The Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said he would
like Pope Benedict XVI’s successor to have a “strong pastoral sense” and
the ability to address “administrative problems” that have emerged at
the Vatican.
“This pope did try to reform sections of the Curia,
he tried to bring various offices together. It didn’t work out, there
was a resistance to it. I believe maybe now is the chance to look at
that again: a smaller Curia, a tighter one, not one that tries to run
the entire church,” he said
The archbishop was speaking to media at the opening of a mental health facility in Dublin’s Grangegorman yesterday.
He
said it was “a sad day” for the Catholic Church, but added that he
respected the pope’s decision. “ He was a very reserved person. I think a
lot of the externals were quite hard on him and now he’ll be on his own
and that’s a big change.
“I think his explanation is pretty
coherent and in line with himself that he feels simply he’s physically
and spiritually it’s just too much for him.”
Speaking at a Mass
for the ministry of Pope Benedict in Dublin’s Pro Cathedral last night,
Archbishop Martin recalled “a reserved, kind and thoughtful man, a
scholarly, perceptive and contemplative theologian, a truly holy man and
a mystic who loved the church and who served the church with total
dedication.”
He said the publicity that surrounded the pope’s life
“was not an easy thing for him. But he responded to this challenge,
which went against his natural tendency through recognising it as a
self-giving for Christ’s sake.”