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Last Updated: Friday - 09/24/2010Week of April 11, 2005John Paul's spirit nourishes our souls
In ExileBy FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi"The life and death of each of us has its influence on others." - Romans 14 This is certainly true for Pope John Paul II. He had a profound influence on our world, perhaps more than any other person in the last half-century. That influence too was not merely religious. He helped shape history. But we must celebrate all of this correctly so that, in his death, we, friend or foe, can receive his spirit and blessing in a way that we were unable to do while he was alive. Henri Nouwen, in his later writings, began to develop the idea of how each person's death, like Jesus' death, is meant to release his or her spirit more fully. Here's how he puts it: "It was only after Jesus had left his disciples that they were able to grasp what he truly meant to them. But isn't that true for all who die? It is only when we have died that our spirits can completely reveal themselves. . . . "I know this because I have seen people die in anger and bitterness and with a great unwillingness to accept their mortality. Their deaths became sources of frustration and even guilt for those who stayed behind. Their deaths never became a gift. . . . "Yes, there is such a thing as a good death. We ourselves are responsible for the way we die. We have to choose between clinging to life in such a way that death becomes nothing but a failure, or letting go of life in freedom so that we can be given to others as a source of hope" (Becoming the Beloved). John Paul II died as he lived, in a faith that flowed out to the world as warm spirit. His death stopped the world for a moment and everyone alike, powerful and poor, Christian and non-Christian, stood muted, silent, not in the silence that came of frustration, guilt or unfinished business, but in a hushed reverence that spoke of a man and a life that blessed and suggested it's wise to stand in silence and consider what that blessing might be. What particular qualities in John Paul II should we let ourselves be blessed by? I highlight three:
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