You can imagine how my life was turned upside down on that trip. I had never been to that part of Italy before and had no idea of the artistic and musical delights that awaited me. The highlight of our performance schedule was a private audience in the Sala Clementina, a resplendent, high-ceilinged audience chamber in the Apostolic Palace of the Vatican, where we gave a special concert for the Holy Father with members of the Orchestra of Catholic University. The culmination of the concert was the choir's performance of Palestrina's 6-part motet Tu es Petrus, a piece composed by Palestrina for the Vatican choir that sets the words Jesus spoke to the apostle Peter, which are inscribed around the dome in St. Peter's (see this post about our most recent choir trip to Rome in March). A sextet, including yours truly, sang alone on the secunda pars. It was surely the greatest moment in my life as a singer. When we had the chance to meet the pope afterward in a receiving line, he told me in his heavily accented English—and I am not making this up—"very great singing." No doubt he said that to everyone in the line, but I can still picture him saying it to me as if it were a video in my brain.
Of course, people are entitled to their own views of John Paul II, the papacy, the Catholic Church (Mike Grass at DCist did a great roundup of the wide range of press reactions; James Wagner's viewpoint is not unusual, although it is extreme). Many people, even Catholics, chafe at some of his views and decisions, but it was his mission to remind us that Christ's message is not always easy and it does not fit in with "the age," no matter what century. What made him so charismatic was that he lived what he preached. This was true up to the end, and although it was painful to watch him struggle with illness and torment, visibly frustrated by the terrible loss of his faculties, that it was what we are all called to do. Like Saint Paul, he ran the good race: although I am saddened by his death, I am relieved that he has gone to his rest.
UPDATE:
Thanks to artist Anna L. Conti, who blogs at Working Artist's Journal, for taking the time to touch up the photograph in this post in Photoshop, which looked pretty terrible because I took a digital shot of an actual photograph. The version of the image there right now is the result of her digital wizardry. Thanks again, Anna!
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