I also think he was influenced a bit too much with modern ideas, especially on ecumenism. Also I think - and maybe because he was a philosopher - his writings weren’t always clear, giving rise to a variety of ways to understand what he wrote.

Pax Christi tecum.
 
I agree. We need a good disciplinarian in the Seat of St. Peter, and John Paul II was not good at disciplining.
 
That’s pretty much the way I look at John Paul II as well. Kind, gentle, wonderful man, but lacking the firm handedness needed to lead well.
I agree. John Paul II was a nice man, but a horrible pope, IMO. He was “great” at attracting huge crowds to outdoor events with pop music, but after he left the churches were still empty and nothing changed.
 
So the Church doesn’t confer it, the people do…some it could be a fitting title or not fitting title, but if the people call him it then it sticks. I can see that. Honestly I don’t know if enough people use it for it to stick beyond 5 or 10 years…

Pax Christi tecum.
That’s how I always heard it works as well. It’s more of a popular acclamation than an official Church designation. Of course, I don’t think that makes such a thing meaningless.

So far, the only two popes that are referred to as “the Great” are Pope St. Leo the Great (440-461) and Pope St. Gregory the Great (590-604). I’ve also sometimes seen Pope St. Nicholas (858-867) referred to as “the Great”, but not as often. In any case, it’s been a while. 🙂

Personally, I have a great love and admiration for John Paul II. All any of us can do at the moment is guess as to how history will remember him. Whatever you say about his disciplinary action (or lack thereof), I believe he has a large body of great accomplishments that eclipses his shortcomings. He reigned for more years than all but 3 or 4 other popes, he revised Canon Law, put out a new universal Catechism, crafted the “Theology of the Body”, visited more countries than any previous pope, etc., etc. He didn’t do everything, but he did a lot. I wouldn’t be surprised if the title sticks. But, again, none of us can really know for sure this side of heaven. 🙂
 
Personally, I have a great love and admiration for John Paul II. All any of us can do at the moment is guess as to how history will remember him. Whatever you say about his disciplinary action (or lack thereof), I believe he has a large body of great accomplishments that eclipses his shortcomings. He reigned for more years than all but 3 or 4 other popes, he revised Canon Law, put out a new universal Catechism, crafted the “Theology of the Body”, visited more countries than any previous pope, etc., etc. He didn’t do everything, but he did a lot. I wouldn’t be surprised if the title sticks. But, again, none of us can really know for sure this side of heaven. 🙂
He also contributed greatly to the fall of communism. I think most of the criticisms stem from things that occured in the “long twilight” of the papacy, when he was so ill and increasingly frail. I believe that history WILL remember him as “the Great.”
 
That’s how I always heard it works as well. It’s more of a popular acclamation than an official Church designation. Of course, I don’t think that makes such a thing meaningless.

So far, the only two popes that are referred to as “the Great” are Pope St. Leo the Great (440-461) and Pope St. Gregory the Great (590-604). I’ve also sometimes seen Pope St. Nicholas (858-867) referred to as “the Great”, but not as often. In any case, it’s been a while. 🙂

Personally, I have a great love and admiration for John Paul II. All any of us can do at the moment is guess as to how history will remember him. Whatever you say about his disciplinary action (or lack thereof), I believe he has a large body of great accomplishments that eclipses his shortcomings. He reigned for more years than all but 3 or 4 other popes, he revised Canon Law, put out a new universal Catechism, crafted the “Theology of the Body”, visited more countries than any previous pope, etc., etc. He didn’t do everything, but he did a lot. I wouldn’t be surprised if the title sticks. But, again, none of us can really know for sure this side of heaven. 🙂
Well, traveling a lot shouldn’t make one a “the Great.” 🙂 I don’t know that the new Code of Canon Law is that much better than the former. The Theology of the Body, while good in many ways, has some issues (such as the “mutual subjection of husband and wife” which seems to be incongruous with traditional teaching of husband and wife, as in Casti Connubbii). The prayer meeting at Assisi was scandalous, as was kissing the Koran. Having rock music at the Vatican was bad, something Card. Ratzinger took issue with apparently. He came up with these large outdoor Masses that now Rome is trying to figure out how to handle them. I guess I look at these things and wonder how he could a “Great.”

Pax Christi tecum.
 
He also contributed greatly to the fall of communism. I think most of the criticisms stem from things that occured in the “long twilight” of the papacy, when he was so ill and increasingly frail. I believe that history WILL remember him as “the Great.”
How does the fall of communism relate to governance of the Church?

Pax Christi tecum.
 
How does the fall of communism relate to governance of the Church?
Communism is atheistic. It’s downfall allows for greater growth of The Church. It also degraded human beings, which the Church is against.
 
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