Pope St. John Paul II Lived His Priesthood as an Oblation

National Catholic Register, 1 November 2021

On the 75th anniversary of his priestly ordination, we recall Karol Wojtyła, who ended as he had begun, living a priesthood signed by suffering.

On All Saints’ Day 1946 — 75 years ago — St. John Paul II was ordained a priest in the private chapel of the archbishop of Krakow, Cardinal Adam Sapieha, who had just been elevated to the sacred college earlier that year.

“The story of my priestly vocation?” John Paul wrote in Gift and Mystery, his memoir for the 50th anniversary of his ordination in 1996. “It is known above all to God. At its deepest level, every vocation to the priesthood is a great mystery; it is gift which infinitely transcends the individual. Every priest experiences this clearly throughout the course of his life. Face with the greatness of the gift, we sense our own inadequacy.”

From the perspective of the papacy, John Paul was hardly viewed as “inadequate”; to the contrary, he was considered a greatly worldly success, even triumphant.

That is not how John Paul saw it from the beginning. John Paul’s priesthood, begun less than 18 months after the end of World War II, was born in brutal suffering. In 1946, as Stalinism was replacing Hitlerism in Krakow, it was more likely that he would be crushed by history than live to change it.

“My priesthood, even at its beginning, was in some way marked by the great sacrifice of countless men and women of my generation,” John Paul also wrote. “Providence spared me the most difficult experiences; and so my sense of indebtedness is all the greater, both to people whom I knew and to many more whom I did not know. In a way these people guided me to this path; by their sacrifice they showed me the most profound and essential truth about the priesthood of Christ.”

The young Karol Wojtyła saw most of the Jews of his hometown, Wadowice, killed in the Holocaust. Many were his friends. On the morning World War II started, Wojtyła was serving Holy Mass at Wawel Cathedral; across the courtyard was Wawel Castle, where the notorious Nazi governor Hans Frank would install himself during the occupation of Poland’s ancient and royal capital. At the beginning of the war, the faculty of the Jagiellonian University where Wojtyła was studying were packed into trucks and deported to the camps.

The massacre of the Polish clergy was one of the most severe traumas of World War II. Some 2,000 of Poland’s 10,000 diocesan priests were killed during the war. Dachau, the Nazi concentration camp near Munich, was the preferred place of internment and execution. The Nazis killed 868 Polish priests at Dachau, which held some 3,000 Catholic clergy over the years of its operation. Two-thirds of those clerics were Polish.

Every Polish priest knew personally fellow priests who were killed. While a clandestine seminarian during the war in Krakow, Wojtyła would often serve Cardinal Sapieha’s morning Mass.

“One morning in April 1944, his fellow server and another clandestine student for the priesthood, Jerzy Zachuta, didn’t show up,” writes George Weigel in Witness to Hope. “After Mass, Karol went to Zachuta’s home to see what had happened. In the middle of the previous night, the Gestapo had taken his classmate away. Immediately afterward, the name of Jerzy Zachuta appeared on a Gestapo poster listing Poles to be shot. One was taken, the other remained. In the designs of Providence there are no mere coincidences.”

So when Karol Wojtyła prostrated himself on the floor in the archbishop’s chapel 75 years ago, he did not think only about the symbolism of a priest laying down his life. He knew the reality of the thousands of his fellow priests and seminarians lying cold in their graves.

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