APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
TO POLAND (MAY 31-JUNE 10, 1997)
MESSAGE OF POPE JOHN PAUL II TO HEADS
OF STATE
Tuesday, 3 June 1997
Your Excellencies,
Your presence here while we are celebrating the millennium of St Adalbert’s
martyrdom in Gniezno is highly significant. On this exceptional occasion, I
respectfully greet and thank you for joining the Church in honouring this great
saint at his tomb.
Ten years ago, venerable Cardinal Tomášek presented St Adalbert as “the symbol
of Europe’s spiritual unity”. In fact, his memory is particularly vivid in
Central Europe. This shows that many peoples on this continent are aware of
being heirs to the evangelizers who vigorously implanted the Christian faith in
their lands, and made the particular Christian conception of man penetrate their
culture.
Born in Bohemia at a time still close to when Cyril and Methodius had begun to
evangelize the Slavs, Adalbert, after the example of those illustrious
predecessors, was able to combine the spiritual traditions of East and West.
Educated in Magdeburg, priest and then Bishop of Prague, he was also familiar
with the Rome of the Popes and Pavia. He was a pilgrim in France; he went to
Mainz and became the friend of Emperor Otto III, before undertaking his last
mission on the shores of the Baltic. A spiritual and missionary man, after a few
years of activity he left his mark on several countries, even to the point of
becoming one of the patrons of the Polish nation, which is happy to preserve his
relics as one of its most valuable treasures.
Adalbert’s lasting influence is largely due to the harmony he achieved between
the different cultures he assimilated, to his independence as a man of the
Church and to his tireless defence of human dignity, the quality of social life
and service to the poor, or again, to the spiritual depth of his monastic
experience. For all these reasons he remains an incomparable source of
inspiration today for those who are working to build a new Europe in fidelity to
its cultural and religious roots.
Adalbert lived in troubled times; he experienced cruel misfortunes in his family
and was hindered in his ministry; he came to suffer martyrdom because he could
not give up preaching the message of salvation. During this sorely tried century
the peoples of Central Europe have endured terrible trials. At the present time,
new ways have been opened. Many Europeans are resolutely engaged in constructive
co-operation in order to reinforce peace between them and around them! May they
not leave any nation, even the weakest, out of the union they are forming!
Today, political leaders still have immense tasks before them. The strengthening
of democratic institutions, the development of the economy and international
co-operation do not reach their true goal unless they guarantee sufficient
prosperity so that every aspect of the human personality can flourish. The
greatness of the role of political leaders is to act always with respect for the
dignity of every human being, to create the conditions of a generous solidarity
which never marginalizes any citizen, to permit each individual to have access
to culture, to recognize and put into practice the loftiest human and spiritual
values, to profess and to share one's religious beliefs. By advancing in this
direction, the European continent will strengthen its cohesion, will prove
faithful to those who have laid the foundations of its culture and will respond
to its age-old vocation in the world.
Your Excellencies, may St Adalbert’s message be a source of fruitful inspiration
for you in facing the magnitude and difficulty of your duties! As I thank you
again for coming here today, I offer you my fervent wishes for the
accomplishment of your noble tasks, for your persons and for all the peoples you
represent. I ask God to grant you all the benefits of his blessing.
© Copyright 1997 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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