
Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski, South Florida Catholics mourn the death of Pope Francis
Pope Francis, the Catholic Church's first Latin American pontiff, who charmed the world with his humble style and concern for the poor, has died at the age of 88.
Pope Francis
made it his mission to change the perception of the Catholic Church around the world.
"Pope Francis saw the Church as a "field hospital" called to tend to the wounded on the battlefields of life offering her medicine of mercy to all. The Church, Pope Francis insisted, is not only to teach but to act—to embrace those on the periphery and to bring the light of Christ to the darkest corners of society," Miami's Archbishop Thomas Wenski said in a statement.
The archbishop said shortly after Pope Francis was elected, his first visit outside of Rome was to the marooned African boat people washed ashore on the small Italian island of Lampedusa.
"He never tired of defending the displaced migrant nor embracing the marginalized or excluded," Wenski said.
Wenski said Pope Francis understood the many knots that bind us in the world today because of "our 'throw away culture' (la cultura del descarte) and the 'globalization of indifference'."
The archbishop said
Pope Francis' legacy
will be defined by a series of "firsts." He was the first Jesuit Pope, the first Pope from the Americas, the first Pope to address a joint session of the U.S. Congress and the first Pope to appoint women to high positions in the Roman curia.
Wenski said Pope Francis defied "institutional norms."
"Because scandals had undermined people's trust in society's institutions, whether political, academic, economical or religious, he defied the institutional "norms" of the Papal court: he carried his own valise, refused to be chauffeured in limousines, and eschewed symbols of pomp and circumstance, living not in the Apostolic Palace but in a room at the Vatican's "hotel". In this way, he inspired many to give the Church a second look," Wenski said.
The archbishop added that perhaps he was more highly regarded by those outside the church than by many within the church.
The Archdiocese of Miami posted on X.
Wenski said Pope Francis leaves this world as a "pilgrim of hope".
"May choirs of angels welcome you and lead you to the bosom of Abraham; and where Lazarus is poor no longer may you find eternal rest."
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