On April 30, 2000, Saint Pope John Paul II canonized Saint Faustina Kowalska, a Polish nun and visionary to whom Christ had appeared with red and white rays streaming from his heart, an image that has since become famous as the "Divine Mercy." Saint Faustina realized that God sees the world through the wounds of his son, and that God’s gaze is full of mercy and love. We need not fear, therefore, but only trust in Jesus. The Divine Mercy chaplet is a special prayer using Rosary beads, but with a different sequence of prayers, emphasizing the saving Passion of Christ. One of the prayers of the chaplet summarizes the devotion, which focuses on Christ’s Passion and God’s mercy: "For the sake of His sorrowful Passion, have mercy on us and on the world." Another prayer associated with the Divine Mercy devotion is a novena of prayer concluding on the Sunday of Divine Mercy (thus beginning on Good Friday). On each day of the novena, a different group is prayed for, encompassing, by Divine Mercy Sunday, the whole world. It is a prayer of trust in the love of Christ.