Pope John Paul II - Homilies - April 19, 1998
- November 22, 1981
Feast of Christ the King - April 6, 1986
Divine Mercy Sunday - April 10, 1991
The Easter message of the merciful Christ, General Audience - April 18, 1993
Divine Mercy Sunday - April 19, 1993
General Audience - April 10, 1994
Second Sunday of Easter - April 23, 1995
Divine Mercy Sunday
Regina Caeli - June 7, 1997
At the Shrine of Divine Mercy in Lagiewniki - April 11, 1999
Divine Mercy Sunday - April 30, 2000
Divine Mercy Sunday
Regina Caeli
Evening Prayer - April 22, 2001
Divine Mercy Sunday - August 16, 2002
John Paul II's Address on Arrival in Poland - August 17, 2002
Pope's Homily During Mass for Dedication of Divine Mercy Shrine - August 18, 2002
John Paul II's Homily During Beatification of 4 Apostles of Mercy
Papal Address Prior to Recitation of Angelus
April 19, 1998
Divine Mercy Sunday
Regina Caeli, Accept Divine Mercy with an open heart. L’Osservatore Romano, April 22, 1998
On 19 April, the Second Sunday of Easter, the Holy Father led the recitation of the Regina Caeli, which he introduced with a reflection on the Lord’s merciful love and on the Special Synod for Asia.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. In today’s Gospel passage we read that Jesus appeared to the Apostles in the Upper Room and said to them: "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained" (Jn 20:22?]23). With these words, the risen Christ calls the Apostles to be messengers and ministers of his merciful love and from that day, from generation to generation, this proclamation of hope has resounded in the heart of the Church for every believer. Blessed are those who open their hearts to divine mercy! The Lord’s merciful love precedes and accompanies every act of evangelization and enriches it with extraordinary fruits of conversion and spiritual renewal.
2. In every corner of the world the way of the Christian people is marked by the constant action of divine mercy. This happened in the early communities and likewise in the Church’s later developments on the various continents.
Today our attention is focused in particular on the signs of mercy which God worked and continues to work in Asia. In fact this morning’s solemn Eucharistic celebration in St. Peter’s Basilica opened the Special Assembly for Asia of the Synod of Bishops.
The theme chosen for this Synod Assembly is "Jesus Christ the Saviour and his Mission of Love and Service in Asia: ‘that they may have life, and have it abundantly’" (Jn 10:10). This is a most appropriate theme for Asia, especially in view of its many religions and cultures, its variety of economic and political situations. It is an enormous land, open to the proclamation of salvation in Jesus Christ and to the witness of Christian solidarity towards peoples who are often sorely tried. At this time I am thinking particularly of the peoples of North Korea, exhausted by hunger and hardship: as I urge the Church’s charitable organizations to take responsibility for this difficult situation, I hope that the international community will also provide the necessary assistance.
3. Let us entrust to Mary, Mother of the Church, the work of the Special Assembly for Asia of the Synod of Bishops. May she, who was at the heart of the apostolic community as a teacher of prayer and communion, obtain an abundant outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Synod Fathers and on all the Christian communities throughout the Asian continent. May Our Lady, Mother of Divine Mercy, also enable us to accept with open hearts the gift of merciful love that the risen Christ offers all believers, so that His mercy and His peace may mark the present and the future of all humanity.