(Vatican Radio ) On the 28th May 1982 for the first time in history a Bishop of Rome
set foot on English soil, four centuries since the break of the Church of England
with Rome. The Pope was Blessed John Paul II who is to be canonised by Pope Francis
on the 27th of April .
On the occasion of that visit the Polish Pontiff was
received and indeed had tea with Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace.
In a programme presented and produced by Veronica Scarisbrick you can hear
the personal memories of this visit on the part of the former Archbishop of Liverpool
Patrick Kelly and Catholic author Joanna Bogle.
But while the Polish Pontiff's
Apostolic visit had its official moments and naturally a pastoral dimension to it,
the hallmark of this six day journey which took him to England, Scotland and Wales
was a constant call to peace and reconciliation. It took place in fact at the time
of the Falklands war.
As he himself said upon arrival at Gatwick airport :
"My visit is taking place at a time of tension and anxiety, a time when the attention
of the world has been focused on the delicate situation of the conflict in the South
Atlantic.. As I stand here today , I renew my heartfelt appeal and I pray that such
a settlement will soon be reached . "...
Archbishop Patrick Kelly was present
at the Holy Mass the Holy Father presided over in Coventry and recalls in a special
way the Pope's words during the homily there on Pentecost Sunday. This is an excerpt
from that homily: " Today, the scale and the horror of modern warfare - whether nuclear
or not - makes it totally unacceptable as a means of settling differences between
nations. War should belong to the tragic past , to history ; it should find no place
on humanitys' agenda for the future "....
Catholic author Joanna Bogle also
picks up on John Paul II's impassioned pleas for peace as she shares her personal
memories of this six day trip . Among the things she pinpoints in a special way are
the simplicity of his repeated request to English Catholics to pray and his insistance
they attend Sunday Mass on a regular basis.
Both popes followed in the
footsteps of another Roman Pontiff, Gregory the Great . A Pope who may not have crossed
the channel that separates England from the continent but sent an envoy there centuries
earlier, precisely in 595. The envoy being no other than Saint Augustine, whose presence
on the Island was mentioned by Blessed John Paul II on the eve of his visit to the
heart of the Church of England, Canterbury Cathedral.
An occasion during which
he was received by the Archbishop of Canterbury of the time Doctor Robert Runcie and
joined in an ecumencial service, pronouncing these words: "On this first visit of
a Pope to Canterbury, I come to you in love - the love of Peter. I come to you also
in the love of Gregory, who sent Saint Augustine to this place to give the Lord’s
flock a shepherd’s care . Just as every minister of the Gospel must do, so today I
echo the words of the Master: “I am among you as one who serves” . With me I bring
to you, beloved brothers and sisters of the Anglican Communion, the hopes and the
desires, the prayers and good will of all who are united with the Church of Rome,
which from earliest times was said to “preside in love"...
Listen to this very
personal programme with a selection of recordings from our Vatican Radio archives...