M
Melchior_1
Guest
Doctrinally speaking John Paul II was very sound. Why else did he have so many enemies from the culture of death?Like I said, Melchior, I have no doubts at all about his personal virtue, holiness and sincerity. And in the particular issues you cite, I agree. But to describe public virtue as heroic, does not the adjective itself mean to encompass all facets of responsibility, again, Doctrinal issues aside.
Regarding abuse, you were abused by your spiritual father, and if you travel up the judicial hierarchy of the Church you see the Pope at the very top. In this sense, I see where you’re coming from, as for your perspective you may either feel not enough was done or justice was not served. But you are not alone with the perspective of abuse.
For me, I was physically and emotionally abused by my biological father. We took him to court and he was found innocent in the eyes of the law. In the eyes of the law it never happened, so he avoided any punishment. He freely admitted it later on, but what done is done; the court had spoken. Canada had deemed that my father was 100% innocent in all charges, despite the bruises I had to show for it.
My question is; who can I blame? The judge? The judge did what he could based on what he was given. My father and his then-wife (not my mother, of course) committed perjury, how was the judge to know he was lying on the stand? He had an effective lawyer running interference and doing what defense lawyers do. How was the judge to know the lawyer was protecting a guilty client?
I harbored feelings of anger and resentment for years. But writing this post had made me think about it…I never once, over my twenty nine years of living, blamed the judge for what happened. There was no way for him to know my father and his spouse (at the time) were lying, there was no way for him to know my father’s lawyer was covering things up. All he had to go with was the testimony of a small child and his sister, who gave a small conflicting detail in their testimonies (I said a specific incident happened on a Saturday, she said Friday). The judge did the best he could with the information at hand.
But foes the buck stop with the judge? I suppose i could be angry at the laws of our country, which allowed such an act to happen and someone to get away with it. I could be angry with the office of the Prime Minister. I could be angry at several people. I could blame anyone/everyone.
But no…I won’t. Not anymore. The judge did the best he could, my father’s lawyer was merely doing his job, the doctor who took pictures of my bruises made an honest mistake, my mother (true to what she told me after she found out about what happened) proceeded to break the law and made certain I would never see my father again (he was innocent after all, he retained his custodial rights).
My father eventually made another mistake, and in an ironic twist his “innocent” verdict came back to haunt him and cost him some freedom. In the case of the priest who betrayed you, at one point or another he too will have his past come back to haunt him. But, much like the judge and anyone else in my case, John Paul II acted in good faith on the issue (as described by Brother JR). In fact, you look at his whole life you can see he has always acted in good faith.
'Has". Not “had” but “has”. Because, as recent miracles have confirmed, he’s still acting in good faith.
EDIT; Notice the parallels, by the way. In your case you have a Priest (like my father) who probably denied any and all wrong doing. You had a a Bishop who may have been protecting him (like my father’s lawyer), which meant the Cardinal (the judge) would not have been able to find anything out. And if the Cardinal can’t pass any information, how is the Pope (the final earthly judge) to know?