The Pope and the island of St Paul
On the occasion of the feast of St Publius, patron saint of Floriana (April 24), this is what the late Pope John Paul II had said about his visit to Malta after saying Mass on St Publius Square (Il-Fosos) in May 1990. He was giving his first public...
On the occasion of the feast of St Publius, patron saint of Floriana (April 24), this is what the late Pope John Paul II had said about his visit to Malta after saying Mass on St Publius Square (Il-Fosos) in May 1990. He was giving his first public audience in Rome two days after he returned from Malta, as reported on the front page of the Osservatore Romano:
"I have just returned from the island of Malta which despite its pluralistic history assimilated the values of various civilisations and should continue in her natural mission of her precious vocation initiated by the great Apostle Paul when he was providentially shipwrecked in Malta situated in the centre of the Mediterranean Sea."
The Pope went on to say that the Acts of the Apostles recount in great detail how Paul converted the Maltese to Christianity by various miracles among which was the healing of the father of Publius who was qualified as the "first in the island" (Governor of Malta on behalf of the Roman Empire) and who later became venerated as the First Bishop of the Maltese Church.
"In fact action was taken to evangelise the inhabitants whose fruits I could myself see and touch during my recent visit because through its Christian fundamentals Malta entered in the Acts of the Apostles by uniting its history with that of the Apostle Paul because my immediate contact with the Maltese population gave me the occasion to feel the religious nobility of this nation after recording the most significant moments of my recent Apostolic Voyage to the Island of St Paul."