12 November 2024
Saint John Paul II’s monumental twenty-six year pontificate is full of eloquent moments, quotations, and actions whose inexhaustible depth cannot be summarized in these few words. And despite carrying the immense responsibility of shepherding a truly global Church, with so many causes for both rejoicing and sorrowing, John Paul always made time—even incredible amounts of time—for his own personal prayer. Those close to him recalled how he would spend up to six hours at a time in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, while his own devotion to Mary ensured a prominent place for the Rosary in his daily schedule. “In prayer,” the Pope said, “you become one with the source of our true light – Jesus Himself.” And as he liked to often say, we come to Jesus only through his Mother—ad Iesum per Mariam.
The Rosary is my favorite prayer. A marvelous prayer! Marvelous in its simplicity and its depth. In the prayer we repeat many times the words that the Virgin Mary heard from the Archangel, and from her kinswoman Elizabeth… To pray the Rosary is to hand over our burdens to the merciful hearts of Christ and His mother.
Like St Therese and Mother Teresa before him, John Paul found comfort in the words passed on to us through the tradition of the Church. At times when our own eloquence and expressiveness might fail, one can never do wrong by leaning on the prayers we have learned from those who passed on the faith. In doing so, we imitate Mary’s surrender, saying with the Church her fiat mihi—be it done to me—allowing the gifts of these timeless prayers to renew our souls.
Closeness to the Eucharistic Christ in silence and contemplation does not distance us from our contemporaries but, on the contrary, makes us open to human joy and distress, broadening our hearts on a global scale. Through adoration the Christian mysteriously contributes to the radical transformation of the world and to the sowing of the gospel. Anyone who prays to the Eucharistic Saviour draws the whole world with him and raises it to God.
May we follow the example of Saint John Paul II by attentively praying the Rosary and visiting Christ often in the Blessed Sacrament, confident that we will be drawn up through Mary’s embrace into the heart of her Son.