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A panoply of sound and color filled the streets of Toronto during
World Youth Day last July. A constant flow of pilgrims passed with
striking beauty and pageantry, as flags and banners waved. Many sang
traditional songs, with guitar or conga drums to accompany them.
The streets echoed with singing, in French, English, Spanish,
Italian and Polish, and other languages I didn’t recognize. Members
of our group (one of four from Cincinnati, Ohio) brought out a
guitar and contributed to the hubbub with contemporary Christian
music. Upon seeing the Stars and Stripes flutter past, our band of
pilgrims yelled, “USA!”
We hollered, “Where ya from?” to crowds of bright shirts and
flags. They yelled back, “Jamaica, mon!” or “Italia” or “Dallas.”
(Apparently, Texas is an independent country!) Whatever their reply,
it was met by enthusiastic cheers. We were not only glad they were
from Jamaica, Italy or Texas, but also glad they were here.
The parade of nations went past with so much noise and display
that it looked as if the circus had collided with the Olympics. And
that was only the line for lunch.
This World Youth Day had the theme: “You are the salt of the
earth. You are the light of the world.” From July 23 through 28,
over 375,000 pilgrims from 170 countries filled the grounds of
Exhibition Place, where concerts and the opening Mass took place. It
also held a hall full of displays and booths. Attendance swelled to
800,000 for the closing papal Mass held at Downsview Lands, a huge
park north of Toronto, which was open to the public. Some drove 10
hours to attend that single event.
A
Family Reunion
As members of the Catholic Church, we are a family whose
spiritual father is the pope. The pilgrims at World Youth Day came
to see their Holy Father. In introductions, place names were thrown
around like surnames, identifying their branch of the worldwide
family tree. “‘Catholic’ has always meant ‘universal,’ but for me it
now means ‘family,’” said William Egan, from Cincinnati. “I have
found my true home, my true family, in the Church.”
Pope John Paul II understands the need for family in the Body of
Christ. He lost his biological family at a young age, and grew up
recognizing the brotherhood and sisterhood in the People of God.
This sense of family, however, does not imply a cookie-cutter
similarity.
World Youth Day was not a melting pot for people to forget where
they came from and assimilate into the title “Catholic.” Instead,
each country bore its own flag proudly, but without arrogance or
bitterness toward flags of other nations.
Joe Monaghan and Kim Reis, a married couple who hosted two
pilgrims in Toronto, were one of many families who opened their
doors to strangers, extending to us the hospitality of Canadian
culture. They offered us a family to come home to, a bed to sleep in
and breakfast in the morning, as well as rides to and from the
parish hall where our bus met us each morning. Other groups slept on
gym floors or parish halls, and a few others booked hotel rooms. It
was a blessing to experience World Youth Day as a pilgrim people,
staying in a local home with other Catholics, experiencing an
exchange of culture.
Joe took a particular pride in his Scottish homeland, saying: “If
Canada is the second-largest country in the world, Scotland, by far,
is the largest!” Pilgrims from the island nation of Grenada waved
their green, yellow and red flag exuberantly, and the Belgians were
happy to be from Belgium.
There was camaraderie between countries. The only thing better
than hearing chants of “U-S-A” from other Americans was hearing
chants of “CA-NA-DA” by other Americans and “U-S-A” by the
Canadians! “You see youth from around the world coming together and
it’s something to bring back to your Church and make you stronger,”
said a young man from Chicago.
Afghans, Chileans, Nigerians and Danes all call one man “Papa”:
the pope. And because he is my Holy Father also, I am a member of
their family. Thus there was nothing strange about a group of my
Irish brothers whirling me around to a fast-paced rendition of their
traditional song “Fields of Athenry,” or dancing a slow step with my
Brazilian sisters singing “Gloria.” We’re family, even if we just
met.
Strengthened
by Teaching
There were spontaneous concerts on sidewalk corners, and formal
bands on the main stage in Exhibition Place. Artists with styles
ranging from that of Father Stan Fortuna, a rapping Franciscan from
the streets of New York, to John Michael Talbot, a meditative
Franciscan from an Arkansas hermitage, entertained audiences. This
main stage held groups from Australia, India and Peru, and many
others played in 31 locations around downtown.
But this giant, international family came to Toronto for more
than seeing the pope and singing in the streets. “We came to learn
about our faith,” said a pilgrim from Brazil, one of 1,600 who came
from the country with the largest Catholic population.
