Catholic leaders remember Cardinal Dulles' service as 'great theologian'
<http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=14617>http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=14617
 


Washington DC, Dec 14, 2008 / 01:26 pm 
(<http://www.catholicnewsagency.com>CNA).- U.S. Conference of 
Catholic Bishops president Cardinal Francis George and Catholic 
commentator George Weigel have both written statements eulogizing 
Cardinal Avery Dulles, SJ, following the American theologian's death 
on Friday. Cardinal George called him "a great theologian and a 
totally dedicated servant of the Church" while Weigel recalled the 
late cardinal's humility and modesty.

"His wise counsel will be missed; his personal witness to the pursuit 
of holiness of life as a priest, a Jesuit and a Cardinal of the 
Church will be remembered and will encourage the Church to remain 
ever faithful to her Lord and his mission," Cardinal George said in a 
Friday statement.

George Weigel, writing in Newsweek, recounted some details of Dulles' 
life and faith.

Born on August 24, 1918, Cardinal Dulles was a part of a family with 
a long history of government service. His father, great-uncle, and 
great-grandfather all held the office of U.S. Secretary of State. 
According to Weigel, Dulles' father John Foster Dulles was "the most 
prominent Protestant layman of the 1940s" and a chairman of the 
Federal Council of Churches' Commission to Study the Bases of a Just 
and Endurable Peace.

However, the young Avery Dulles arrived at Harvard University as a 
"thoroughgoing" skeptic and agnostic. Then on a windy spring day in 
1938, Dulles was walking along the Charles River when he noticed the 
veins in a leaf on a blossoming tree.

"Such precision, beauty, and purpose could not, he thought, be an 
accident," Weigel said.

Dulles realized the universe must be governed by an all-good and 
omnipotent God. "That night," he later recounted, "I prayed for the 
first time in years."

Having come to appreciate, in Weigel's words, the "depth, subtlety 
and coherent structure" of Catholicism, he entered the Church in 
1940. After serving in the Navy, he joined the Society of Jesus and 
was ordained a priest in 1956.

He would go on to serve as a professor of systematic theology at 
Catholic University of America and later was a professor of religion 
and society at Fordham University.

His rigorous academic formation made him an intellectual leader in 
U.S. Catholicism and in the United States as a whole.

"His steadiness, which was complemented by an equally remarkable 
fairness to those with whom he disagreed, made him a unique figure on 
the U.S. Catholic theological scene--a reference point for just about 
every serious Catholic religious thinker, and more than a few 
Protestants and Jews as well," Weigel wrote in Newsweek.

Weigel called Dulles a "self-consciously ecclesial theologian" who 
deliberately "thought with the Church."

Dulles produced more than two dozen books and 800 scholarly articles. 
In 2001 Pope John Paul II, reportedly acting on the advice of Joseph 
Cardinal Ratzinger, elevated him to the cardinalate.

Weigel recounted Father Dulles' reaction to being named a cardinal, 
saying the Jesuit priest's first action was to inquire whether he 
could be dispensed from canonical law requiring that a cardinal be 
ordained a bishop.

"I assured him that a dispensation would be readily given, as it had 
been for others like him. There was an audible sigh of relief at the 
other end of the phone. It was all another expression of the man's humility."

Dulles chose as his cardinal's motto St. Paul's words "Scio cui 
credidi," meaning "I know in whom I have believed."

"He never sought cheap originality or sound-bite fame," Weigel 
continued, praising Dulles' "modesty of intellectual purpose" which 
accompanied his "charming modesty of person."

"One does not often see cardinals of the Holy Roman Church walking 
across campus in cheap blue windbreakers; the cardinal's sartorial 
style would have caused grimaces at Walmart, let alone Brooks 
Brothers," Weigel wrote in Newsweek.

Father James Massa, executive director of the Secretariat of 
Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs at the USCCB and a student of 
Cardinal Dulles, also praised his life.

"For a generation of priests, scholars and faithful, Cardinal Avery 
Dulles has been a reliable and faithful interpreter of the Second 
Vatican Council. A number of his books have become classics in 
theological education, such as Models of the Church," he said in a 
USCCB press release. "In some ways, his life bears comparison with 
another great cardinal-theologian, John Henry Newman, on whose 
birthday, 200 years later, Avery Dulles was created a cardinal of the 
Catholic Church."

During his visit to the U.S. in April, Pope Benedict XVI met with 
Cardinal Dulles in a private audience.

In his USCCB statement, Cardinal George's memorial remarks concluded:

"I am deeply saddened at the loss of a personal friend," Cardinal 
George said. "But I rejoice in the hope that now he sees clearly what 
he explored so well in his studies on revelation, on grace and on the 
nature of the Church and the papal office. May he rest in peace."

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We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.



<*}}}>< <http://www.halfthekingdom.org/please%20donate.html>Donations 
are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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