Tis_Bearself
Patron
Let me start out by saying that I do not dislike Pope John XXIII, don’t mind that he became a saint, don’t have a problem with him in general. My mother liked him and he seems to me to have been a nice down-to-earth Pope. I also realize that he was Pope for a relatively short time and took a lot onto his plate, when people just sort of expected him to fill the chair because he was pretty old when elected.
Having said that, I am wondering why Pope John XXIII seems to have had so many problems with at least two of our current great modern saints, namely St. Faustina and St. Pio. I understand that he received wrong/ biased information about both of them, including a bad translation of St. Faustina’s writings and a negative report on Padre Pio from leaders of his order who were upset that he wouldn’t turn over funds he’d raised for his hospital, which they wished to use for another purpose. (It seems that these persecutions of saintly people for refusing to turn over money happen all the time - soon-to-be-Blessed Fulton Sheen went through similar with Cardinal Spellman. )
What I don’t understand is why a Pope would take this wrong/ biased information at face value without trying to get to the bottom of the possible problem or motivation. It seems to be assuming the worst of holy people. It was also pretty quickly corrected by later Popes (Pope Paul VI revoked the sanctions on Padre Pio and Pope JPII straightened out the Divine Mercy business and canonized St. Faustina.) And in the case of Padre Pio, he’d already been investigated by several previous Popes and was being allowed to continue on his way with no problem, when Pope John XXIII revived the previous concern.
I am sure they are all having a good chuckle in Heaven about it now, but it’s rather annoying to me that Pope John XXIII didn’t do some more investigating before deciding to limit or penalize great saints. Why would he just believe what he was told, apparently?
Having said that, I am wondering why Pope John XXIII seems to have had so many problems with at least two of our current great modern saints, namely St. Faustina and St. Pio. I understand that he received wrong/ biased information about both of them, including a bad translation of St. Faustina’s writings and a negative report on Padre Pio from leaders of his order who were upset that he wouldn’t turn over funds he’d raised for his hospital, which they wished to use for another purpose. (It seems that these persecutions of saintly people for refusing to turn over money happen all the time - soon-to-be-Blessed Fulton Sheen went through similar with Cardinal Spellman. )
What I don’t understand is why a Pope would take this wrong/ biased information at face value without trying to get to the bottom of the possible problem or motivation. It seems to be assuming the worst of holy people. It was also pretty quickly corrected by later Popes (Pope Paul VI revoked the sanctions on Padre Pio and Pope JPII straightened out the Divine Mercy business and canonized St. Faustina.) And in the case of Padre Pio, he’d already been investigated by several previous Popes and was being allowed to continue on his way with no problem, when Pope John XXIII revived the previous concern.
I am sure they are all having a good chuckle in Heaven about it now, but it’s rather annoying to me that Pope John XXIII didn’t do some more investigating before deciding to limit or penalize great saints. Why would he just believe what he was told, apparently?
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