Catechesis is a major part of the World Youth Day events. We were
challenged in formal sessions taught by approximately 500 bishops
and cardinals from around the world. The speakers focused on
being salt of the earth, light of the world and reconciled to
God.
Bishop Jean-Louis Plouffe of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie,
Ontario, spoke to those gathered at St. Anthony of Padua
catechetical site, giving practical advice on how we could be salt
of the earth.
He encouraged the 800 gathered there to do small things with
love, in the spirit of St. Thérèse of Lisieux. “Salt has the
powerful gift to preserve and add flavor. Jesus invites us...to give
a special flavor to the world; to transform it from the inside out.
We do this by God’s love....It is love that preserves us. It is love
that flavors our lives and flavors the world.”
In a spirit of practicality, he voiced the question on everyone’s
mind, “How can I be salt when I go home?” One suggestion offered
was: “By staying connected to Jesus in prayer.” Indeed, the pope
affirmed this when he said at the Saturday vigil, “Prayer will be
the salt that gives flavor to your lives and leads you to [Jesus],
humanity’s true light.”
Bishop Plouffe preached a gospel of little deeds, able to be
lived out in daily life: Give thanks for your own gifts. Stay
connected to the Church. Be kind to your family, especially your
brothers and sisters.
On this theme of love, at the catechesis about reconciliation,
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, of Washington, D.C., said, “The love
you show to the person you love the least is how much you love
Christ.” This is simple advice, but very challenging. It convinced
me of how much I still need to learn to love.
There were many opportunities for reconciliation throughout the
week. Three hundred priests at a time heard confessions at Duc in
Altum Park on the shore of Lake Ontario. Priests traveling with
various pilgrim groups offered to hear confessions during the
catechetical sessions. Reconciliation sites were also set up before
the Saturday night vigil began. If a pilgrim still couldn’t find a
chance to slip away, there were priests at almost every corner. One
held a Styrofoam placard reading “Confessions here.” It was easy to
find one and ask, “Father, do you have time to hear my
confession?”
The
Discipline of Holiness
In a Church racked by scandal, and to a world cynical toward the
beauty of chastity, the pope called the youth to a higher standard
at Thursday’s welcoming ceremony. The world proposes a “joy that
comes with the superficial and fleeting pleasures of the senses,”
but Pope John Paul II invited all people to discover a true joy that
has “walking with Christ” as its source. It is a joy found “in
obedience to the Father and in gift of self to others.”
Kyle Johnson, from Wisconsin, remarked: “Being joyful during our
daily struggle to grow closer to Christ is witness enough to make us
salt and light for the world. The pope asked us to use our talents
for the Kingdom of Christ and not to be afraid in adversity. All the
youth of the world know the struggles facing the Church at this
time, but our love for John Paul II and the Church easily surpasses
any crisis.”
The pope knows of the power of love and self-gift to light the
lives of young people. “If your friendship with Christ, your
knowledge of his mystery, your giving of yourselves to him, are
genuine and deep, you will be ‘children of the light,’” he said at
Saturday’s all-night vigil. He sees in us the hope for the Church in
the 21st century. He commits to this generation the task of “working
with [God] in the building of the civilization of love.”
The young people accepted his challenge to reject “the lure of
sin, however attractive it may be, in order to set out on the
difficult path of the gospel virtues.” The world often prods us to
find the easy way out.
Dave Willig, a chaperone of our Cincinnati group, commented: “You
only discipline those you love. If you don’t love them, you don’t
discipline them.” If this is so, then the pope loves us, for he
offers a challenge, the discipline of holiness.
To Emily Snyder, from Massachusetts, being holy salt and light
meant “We must be saints—and not just saints when no one’s around.
We have to be saints even to the folks who drive us bonkers, saints
when we’re in utter pain. Look to the Holy Father—he is just
such salt and light.”
The
Challenge to Young Catholics
Emily also shared some of the challenges of growing up Catholic:
“One thing to remember when being salt and light is that
others...try to trample you underfoot or blow you out; even folks
within the Church. This is the hardest to stand up to, not folks
from without, but ‘fellows’ from within....But that doesn’t obviate
us from kindly, but firmly, remaining loyal to the Church, to loving
God and his people so much that you try to lead them back to him.
And I pray that others do the same for me.”
