|
4th
April, 2005
CARDINAL
GEORGE PELL
Archbishop
of Sydney
History will know him as John Paul the Great. He was not only
the most politically influential pope in centuries. He was
also, to the very end, one of the greatest Christian pastors
in history.
He was always a disciple of Jesus Christ, Catholic and Polish,
as he attempted to explain and relate eternal truths to the
tragedy and muddle of twentieth century life. He taught regularly,
in season and out of season that there are truths about the
human situation, which can be known; in them is found human
flourishing.
The great body of John Paul II's teaching in faith and morals
and on social questions forms a powerful and coherent whole,
drawing on the dynamic of tradition and development that has
made the Catholic church one of the most robust and longest
surviving institutions in the world.
In everything from short homilies to solemn encyclicals he
explained the scandal of the Cross and how the Church must
be a sign of contradiction, while emphasizing the power of
reason to know the liberating effects of truth.
For John Paul II there was no easy courting of popularity
and no shirking of challenges. Despite this - or indeed because
of it – his teaching will continue to have an important
effect on public thinking and discourse well into the 21st
century.
At the centre of his work is the question of the meaning of
human life, and in particular, of suffering. A principal point
of difference between secular humanists and Christians is
the value accorded life and suffering. The radical secularist
view that suffering is meaningless, that a life of suffering
is without value, is no longer enough for people.
There is more to the story than this, and John Paul II addressed
this intellectually and through the public performance of
his duties at such personal cost.
George Weigel, the American author of the best biography of
the pope, Witness to Hope, observed this week that
John Paul II was determined to use even his own illness to
challenge us with the message of the Cross.
His own very public following of the Way of the Cross, especially
in the last few years of his life, showed us not only that
suffering can have meaning, but that it can also have a magnificent
dignity.
None of us want to suffer, but the modern world is unusual
in its over-riding fear of suffering. We are tempted to ignore
suffering, or to hide it away as demeaning or pointless, or
to bring it to an end by eliminating the sufferer.
As a product of 20th century central Europe, John Paul II
knew plenty about suffering before contracting Parkinson's
disease 14 years ago. But suffering is not the end. Christ's
resurrection ensures the triumph of love over all suffering
and evil.
This is the message the pope continued to preach to us, silently
at the end, through his own very personal and public witness
to the truth of love's triumph. For some, this was confronting.
Now he is gone, it gives all of us reason to reflect and to
be grateful for the life and work of this great good man.
John Paul II ended as he began, with faith, love and courage.
With these he gave a whole world new reasons to hope; new
reasons to trust in God and the power of love.
This
is the complete text of a statement released by Cardinal Pell
following the Pope's death early Sunday.
|