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Past
Statements
April 19, 2005
Pope Benedict XVI greeted with great joy
I greet with great joy and thanksgiving to God the announcement
that Cardinal Josef Ratzinger has been elected pope and
has taken the name Benedict XVI.
He is a world class theologian and was a peritus or expert
at the Second Vatican Council so he will continue the reform
and renewal of that historic event.
I know well this humble and good priest. At every “ad
limina” visit that every bishop makes every five years,
I have had a personal visit with him. Only last May, a few
days after my visit with Pope John Paul II, he was kind enough
to spend 45 minutes with me. I had a very joyful and positive
meeting with him.
During this visit, we spoke about this diocese and he said
to me, “A great work has been done there for the church.” I
told him, “That is the intercession of Our Lady.” He
said, “You have been the instrument.” I thanked
him.
He is a humble, very personal man, easy to meet and very
gracious. He should rightly be considered as one of the great
theologians of this century.
He tried twice in recent years to retire from his work as
prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
John Paul II said, “I need you to stay on.”
During my visit with John Paul II, I had said that his prediction
about a “new springtime for Christianity” was
beginning to come through and was coming through. How true.
How true. It was for the young people. As I believe Cardinal
Ratzinger said to me once again as if to be sure I had said
it. “Bishop, did you tell the Holy Father that the ‘new
springtime’ was coming?” This made me think that
he felt it important to encourage John Paul II in his long
illness.
I told the cardinal during this visit how I had used his
material on the priesthood in various retreats which I had
given. I referred especially to his book, “Introduction
to Christianity,” and to two articles that he had written
on the priesthood that I had used over the years.
Of all the cardinals who were talked about as possibilities
of being elected, this is the man who knows this diocese
best of all from my frequent conversations with him. He is
also the one of all those cardinals whom I knew best of all.
At the conclusion of our visit, I shared with him some material
given to me by Sister Jane Carew on catechesis. Sister Jane
had been to Rome during the Year of the Great Jubilee of
2000. Cardinal Ratzinger gave her talk to catechists. Sister
Jane is a catechist and director of our office of catechesis.
The cardinal had given a talk asking that there be a school
of prayer for catechists. Sister Jane, after listening to
his talk, has initiated it in our diocese, and I shared with
him all the material she had given me. He laid it out on
the table and looked at it joyfully and with thanks. He was
very touched.
A great theologian then, a pastor, a humble priest, a man
of keen intellect, a man who strongly opposes relativism
and will strengthen the good work done by his predecessor.
I am especially pleased that I know him and that he has such
a strong knowledge of this diocese.
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