Michelle Moravitz, from Minnesota, voiced some of the same
concerns: “When people don’t understand the faith, they assume
things that are false.” Then she added a word of responsibility for
our generation: “We need to stand up for our faith.”
On the bus ride home to Cincinnati, Lauren Bort encouraged us to
take that stand: “Everyone I work with knows I’m Catholic, and they
look to me to be an example of what the faith is. And I challenge
you, as I challenge myself, to be that witness.”
Pope John Paul II’s words from his first homily as pope continue
to ring out: “Be not afraid!” Opening the doors of our lives to
Christ, as he urged that day in 1978, remains a challenge.
It is in the small acts of encouragement and daily witness that
the youth answer the Holy Father’s call: “Let the light of Christ
shine in your lives! Do not wait until you are older in order to set
out on the path of holiness!”
He uttered these words at the welcoming ceremony on Thursday with
a sense of urgency: “Christ needs you to carry out his plan of
salvation!” Unstated, but implied, was that the pope also needs us.
The young Church he visited in Toronto is the Church of the future,
and even the Church of today. The young people he forms through his
word and example are the hands guiding the Church through the
present century. He wants to form these pilgrims into strong and
loving guardians of the deposit of faith.
When Pope John Paul II mentioned on Sunday, “You are young, and
the pope is old, and a bit tired. Eighty-two is not the same as
being 22 or 23,” his audience immediately responded with chants of
“The pope is young! The pope is young!” Yet he knows this may be the
last World Youth Day he will attend. The next one will be celebrated
in Cologne, Germany, in 2005. If he can’t be present in person, he
will be with us in spirit. The pope is preparing young people to
accept responsibility as leaders of the Church.
Racing
to the Cross
He left us with a picture of a father willing to sacrifice for
his family. At a time when much of America’s baby-boom generation is
looking forward to retirement, he is still unrelenting in spreading
the gospel. At his arrival in Toronto, he walked down the steps of
the papal airplane to the tarmac, slowly, painfully, deliberately.
It might have been the slowest descent in the history of air travel,
but he did it.
As a young pilgrim, I saw him taking the steps to show a
willingness and determination to keep going. He embodied the virtue
of perseverance in fulfilling his vocation. He encouraged me by his
example. If an elderly pope can still walk down the narrow, steep
airplane stairs, perhaps I can find the same grit, determination and
grace to walk the straight and narrow path that gospel values
require.
He was stronger and more energetic-looking than he has been in
many months, standing for a time, waving and looking the crowd in
the eyes. But he can’t run as he once did. Now he asks us youth to
be the hands, the smile, the feet, the face of Christ in the world.
He asks us to race toward Jesus in the shadow of the Jubilee
cross.
In this spirit, youth participated in a five-mile walking
pilgrimage to Downsview Lands, a 644-acre park in Toronto where the
all-night vigil and papal Mass were held on Saturday and Sunday. We
packed everything we needed for the next two days in knapsacks,
flung sleeping bags over our shoulders and went off with light
hearts. Not surprisingly, many were singing.
The group from Anchorage, Alaska, took literally this charge to
run to Christ. They started their pilgrimage in the early morning
hours, before the sun turned them into Baked Alaskans. Not wanting
simply to walk toward the giant cross and the papal altar at
Downsview, they ran the designated route, passing off their handmade
state flag when one got tired.
“I carried it to the park, and then gave it to John,” said
Kalesha Henry, from Anchorage. “He tossed me his book bag, took the
flag and was off, sprinting. When the rest of us reached the park,
we saw our flag, waving in the front.” The 89 pilgrims were rewarded
for their efforts. They sat front and center for the vigil and papal
Mass.
They ran toward the pilgrimage site. If he could, the pope would
be running alongside them, calling them to the cross and to the
altar, to holiness. In the spiritual sense, however, he is running
not alongside us but ahead of us. We are having trouble keeping up
with him. This slow-moving man in white is racing us to the Cross,
racing up Calvary, racing us to heaven, and he invites us to
follow.
On a rainy July Sunday, 800,000 pilgrims responded to this
invitation by their presence at Mass. The Holy Father calls, and we
come. He leads, and we follow. The challenge of World Youth Day is
not only for young people but also for all Catholics: Be salt of the
earth. Be light of the world.
Maria Kemper is a junior at Franciscan
University of Steubenville, Ohio, majoring in theology and
literature. She was an editorial intern during summer 2002 for this
publication. This was her first World Youth Day.
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