This Question Shook John Paul II — Now Another Man Must
Answer Christ’s Summons
COMMENTARY: The greatest pre-conclave homily was preached by
St. John Paul II in 1978, on the Gospel where Christ asks Peter three times,
‘Do you love me?’ — the same Gospel heard in churches around the world this
Sunday.
Pope John Paul II
prays during Mass at Etchmiadzin, Armenia, on Sept. 27, 2001. (photo: Gabriel
Bouys / AFP via Getty Images)
Father
Raymond J. de Souza CommentariesMay 3,
2025
On the Sunday before the conclave begins, a good many
cardinals will visit their “titular churches” in Rome. This Sunday they will
have a Gospel text that should inspire their preaching as they ready themselves
to elect a new pope.
The assigned reading for this Sunday is John 21:1-19. Jesus
asks Peter three times to profess his love, and three times confers upon him
the mission of caring for the entire flock — “feed my lambs, tend my sheep.” As
it is the assigned reading for Sunday Mass all over the world, homilists
everywhere will likely preach about Peter’s primacy.
Every cardinal, upon receiving the red hat, is assigned a
church in Rome, becoming, as it were, the local parish priest. He is not
actually that, but the titular assignment maintains an ancient tradition that a
bishop is selected by the local clergy — in this case, that the bishop of Rome
is elected by the clergy of Rome. The College of Cardinals expresses the
universality of the entire Church; their titular churches link them to the
local diocese of Rome.
The pre-conclave visits for Sunday Mass can create quite a
commotion. The cardinals who live far away from Rome rarely visit their titular
churches, so any visit can be something of a local event.
Given the fevered atmosphere just before a conclave, the
most prominent cardinals attract an inflated congregation of supporters,
curiosity-seekers and media. What did the apparent front-runners say? Did it
help or hurt their cause? What preferences did the so-called kingmakers
express? Were there intercessory prayers in Mandarin? Were there prayers for
persecuted Catholics? It can be a bit of a spectacle.
John 21 is also used at papal funerals. It was used for both
Pope Francis and Pope St. John Paul II. Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, who
preached last week, barely took notice of the Gospel passage in his
formulaic homily rehearsing
the life of Pope Francis. The cardinals will certainly do better than that this
Sunday.
In 2005, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger delivered a homiletic
masterpiece at John Paul’s funeral, built around the final words of
Jesus to Peter: Follow me! One hopes the cardinalatial preachers can approach
Cardinal Ratzinger’s heights this Sunday.
The greatest of all pre-conclave homilies was preached on
that very text, John 21, in October 1978. Blessed John Paul I had died after
only 33 days, and the stunned cardinals gathered for the second conclave that
year.
After arriving in Rome, the Polish cardinals offered a Holy
Mass for the late pope. Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński, primate of Poland, was the
principal celebrant, and Cardinal Karol Wojtyła, archbishop of Kraków, preached
the homily on the conversation between Jesus and Peter.
There is no video of the occasion and it was largely unknown
until papal biographer George Weigel included it in Witness to Hope,
the 1999 biography of John Paul II. Weigel discovered it in the Kalendarium
życia Karola Wojtyła, an exhaustive pre-papal chronology compiled by Adam
Boniecki.
With near-mystical quality, the future pope preached that
day about his immediate predecessor, John Paul I, and his first predecessor,
St. Peter:
The
succession of Peter, the summons to the office of the papacy, always contains
within it a call to the highest love, to a very special love. And always, when
Christ says to a man, ‘Come, follow me,’ He asks him what He asked of Simon:
‘Do you love me more than these?’”
The question at the heart of every vocation is the same: “Do
you love me?” But the Petrine office, to be the Vicar of Christ, is so
terrifying, that the heart cannot bear the weight. Cardinal Wojtyła again:
Then
the heart of man must tremble. The heart of Simon trembled, and the heart of
Albino Luciani, before he took the name John Paul I, trembled. A human heart
must tremble, because in the question there is also a demand. You must love!
You must love more than the others do, if the entire flock of sheep is to be entrusted
to you, if the charge, ‘Feed my lambs, feed my sheep’ is to reach the scope
which it reaches in the calling and mission of Peter.
It is a truly remarkable passage. On the threshold of the
papacy in 1978, Cardinal Wojtyła already felt the weight of the call — a weight
too heavy for the heart of man. The Polish cardinal’s heart no doubt trembled.
In order for the Church to receive the gift of Peter, one man must be willing
to pay the price. Peter paid that price with his life, crucified upon the Vatican
hill.
Cardinal Wojtyła’s homily again:
Christ
speaks enigmatic words, He says them to Peter: ‘When you were younger, you
girded yourself and went where you wanted. But when you grow old, someone else
will gird you and lead you where you do not want to go.’ Mysterious and
enigmatic words. … And so in this summons, directed to Peter by Christ after
His Resurrection, Christ’s command, ‘Come follow me,’ has a double meaning. It
is a summons to service, and a summons to die …
Just days later, that summons would fall upon Cardinal Karol
Wojtyła of Kraków. As all popes are, he was asked in the conclave: “Do you
accept your election?” He was really being asked, in the Sistine Chapel, before
Michelangelo’s immense Christ the Judge: “Do you love me more that these?”
Twenty-five years later, in October 2003, at the silver
jubilee of the pontificate, John Paul II returned
to John 21:
Every
day the dialogue between Jesus and Peter takes place in my heart. In spirit, I
fix my gaze on the Risen Christ. He, well aware of my human fragility,
encourages me to respond with trust as Peter did: “Lord, you know everything;
you know that I love you” (John 21:17). And then He invites me to assume the
responsibilities which He himself has entrusted to me.
In his long pontificate, when John Paul spoke of his papal
office, he preferred the text of Luke 22:32. Jesus, predicting Peter’s denial,
assures him that he has prayed for him that his “faith may not fail” and that
Peter will return and have the mission of strengthening the others in their
faith. Less frequently did John Paul take up the more well-known Petrine
passages in Matthew 16 and John 21. But in John Paul’s internal life of prayer
with the Lord, it was the conversation of John 21 that accompanied him always.
At John Paul’s great funeral Mass in 2005, Cardinal
Ratzinger placed the entire pontificate with the context of John 21:
In
the first years of his pontificate, still young and full of energy, the Holy
Father [John Paul II] went to the very ends of the earth, guided by Christ. But
afterwards, he increasingly entered into the communion of Christ’s sufferings;
increasingly he understood the truth of the words: ‘Someone else will fasten a
belt around you.’ And in this very communion with the suffering Lord,
tirelessly and with renewed intensity, he proclaimed the Gospel, the mystery of
that love which goes to the end (cf. John 13:1).
In conferring the primacy upon Peter, Jesus placed it within
the mystery of love. A love so deep and broad that the heart of man can hardly
contain it. Thus the heart trembles.
On Sunday, for many of the cardinals, the homily will be
their final public words before the conclave begins on Wednesday. Then, for one
man, the summons will approach, and the heart will tremble.
Father
Raymond J. de Souza Father Raymond J. de Souza is the founding
editor of Convivium magazine.
https://www.ncregister.com/commentaries/john-21-pre-conclave-homily

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