Pope Francis Declares Sainthood for Two Beloved Predecessors
"To carry out a double canonization is a message to the Church: These two are good people," Pope Francis told reporters on the papal plane back from celebrating the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro last summer.
A composite photo showing the two tapestry portraits for former popes John Paul II and John XXIII hanging from the facade of St. Peter's Basilica
As the 20th-century Jesuit theologian Karl Rahner once said, "The saint shows us what it means to be a Christian in this particular way." What the church celebrated on Sunday, when Pope Francis canonized two of his predecessors, is not the canonization of a liberal and a conservative but the raising up of two individuals: Angelo Roncalli and Karol Wojtyla. And that is a powerful message to all of us who strive to be holy in a different way.
At the age of 87: Emeritus Pope Benedict arrives for mass before the canonisation ceremony in St Peter's Square
Pope Francis, right, embraces his predecessor Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, during the ceremony in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican
Costa Rican: Floribeth Mora, who claims she was cured of a serious brain condition by a miracle attributed to Pope John Paul II, arrives with her husband Edwin Arce
Relics: Pope Francis receives a relic of John Paull II - a vial of his blood - from a woman whose brain aneurysm purportedly disappeared after she prayed to him
Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI meets Italian President Giorgio Napolitano in St Peter's Square
Royals Albert II and Paola of Belgium and Juan Carlos I and SofĂa of Spain.
Anna Komorowska (right)) takes a picture of her husband Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski (left, in right photo) and former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski
Piazza Navona
PROFILE: JOHN PAUL II
- 1946: Ordained priest
- 1964: Becomes Archbishop of Krakow
- 1978: Elected Pope aged 58
- 1981: Seriously wounded in shooting
- 2001: Diagnosed with Parkinson's disease
- 2003: Celebrates Silver Jubilee at Vatican
- 2004: Papacy becomes third-longest ever
- 2005: Dies after heart attack
John Paul helped topple communism in Poland through his support of the Solidarity movement. His globe-trotting papacy and launch of the wildly popular World Youth Days invigorated a new generation of Catholics. And his defence of core church teaching heartened conservatives after the turbulent 1960s.
PROFILE: JOHN XXIII
- 1904: Ordained priest
- 1953 Appointed the Patriarch of Venice
- 1958: Succeeds Pope Pius XII aged 77
- 1962: Calls the Second Vatican Council
- 1962: Named Man of the Year by Time
- 1963: Dies of stomach cancer
- 2000: John, known as the 'Good Pope', is beatified by Pope John Paul II
John is a hero to liberal Catholics for having convened the Second Vatican Council. The meetings brought the church into the modern era by allowing Mass to be celebrated in local languages rather than Latin and by encouraging greater dialogue with people of other faiths, particularly Jews.
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