Friday, August 15, 2014

A Reflection on "The Jeweler's Shop"


One thing that I have come to realize throughout my previous studying of St. John Paul II is that he has an amazing connection with the people of the church. He is well known for his connection with the youth, and while yes, it is true that he does have this specific connection, his observation of man as a whole, in each stage of life is rather mesmerizing. After reading through the Homily that St. John Paul II delivered in Boston in 1979, I could not get out of my head just how connected he was to all people.

As many know the new saint lived in Poland during the Second World War. He was a gifted student, studying Polish Philology, as well as a gifted actor. Throughout the war the young saint participated in the rhapsodic theater. It was a theater which focused very little on the movement, and highlighted the word. Acting and theater was a career Karol Wojtyla thought seriously about pursuing, until he heard God’s call to the priesthood.

He may not have pursued the theater and the arts as many of his friends had expected him to, but he never quite gave up on them either. Around 1960 Karol Wojtyla wrote and published The Jeweler’s Shop – A Meditation on the Sacrament of Matrimony, Passing on Occasion into Drama. It is a play that encompasses many ideas of the Rhapsodic Theater including “respect for the concrete person, freedom, and the search for community and solidarity.”[1] Many are able to identify that this little play also goes hand in hand with the Holy Father’s later teachings on the Theology of the Body.

So what is the story of The Jewler’s Shop? It is the story of three different couples, the first couple and their engagement. The second couple’s struggles and how they are slowly falling apart from the inside out. The third couple is each a child from one of the previously mentioned relationships who are now moving toward matrimony themselves despite their rather difficult roots. The thing about this play is that it is written so eloquently. It seems as though St. John Paul II pulled from places that he was familiar with, as in the settings, the town square, and the hiking, as well as illustrating struggles and relationships that he would have witnessed himself as a priest.

The First couple, Teresa and Andrew, who John Paul II writes about, is the couple that everyone wishes to be. They’ve slowly fallen in love over time, knowing one another for years. They had been friends for several years, hiking together, and just spending time with their friends. They had simply built a friendship and now they were beginning to work together to create a new family.  There is an innocence and purity to their love, they found one another, despite the distractions and they trusted that they could make it work. Teresa makes it a point to say that she does not know what time Andrew asked her to marry her; she was too caught up looking at him, and taking in the moment, that she didn’t see the world around her, and didn’t look at the clock in the town square. She explains that though she paused, there was no hesitation in her answer; she knew it was yes immediately. The trip to the Jeweler’s shop, and the Jeweler himself cemented her answer.

Look at this first example of love, what do we see? We see purity, respect for one another, and a relationship based in God’s love first.  Despite the smaller hardships and struggles that this couple would have gone through one can see just how perfectly they are made for each other. The space that you visualize when reading the story is, at least for me, a Polish town square, a bell tower, a jeweler’s shop, and surrounding buildings. The Pope it appears pulled from places which he was familiar with when writing this play. This couple continues on to have a son, Christopher, but soon after his birth, Andrew is sent to war where he dies. Teresa raises Christopher on her own, he is lacking the father figure in his life and later on, he comes to wonder how things would have been different and if he would have been more prepared for marriage. The loss of Andrew made me see a parallel between the first couple’s family and the family from which the Pope grew up in, in his case however having lost his mother; he lacked the maternal figure in his life.

The second couple, Anna and Stefan, is a couple going through a rather difficult time in their relationship. They appear to no longer care for one another, and Anna feels as though Stefan has driven her away. She decides that the best way to handle this is to continue to push him farther away, making no attempt at resolving their issues, and causing their children to suffer. Anna regrets her marriage and one night she tries to find a distraction. After much struggle, she comes face to face with the “bridegroom,” who to her chagrin has the face of the man whom she married. She tried to sell her ring, assuming that she would make a small profit from the gold, only to discover that it is not based on the value of the metal, but the weight, and her ring weighs nothing without her husband’s ring. Adam, a friend she meets outside of the shop is her voice of reason. He reminds her of the importance of the vows she made when marrying Stefan, explaining that she cannot just walk away, there needs to be effort in resolving what has become broken and she has to find somewhere to begin.

