I woke up around 3:30 this morning and before going back to sleep
I checked the news on my phone. I was shocked to read of the death in Rome just
a few hours earlier of Cardinal George Pell. Beside me on the bed was the third
and last volume of his Prison Journal, which has been my night time
reading recently.
Though I never met Cardinal Pell, I had come to know him through
his prison writings. One thing he mentioned frequently was his hope that he
would be released having been found innocent of charges of the abuse of two
altar-servers for which he had been jailed, not only for his own sake as an
innocent man but more for the sake of the Church.
I came to know a man who in his daily diary could be reflecting on
the readings in the Office of Readings in the Breviary, the praying of which
each day sustained him, and then going on to comment on a cricket match or an
Australian Rules football match, which he could watch on TV. He frequently
quoted extracts from letters he received from all over the world, letters which
gave him hope and courage. He mentioned a letter from a 'carpenter and
historian' in the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic where I have spent short
periods as a priest in 2000, 2017 and 2019. I think that that is a person who
regularly reads Sunday Reflections on this blog.
The Cardinal mentioned the Columbans a number of
times and wrote about his friend Fr Robert McCulloch, a Columban in Rome who
was a good friend of his.
Among Cardinal Pell's regular
correspondents were some other prisoners whom he was never able to meet. He
tried to answer their letters. In other words, he was ministering to these,
just as St Paul ministered to the early Christians while he was a prisoner, and
as two Columbans, Fr Brian Gore, an Australian, and the late Fr Niall O'Brien from
Ireland, ministered to their fellow prisoners in Bacolod City nearly 40 years
ago. They were part of the Negros Nine, three priests and six lay leaders
falsely charged with murder in the Philippines. Like Cardinal Pell they were
eventually acquitted.
In his Prison Journal Cardinal
Pell comes across as a prayerful man of solid faith with a quiet, manly piety. He speaks well
of his fellow prisoners and of the prison staff, while mentioning incidents
that seemed to show at times either incompetence or pettiness. But he
frequently writes about acts of real kindness by staff and by prisoners.
In the second jail where he spent time he was able to share some
facilities with a small group of other prisoners.
Even before his ordeal I admired
Cardinal Pell for his clarity while speaking of some Church teachings that many
find unpalatable. He was quite aware that he was a divisive figure in some
ways. When asked by Pope Francis to go to the Vatican to clean up many
financial anomalies there he met considerable resistance.
In either Volume One or Volume Two of
his Prison Journal Cardinal Pell suggested that there are
certain hymns that men or boys won't sing. He was really saying that they need
manly hymns and gave two examples that his contemporaries in St Patrick's,
Ballarat, Victoria, a boys' school, enjoyed singing. One was Faith
of Our Fathers, written by Father Frederick Faber, an Englishman who lived
in the Oratory in Birmingham when Cardinal Newman was there. There are two
different tunes to this hymn. I suspect that the tune used in St Patrick's
was the one used in Ireland rather than the one
that is popular in the USA. It used to be sung before major Gaelic Football and
Hurling matches in Ireland
In the early 1950s when I was a child
our parish in Dublin introduced the other hymn that Cardinal Pell
mentioned, We Stand for God. It was the one hymn I loved to sing
with all my heart because it had a rousing quality to it. I discovered recently
that the melody was that of the anthem of the Papal States and that was
a hymn to the Blessed Mother.
At the end of the interview above by Colm Flynn of EWTN, an Irish journalist, Cardinal Pell was asked to summarize Benedict XVI in one word. He offered two words: Christian disciple. Neither the interviewer nor the interviewee could have imagined that the Cardinal would be dead just over a week later. May he and Benedict XVI, both faithful Christian disciples, rest in peace.
1 comment:
Dearest Father Seán,
Ghe biggest compliment that Cardinal George Pell gave Pope Benedict XVI was that he was not a politician!
Nowadays it is very rare for finding people that are sincere and honest and not politically influenced.
Loved the video with the song: We stand for God.
Hugs,
Mariette
Post a Comment