Sunday, September 19, 2010

More on the Papal Visit

Wimbledon Common opposite the Papal Nunciature's residence was even more crowded this morning than yesterday with well wishers hoping to catch sight of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI.  Again there were many young people though more of my own grey haired generation were  evident this time. No folk songs unlike yesterday but today's far larger crowd was as high spirited as before. Cardinal Vincent Nicolls of Westminster was cheered and he reciprocated by handing out some postcards signed by His Holiness.

The Pope left the Papal Nuncio's residence walking towards us at first and began to cross over Parkside apparently to greet the teenagers who had been singing "Pope Benedict we love you..." all to much clapping and cheering but then his limo/security advisers met him half way across the road to drive him off to Wimbledon Park.


The thousands who turned out yesterday in Hyde Park and today in Birmingham follow the pattern set by the Faithfull in Scotland who turned out en masse on day 1 of what has proved to be a very successful 4 day state visit.

One of the remarkable and hopefully lasting features of this Papal Visit, is that it is causing many of the British people, media and establishment  to be more reflective about the meaning of life and rather  less superficial and parochial  sounding  than often has been the case so far   at this end of C21

In the end  the  protesters and sceptics did not  make the slightest difference to the  provoking  of deeper thought and discussion following in the wake of His Holiness during his 4 days here. Well done.

2 comments:

  1. Hello Jerry,
    I didn't manage to catch much of the Pope's visit but I did watch his address to the members of the Commons and Lords. I thought it was a brave and powerful speech whose impact was (for me) slightly muffled by a rather wooden delivery. I know that, in terms of personality, the Pope is above all a theologian and an intellectual who, quite rightly, has little time for the trappings of show businees, but I felt he could have been a little more outgoing, especially as he has a warm and captivating smile.
    I thought the little speech by Baronness Hayman afterwards extraordinarily fine and heartfelt.
    Incidentally, fid you see the excellent programme on the Vatican on the eve of the Pontiff's visit?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Greetings Barnaby

    Before the Visit many were concerned that some of his human traits like a tendency on occasion to woodeness of delivery could result in a dull Visit certainly when compared with the Visit by JPII in 1982.

    In the event the Visit was neither dull nor wooden. The two pontiffs have completely different traits of character so the
    Visits cannot sensibly be compared. Both were good for Britain and the British. JP II's famous entrety for us to avoid the pitfalls of the "contraceptive society" (neatly sidestepping the issue of human contraception) dovetail well with Beedict XVI's warnings about the increasing secularisation of our society. Both men spoke with authority and both men's words were though provoking.

    Interesting question, admittedly only in the Daily Mail, today, about why the Archbishop of canterbury does not speak with such authority.

    ReplyDelete

Human Conflict

A time for reflection, given the fighting in Ukraine, Sudan,  Israel,  Gaza and Iran to name those areas which come to mind. There is or was...