Dear FRONTLINE
I have always thought you to be a truthful and unbiased media. Last night's edition on Pope John Paul II proved me wrong. The critics/commentators did everything to make him sound like a victim of the war and strife on Poland during WWII. What about the fact he is a very holy man who is the Vicar of Christ? His work is to represent Christ on this earth! Scripture and Tradition have been handed down through the centuries from our early fathers of the Church. I would be very suspicious of a pope who changed our basic roots! We are not people who change with the times, meaning we cannot become self-serving. He has done his job remarkably well and I think much of humanity is jealous and critical because of it. Needless to say, I am very disappointed in your presentation of this very holy man.
Jane Chroniak
Dear FRONTLINE
The program was deeply sympathetic to the Pope in explaining his positions on liberation theology and women in terms of his background.It was wrong of him to crush and expunge the priests in Latin America who were struggling for basic human righs just as he was was fighting to free Poles from cummunist tyrany. However, we can understand how he could carry his anti-Marxism to another part of the world he knew nothing about.
John Moore Concord, MA
Dear FRONTLINE
This Pope's impact on the world at large will be eternal. Those who have been in his presence as I have had the honor sense something other-worldly, mystical, and genuine about this man and his deep, deep faith. He is not afraid of ridicule; he has a mission to accomplish and he is working feverishly to complete it. May God grant him a hundred years in which to do it!
Victoria Gennaro McAdoo, PA
Dear FRONTLINE
People of little or no faith will never truly understand the Pope. Some of the "experts" chosen for the program clearly had no real understanding of the Pope. To say the Pope is responsible for increased abortion because of his position on contraception ignores the fact that abortion, as well as divorce and child abuse, skyrocketted after contraception became widely accepted. The Pope understand the rebellion against God that contraception began. People are seeking to wrest control of life and death from God.
Jon Wolff Augusta, GA
Dear FRONTLINE
Watching your program on the Holy Father was a religious experience in itself. I attended Catholic high school but was no where near prepared for the anti-religious fervor so widespread in today's colleges and universities. This man is a testament to all who have dared to challenge the status quo. Bravo PBS! This is yet another example of your wonderful, unbiased programming which continues to push the boundaries of excellence further.
Jenny McMillen Nashville, Tennessee
Dear FRONTLINE
His legacy is simply the legacy of The Church, which is the Sanctification of human kind so that the work of Redemption can come to its perfection.
Federico Higuera Cobden, IL
Dear FRONTLINE
I was not able to view the program in its entirety. However, in viewing the web page roundtable, it concerns me that only 2, of the 8 panelists chosen, defended the positions of the Catholic Church. For instance, as one would expect, the 2 ex priests certainly have issues with the Church, having renounced their life-long vows to the priesthood. Why was a current priest not included? For balance, I believe that it would be advantageous to present noted theologians who would defend Catholic teaching in addition to individuals who disagree.
Jim Monaghan Temecula, CA
Dear FRONTLINE
I found the show well balanced, presenting both sides of the man and Catholicism for what he is and the church itself respresents, the varying complexities and contradictions that we all possess to one degree or another. I personally am a non-practicing Protestant and one who "has lost his faith", yet, seeing this expose on JPII I am encouraged to find it again and to hold onto it this time. If I could meet the Pope and ask him one question it would be, can you help me to find my faith again? His response would be in the affirmative. I feel the yearning to find my faith again due to this program. If for no other reason than that I thank PBS.
Grant Harris Brookfield, Wi.
Dear FRONTLINE
I am always impressed by the excellent, insightful and intellegent work on Frontline, but this peice really stands out. I have just read many critical reviews of this show and agree that it is a very complex issue not easily examined in a two hour segment but I felt in many ways it encapsulated the life of a man drawn to God's work who still remains a man, suseptible to mistakes, but has made a profound difference in many lives. I am not Catholic but was moved to tears during the testmonies of faith and plan on reading further into other religous mystics. I am pro-choice and feel women should be ordained but this difference in views did not detract from my feeling that JPII is offering hope and redenption to many people seeking faith in this complex world. I was very effected by your program -- good work!
Heather Duncan Seattle, WA
Dear FRONTLINE
I was very disappointed when your program, that at first seemed to be a tribute to a very worthy man, turned out to be just another case of Catholic bashing. There are women in the church today who are perfectly satisfied with the teachings and traditions of the church as it was meant to be, just as Jesus Christ established it!
Kim Clark Hayden, Alabama
Dear FRONTLINE
I believe his legacy will be the strengthening, or perhaps re-establishing, of spirituality in a world that immaturely is fascinated and distracted by wonders of science and technology. That world thinks is has found the handle to truth, but the "Millennial Pope" trys to cling to, and portray, the truth God communes to him -- and to all of us really. Witness the warden and his realization about the "death penalty". . .
Glenn Keiper Duncansville, PA
Dear FRONTLINE
What came across to me in your presentation was how great this Pope is- because his values have envested life with meaning, with purpose, with dignity -this type of envestment being the purpose of all civilized existence. In this sense, he ennobles all of us, no matter who or what we are, and secure us in an infinite vision.
florence walton coon rapids, minnesota
Dear FRONTLINE
After watching this documentary I feel compelled to come to the Holy Father's defence. I don't enjoy seeing someone who has done so much for humanity become the object of so much criticism and frustration. I was grateful for the contribution by Msr. Albacete and for the amount of time the editors gave him.
Paul Flansburg
Dear FRONTLINE
This programme was little more than a hit piece on John Paul II. The sections on Latin America and Women were particularly slanted and one sided, with almost nobody shown defending, or even accurately explaining, the Pope's views. Almost all of the critics felt compelled to give purely psychological explanations of the Pope's beliefs, without considering that they may have coherent philosophical or theological origins. There is nothing in the Pope's positions on the role of women, church and state, contraception, or any other controverted issue that is new. All are long standing Catholic doctrines. If anything, this Pope has been quite liberal in his reinterpretation of traditional beliefs.
I have supported PBS over the years. No longer. This show proved that anti-Catholicism is the last acceptable form of bigotry.
Mark Cameron Ottawa, Canada
Dear FRONTLINE
Dear Frontline, As a Jesuit-trained individual and someone who lived in Central American in the 80's, I enjoyed your program about the Holy Father. Ignoring the overriding papal classically Christian message that suffering makes faith stronger, it did strike me as ironic that nowhere was the incongruity of liberation theology civil disobedience & ends justify the means juxtaposed to the absolute obedience commanded by the Holy Father. JPII's finger wagging at the militant Nicaraguan Jesuit Ernesto Cardenal at the Managua airport in 1984 was unforgettable. The Pope was right to angrily maintain that he alone is Pope, and clergy has no right to take matters into their own hands, no matter the injustice. How is it the Pope could rely on revolutionary priests throwing off the Central American repressive dictators to then trust Marxists Catholics to subjugate themselves to the Church? The Church is not based on liberation, but on devotion. His faith is in God, not humans of political ambition. The Pope knew first-hand Marxism was the substitution of a State Church for Christ's Church. John Paul II's distrust of Marxists, with, or without roman collars, was proved justified.
John Feegel Loudoun County, Virginia
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