Seeing how God and Mary guided John Paul II
05/13/2026
John 16:12-15 Jesus
said to his disciples: "I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear
it now. But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth.
He will not speak on his own, but he will speak what he hears, and will declare
to you the things that are coming. He will glorify me, because he will take
from what is mine and declare it to you. Everything that the Father has is
mine; for this reason I told you that he will take from what is mine and
declare it to you."
Every morning around 5:45
I greet the high school students who attend Ozark Catholic Academy in Tontitown
before they depart for school. We say the Our Father in Latin. A few weeks ago
I was talking to a senior and her mother as they waited to leave and we
discussed Pope Leo XIV and how young he was to be elected pope at age 69.
I made the comment, “But
John Paul II was only 58 when he became pope and that’s so young!” And the
senior literally laughed out loud – “Ha!” – at my assertion that 58 was
“young.” To an 18-year-old who’s fit as a fiddle, being 58 must seem as old as
the hills. But it was very providential that the Polish pontiff was so young
because his excellent health helped him to survive an assassination attempt
three years later on May 13, 1981.
Some of you might
remember the sunny afternoon that Pope John Paul II was wheeling around St.
Peter’s Square in his popemobile, smiling and greeting pilgrims when Mehemet
Ali Agca shot the Holy Father four times. John Paul, of course, because of his
deep devotion to Mary, gave the Blessed Mother the credit for saving his life.
May 13 is the feast of
Our Lady of Fatima and John Paul insisted Mary’s hand had moved the bullet away
from his vital organs. Who is Our Lady of Fatima? Our Lady of Fatima is one of
the virtually innumerable titles for the Blessed Virgin Mary. She appeared from
May 13 to October 13, 1917 to three peasant children in Fatima, Portugal.
Mary’s titles often arise from the location where she appears, in this case
Fatima, Portugal.
By the way, Mary must be
a polyglot, someone who speaks a lot of languages, because she invariably
appears to illiterate children or peasants and addresses them in their native
tongue. When she appeared before Lucia, Francisco, and Jacinta, she spoke to them
in perfect Portuguese. If Mary appears to you, she will have a soft southern
drawl, “Ya’ll come back, hear?”
Now a more subtle
connection between Our Lady of Fatima and John Paul revolves around the third
secret of Fatima. Mary revealed 3 secrets to Lucia, Francisco, and Jacinta, and
the third one – which the Vatican publicized in 2000 – referred to a bishop dressed
in white (the pope) who traveling through a ruined city (ancient Rome) would be
killed by soldiers (Mehemet Ali Agca).
But John Paul interpreted
that secret to be an advance warning to help him survive the assassination
attempt. In other words, John Paul did not believe May 13 was a coincidence but
rather a providence: God’s hand guiding history, especially the pope’s own
personal history. We might say that as Mary’s motherly hand guided the bullet
away from John Paul’s vital organs, God’s fatherly hand had been guiding John
Paul’s whole life so that he met that bullet on Mary’s feast day.
Tony Robbins, a popular
motivational speaker, holds an annual seminar called “Date with Destiny” to
help people improve their lives. John Paul believed May 13 was his “date with
destiny” where Mary’s hand and God’s hand worked powerfully together to save
his life and to strengthen his faith. The assassination attempt did not
discourage the pope; it made his more determined than ever.
My friends, we all have a
date with destiny. Oh, I don’t mean you should attend a Tony Robbins
motivational tent revival, but to discern carefully how God the Father’s hand
through his providence and Mother Mary’s hand through her prayers guide our own
lives. People of faith cannot countenance living by luck, or believe in karma,
or knocking on wood so something bad does not happen, or avoid talking about a
NBA player’s perfect free throw stat as he steps up to take one, or how
baseball player wear the same underwear while they are on a winning streak.
That is all superstitious bunk.
Rather, we must adopt the
attitude of little children, like Jacinto, Francisco, and Lucia, who are docile
to the guidance of a father’s and mother’s hand in their life. That is why the
standard Catholic prayer is always: one Our Father, one Hail Mary, and one
Glory Be. Why? Because we submit ourselves, especially our wills, to the
providence of the Father, and to the prayerful protection of our Mother, so we
can glorify the Holy Trinity in all we do. Then we will live a truly worthy
Christian life.
Praised
be Jesus Christ!






