Hello all,
I am sure you all remember Pope John Paul II, may he rest in peace. Recently, I heard that the current Roman pope, Pope Benedict XVI, has waived the minimum period required to declare someone a saint for Pope John Paul II. I am not 100% sure, but I think the minimum requirement is to wait at least 3 or 5 years...i can't remember.
In our church, the required minimum waiting period is 50 years...am I correct? (that's why we don't officially declare H.H. Pope Kyrillos VI as a saint at the moment).
Anyways, what I was thinking is that does the Pope have the right to waive a specific law of the church just to please the people? Many Polish people wanted Pope John Paul II declared "an immediate saint" (Pope John Paul II was of Polish descent).
Has there been any point in our church history where the Pope has waived an official church rule?
Sinful Servant
Comments
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now the catholic church, thats a bit different. now they lean to the public more to the pantocrator.
and pope john paul must be beatified first like mother theresa, theyu have er what shall i call them? phases i suppose. and they must look up miracles, at leat four. etc.
but in all the catholic church is always changing.
for example, they cant figure out whether they believe in a limbo anymore, they changed the altar to face the people, and they now allow people to touch the body. and much more but ill cease my rambling.
(if im mistaken in anything, please notify me, bc im not the most reliable person when it comes to the facts.lol)