This second example of love is the one which people fear they will find themselves involved in. It was beautiful and passionate at the beginning, and it has slowly diminished. Neither person has any idea where to begin so that they can resolve their relationship, and so they choose to simply ignore it, allowing much tension and distress to find its way into the household. How many relationships can we imagine that the Holy Father had witnessed slowly starting to fall apart. It’s the mundaneness of everyday life that causes people to get comfortable and fail to make the other feel special in any way. But these difficulties take time and discernment to be resolved; divorce isn’t something that should occur at the whim of an unhappy couple. Effort should be made to try and resolve the difficulty, and as the priest who would be giving the advice, we can only imagine John Paul II as Adam, the voice of reason, who helps Anna try to put her emotions in order and her marriage into perspective.

Christopher and Monica make up the third couple. Christopher comes from the marriage of Teresa and Andrew, cut short by Andrew’s death while away at war. Monica’s family is made up of the broken home of Anna and Stefan’s marriage. Both children have managed to find love in the other, and yet they fear for themselves and their relationship, as well as any children whom they may have. Monica is afraid that Christopher and she will fall out of love, and fall away from one another, as she has seen her mother and father do. Christopher fears that he will not be a proper husband to Monica as he has had very little example of how a man should behave since the loss of his father at such a young age. Still they let their shy love win over. Despite their difficulties and fears, they still care deeply for one another. They visit the Jeweler’s shop and unlike Teresa and Andrew who felt as though the Jeweler read their entire future simply by looking at them, they could not see the greatness of the Jeweler. They were happy, at peace in one another, and saw nothing more in the rings than a visible sign of their commitment to one another.

These fears of Christopher and Monica’s which the Pope so beautifully explains, causes one to yet again see his connection with the youth. Yes, love and marriage, theology of the body, it is all connected, but still this hesitation and struggle which they find themselves facing simply to accept the love of another, who could quite possibly turn around and fail them, is a beautiful meditation. I come from a broken home, for lack of a better term. Yes, we’ve adapted, we aren’t seriously lacking in anyway, and we all have good relationships, but I find it quite easy to place myself in the shoes of Monica specifically. I fear all of the same things, finding someone whom I can love now, and who will love me now, only to turn around years later and fall out of love with me. It’s terrifying, but with God all things are possible. That is where discernment comes in.

The reason I decided to talk about this play is because it is the writings of John Paul II but in a completely different light. Sure there is still theology throughout it, and his Theology of the Body is most definitely present in the way he presents the relationships, reminding us that we are called to mirror the most holy trinity, even throughout the difficult times. But there is also the sheer humanity of the story, the love, the lust, the struggles, the fears, and the hope, which are all present in the story.  Yes, it is minimalistic and solely focused on the words within the tale rather than the actions, that is why reading the script of the play can be so fulfilling.

The story is not something that you need to see laid out before you in order to understand it, rather it is beautifully presented in such a way that simply reading the text allows you to grasp so much from it, you can place yourself in the shoes of each character.  The fact that the Holy Father chose to present a meditation on the sacrament of marriage with a very realistic view of how couples handle the obstacles presented to them is incredible. Sometimes I think that people assume the Catholic church has all of these ideals, and that she refuses to acknowledge the human struggles that actually come up. Saint John Paul II was able to look at these ideals and acknowledge the difficulties that man has in following through with them sometimes, but ultimately he reminds us that if we have God we can get through anything.

If you haven’t read the play I recommend it or you could watch it on YouTube – I will post a link under my resources. J

Resources –
“Karol Wojtyla - the Jeweler's Shop.” Accessed August 10, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHki1shZJB0. (The Link to the Play)
“Peter Casarella - The Proper Weight of Love: What We Can Learn from The Jeweler's Shop?” Accessed August 10, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xa6sVkNEDs0. (Lecture on the Play)
John Paul. The Jeweler's Shop: A Meditation On the Sacrament of Matrimony Passing On Occasion Into a Drama. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1992, 1980.



[1] “Karol Wojtyla - the Jeweler's Shop,”, accessed August 10, 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHki1shZJB0.

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