April 4, 2005
The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Revd
Rowan Williams, has paid a warm tribute to the life and ministry
of Pope John Paul II, describing his last days as a ‘lived sermon'
for Eastertide about facing death with honesty and courage.
In a statement delivered in the precincts of
Canterbury Cathedral, visited by Pope John Paul in 1982, Archbishop
Williams said that the Pope's life had been a demonstration of faith
lived out. He praised the way in which the Pope had approached his
own death with courage and acceptance.
"I think in these past few days, we've seen an
extraordinary ‘lived sermon' for Eastertide, about facing death
with honesty and courage; facing death in the hope of a relationship
which is not broken by death but continues beyond it. Pope John
Paul showed his character in the way in which he met his death;
clearly frustrated, clearly suffering and yet at every point accepting;
facing his frailties and remaining courageous and hopeful. I feel
there's a certain appropriateness about the fact that he died within
the Easter season – a time of the Church's year which meant so much
to him. It has been a season in which he was able to give a message
to the whole of the Christian world, and in fact to the whole human
world, that won't be readily forgotten."
He added that the Pope's early experiences under
Nazism and Communism greatly strengthened the Papacy when he came
into office:
"Because he was a man who had lived through the
toughest and most testing times of the modern age, Pope John Paul
II brought with him a very particular authority to his office. He
‘d shown that both as an opponent both of Nazism and Soviet Communism
he was fully aware of the fact that the Church has to be something
different; that it has to offer different values and different hopes
to the society around it."
Dr Williams paid tribute to the Pope's willingness
to acknowledge the failures of the church:
"He faced the reality of the Christian church's
complicity with anti-Semitism. This showed itself in the way in
which he admitted the Church's failures in the 1930s, visited the
Roman Synagogue and in Jerusalem made his peace at the Western Wall.
In doing this he showed something fundamental, something distinctive
about being a Christian which is of huge authority."
Anglican Communion News Service, London
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