April 02, 2005
As you can tell, I cannot bring myself to weep too hard for someone who died at an advanced age after living such a rich, full life. I'm a nominal Catholic, but was raised to "question authority," and I don't have quite the reverence for the office that cradle Catholics have. But I do have tremendous respect.
What I do know is that this man, along with Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, helped to create the conditions that led to the downfall of Communism in Eastern Europe, saving an uncountable number of lives and improving the quality of life around the world.
He had the courage, when he was young, to study a religion that was prohibited by the state.
He spoke many languages.
He traveled more than any other pope.
He was the first non-Italian pontiff in centuries.
He was an important bridge-builder within Christianity and between Christians and Jews. And between Christians and Muslims.
He was a great man.
The world will miss him.
The world, and the church, will go on—and will be better off for his having been here.
How can one pray for the pope? The temptation is to believe that God wouldn't listen. Or, if He did, that he'd be listening to the devout believers ahead of someone like me.
But that's the wong attitude, and in any event—as Tom Stoppard once said—I should have the courage of my lack of conviction.
I'll pray for him tonight, and I'd suggest that those of you who are Protestant, Jewish, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, and agnostic try it as well. At the very least, a very good and powerful man has left us. So we mourn.
Posted by: Attila at
08:20 PM
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