The funeral of Pope John Paul II was unlike anything the current generation of college students had ever seen on television: a massive spiritual event half a world away; studded with the ancient and the sacred. Gregorian chants instead of chattering pundits. Classical Latin meets FOX News.
Perhaps because of this lack of precedence, media covered the papal funeral in much the same way they once covered national political conventions — long stretches where a viewer could enter an event and simply experience it, unencumbered by rolling punditry and commercial interruption.
We need more of this, and not just in politics.
This was also the first true “mega-event” to occur anywhere near a church or infused with such pure spirituality in our lifetimes. Few undergrads can recall the wedding of Diana and Charles, and that was little more than a soap opera infused with spires and organs. As Americans, our public history and its imagery has confined itself largely to functions of the state, or the state of the economy.
Christmas specials aren’t even clothed as religious events anymore, unless you pray at Marshall Fields’. The Olympics and their pomp glorify the perfectibility of Man on Earth, humanism at its pinnacle. Presidential Inaugurations or national political conventions have a sense of grandeur; and in their observance we may bow our heads to God. But the entire exercises are nothing if not obeisance to the state. We need more of what we got last week: Ancient and powerful spiritual traditions given place in our public identity and respect in our discourse. If television and other electronic media are the real educators of Generation Y, the molders of our collective consciousness, we need more of this.
A Protestant, I knew precious little about Karol Wyotola before last week. Frankly, I didn’t know who he was at all. If you aren’t Catholic, or even if you are, maybe you didn’t either. But here was a man of history, in every sense of the word. I’ve been gobbling up all that’s been written since then, from pullout sections in most every newspaper to hour-long C-SPAN specials with papal biographer George Wiegel. There is much to know.
How many of us can explain the significance of Lech Walesa and the Polish Workers Movement? Or the historical importance of Vatican II? The tenets of Liberation Theology? Likely few.
In the academy we know, connections to modern and ancient are rarely discussed. Ancient is ancient; then was then. Faith is tradition at best, corrosive to free thought at worst. Politics is secular, and history is distant. “What they did then” and “what we do now” have clear delineations.
Yet here was a man who smashed those notions to bits. He became a political force because he dared travel the globe to preach with vigor and certainty that there is nothing new under the sun. Truth is absolute, there is right and there is wrong. To deny man God is to deny man freedom, and to deny God is an injustice that cannot long endure. John Paul II was a rare intellectual figure, the first “modern pope,” as he has been anointed, who drew on ancient, fixed ideas that hadn’t changed. To many this made him a doctrinaire conservative or a reactionary who wouldn’t change with the times. To him, it seemed, times didn’t merit any changing. And yet pundits, left and right, international or domestic, agree on one thing: he changed the world. It’s big stuff, with implications for our society and our world.
As a moment in time, connotations in religion or politics aside, John Paul’s death marks another closing demarcation on the 20th century. Ronald Reagan’s death was a bit of this as well. When Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev leave us, what will be left? To most of us these people are the newsreel snapshots of memory from childhood. But our childhoods were carved amid big things in the world. 1979 meant we were a gleam in the eyes of our father. It was the year John Paul returned to Poland and sparked a revolution with the power of faith. 1989 found many of us in little more than playpens while the foundations of the world we are about to inherit shook violently from Beijing to Berlin. It’s time for our history books to catch up. John Paul’s greatness is that he simply can’t be written out of them, and neither can his ideas. Neither can his faith.
Faith is a touchy subject at this and other universities like it. But they should, at the very least, realize how far removed so much of history is to their students. Examine the late pope as a pedagogical device, as a mover of history, and give him the best compliment of which secular institutions are capable: make “John Paul the Great” required reading.
Eric B. Cullen ([email protected]) is a senior majoring in history.





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Nice essay.
Faith is a very slippery thing, or so I’ve found. I think it is an integral part of the human psyche, our connection to the Universe.
Modern catastrophism, I believe, is rooted in a lack of faith, feeling isolated from nature and the Universe and the Source.
In fact, catastrophism can be viewed as a subset of all the anxiety disorders we are taking dangerous drugs to cope with.
My faith isn’t great enough that I never worry but it is growing, and as it grows, a sense of connection to the planet and the planet to the solar system and solar system to the galaxy, etc. causes many more things that used to worry me to make sense.
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Whatever. He wasn’t a real pope. Thankfully though, we’ve had Pope Michael guiding us this entire time.
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Ratcliff,
Weren’t you the one who posted to Deters, that the filibuster doesn’t exist? But then you post that mumbo jumbo, above. Well, if anything, you have at least proved that filibusters do exist, just get some Religous activist, which is what you crazy Republicans have become, and ask him to explain god. Tee hee
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One last thing, is the bible literal or metaphoric?
If it only takes the faith of a mustard seed to move a mountain, why hasn’t it been done, yet?
Maybe fakin it is easy.
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Reading through this article it is rife with inaccuracies and bias.
“Gregorian chants instead of chattering pundits”
The massive crowd somehow found time to boo at Bush.
“A Protestant, I knew precious little about Karol Wyotola before last week. Frankly, I didn't know who he was at all. If you aren't Catholic, or even if you are, maybe you didn't either.”
Bet you’ve heard of Cardinal Law? Looking over our beloved history, pedophilia is not prohibited by the bible and the church is suspect throughout history, Cardinal Law’s presence only further illustrates the moral majority’s love of pomp and circumstance over substance and investigation.
Why is it that Republicans don’t approve of Marshall Field’s treatment of Christmas (as if its the only holiday during that time period), but would turn around in a heartbeat and demand that government stay out of business’s hair. Does the state have some unforseen power to legislate religous belief, moreso than the economy? Well, the bible doesn’t think so, obey the laws of men, and pay unto Caesar, ring a bell?
Ratcliff, the faith still growing, you activist?????
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Thanks for a great column, Eric. You did an effective job of narrowing in on JPII’s unique historical role as the conservative modernizer.
BJV