- Posted by Thomas Chirayil
- On April 20, 2015
- 0 Comments
Address of the Apostolic Nuncio, Msgr Luigi Bonazzi
Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral
Montréal, April 17, 2015
Dear brothers and sisters,
Today, in this moment of prayer and thanksgiving,
this is not only a farewell by the Archdiocese of Montréal,
it is not only a farewell
by the Church in Québec and in Canada,
it is also a Catholic farewell,
a farewell of the universal Church,
which accompanies the mortal remains
of our dear Cardinal Jean-Claude Turcotte.
Pope Francis is also with us,
with all the sincere friendship which linked him to Cardinal Turcotte.
The Holy Father remained close to the Archbishop Emeritus of Montréal
in the last months of his illness,
(he even called him for news)
and when he learned of Cardinal Turcotte’s death
he expressed his fervent condolences
through the message he sent
to His Grace, Archbishop Christian Lépine,
Archbishop of Montréal.
In his message, Pope Francis
recalled Cardinal Turcotte with emotion
as a “zealous pastor and attentive to the challenges of the contemporary Church … as a faithful pastor who served the Church
not only in his diocese but also at the national level …
as well as being a highly regarded member of the various Roman dicasteries.”
Cardinal Turcotte always remained faithful to this friendship.
I was able to visit him on Good Friday past.
I was touched by his smile when opening his eyes, he recognized me.
I had the audacity to ask him:
“Your Eminence, you are joyful?” “Yes!”
“You are in the light? There is light within you? “. “Yes!”
And his bright face was expressing a “yes”
that was even stronger than the “yes” of his weakened voice.
We spent some time together
and at the end, I asked him, “Your Eminence,
do you want me to say something on your behalf to Pope Francis?
Do you have something to say to him?”
After a moment, with a very distinct voice and bright eyes he whispered to me:
“That I pray for him.”
I could not but tell him in my turn:
“And Pope Francis prays for you.”
And I withdrew.
There was within me – as I told his family and those who attended him –
a profound joy:
that of seeing a Christian, a bishop, who obviously
was going through the last stage of his life
with the awareness that he was going not to death,
but towards the door that leads from life, from this present life
to eternal life.
Yes, brothers and sisters, thanks to the gift of faith,
we can look upon Cardinal Turcotte
not as one who is dead
but as a brother alive in God
who continues to look at us, to be interested in us, to intercede for us.
And we discover that we are, here on earth,
a large family of fathers and mothers, of brothers and sisters, of friends
living in the expectation of being, one day, all reunited.
Thank you, dear Cardinal Turcotte. Yes, indeed, a heartfelt thank you!
Au revoir!
We pray for you!
Pray for Pope Francis!
Pray for us!
We need your prayers to resume, with serene hope and courage,
the way that leads from this life to The Life.