My reaction to the pope's death is similar to my reaction to Regan's death: not too familiar with the man's career, clueless as to why its such a big deal, but somehow the media has compelled me to care. But the parading of the corpse is too much.
It seems like JPII was a decent man, though some of his beliefs were ridiculously out of date and retroactive.
I went to Catholic school for 11 years, and to this day I'm not sure what "The Pope" does. Then again, being a non-Catholic, I guess I was too heathenous to fully understand his power, even if the various nuns and priests had let me in on their papal secrets. Now that I think of it, they wouldn't even give me a cracker during communion at mass.
I had a similar thought about the Pope and Reagan; if you ask me, the media coverage was way overblown in both cases. Also, they're both given major credit for the collapse of Soviet communism, but ther roles were more symbolic than anything else. The U.S.S.R. collapsed from within, and it had been on the skids economically for years. I can remember, as a kid, seeing news photos of Soviet department stores and supermarkets, which looked just like ours— except that the shelves were almost empty, and there were long lines for the few goods they
did have. No political/economic system that's in such bad shape is going to be able to sustain itself for long. So even with or without Reagan or JPII, the Soviet government would have fallen anyway, sooner or later.
As to what the Pope actually does, he steers the church from a doctrinal point of view; if you get a progressive-minded one like John XXIII (1950's-60's), then you get some reform and modernization, like the retirement of the Latin mass in favor of the vernacular one ("Vernacular? That's a doiby!").
But under a reactionary like John Paul, the church moves back toward its medieval roots, unfortunately; and his influence is going to be felt long after he's gone, since he appointed 60 of the 117 living Cardinals. Being hand-picked, the Cardinals inevitably reflect the views of the Pope who appointed them.
Gary's right, this thread
is getting too serious, but I don't have any Pope jokes...