Sunday, May 3, 2009




<http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/05/john-cardinal-oconnor-1920-2000.html>John
 
Cardinal O'Connor (1920-2000)

http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/05/john-cardinal-oconnor-1920-2000.html
 


<http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_vjlTTnUPlbc/Sf12QijyQEI/AAAAAAAABLo/U-SZ65ASk94/s1600-h/PHOTO-JJO%2527Connor%25202%5B1%5D.jpg>
[]

Today marks the passing of John Cardinal O’Connor 
in 2000. EWTN had a nice bio up on their website:

On May 3, John Cardinal O’Connor, the Archbishop 
of New York, died at his official residence 
behind St. Patrick's Cathedral. But his legacy 
lives on...his words, his concern for the 
sanctity of life, efforts on behalf of the poor, 
the sick and the homeless, his defense of the 
unborn, his concern for his priests and his 
support for New York's Catholic schools.

"Every priest would like to be remembered as a 
priest and all that it conveys, rather than as a 
public figure with all that it conveys," Cardinal 
O’Connor once reflected when asked how he would 
like to be remembered. He then added, "I 
regularly go down to the crypt under St. 
Patrick’s Cathedral and I look at the tombs of my 
predecessors. Right in the center is the next 
marble block with no inscription. That’s reserved 
for me. And all that’s important when I move into 
the crypt is that I have served New York as a 
very good priest." And a very good priest he was.

The Cardinal will be remembered as a strong and 
faithful shepherd. At a time when Catholics in 
America were increasingly inclined to take a 
"cafeteria stand on matters of faith and morals", 
Cardinal O'Connor continued to proclaim Church 
teaching on birth control, abortion and homosexuality.

The one teaching of the Church that defined his 
ministry was the sanctity of life…at any age and 
at any stage. He is best known for his stand 
against abortion. To him, it was simple: Abortion 
is murder. It is a sin. But he did more than just 
talk about it. He was committed to the right to 
life and showed his concern by wearing on the 
lapel of his black clerical suit a tiny red rose 
with its stem spelling out "l-i-f-e". He 
participated at the annual Right to Life March 
held in Washington, DC, and formed a religious 
community, the Sisters of Life who are dedicated 
to protecting the sacredness of all human life 
beginning with the infant in the womb to those 
vulnerable to the threat of euthanasia. In 
addition, he repeated an offer many times to any 
woman in need: "go to him for help rather than 
abort her child". The Archdiocese of New York and 
Catholic charities responded by providing 
hundreds of women with medical assistance, 
housing, adoption and legal services, as well as, 
the Cardinal himself counseling women in difficult situations.

Cardinal O’Connor, the fourth of five children, 
was born in a row house in a blue-collar 
Philadelphia neighborhood on January 15, 1920. 
His father, Thomas O’Connor, was his hero and his 
mother, Mary Gomble O’Connor, experienced both a 
sudden blindness and recovery that impacted 
Cardinal O’Connor with a sensitivity to disabled 
people for the rest of his life.
He attended public schools until he was a junior 
in high school. Under the Christian Brothers of 
West Catholic High, he was inspired to take up a 
religious life. He entered St. Charles Borromeo 
Seminary in Philadelphia at age 16 and was 
ordained nine years later on December 15, 1945, a 
month before his 26th birthday. Cardinal O'Connor 
and his 21 classmates promised to return for a 
reunion every year on that date, and the Cardinal 
kept that promise except for his years in Korea 
and Vietnam, and last year because he was ill.

After ordination, he worked as a diocesan priest 
for seven years. His days and nights were full 
with teaching at a Catholic high school, night 
school for adults, hosting a weekly, Catholic, 
radio news program, and volunteering in two psychiatric hospital wards.

In 1953, Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New 
York, who was also responsible for providing the 
Church’s chaplains to the U.S. Armed Forces, 
pleaded for more chaplains. Cardinal O’Connor 
responded and entered the Navy. When he retired 
27 years later, he had risen to Rear Admiral and 
Chief of Chaplains of the US Navy. Later as an 
Archbishop and member of the Episcopal Commission 
that spent two years drafting the American 
bishops' 1983 pastoral letter on war and peace, 
he influenced the bishops in America to tone down 
criticism of U.S. nuclear policies.
After leaving the Navy in 1979, he was made an 
Auxiliary Bishop and assigned to the Military 
Vicarate under Cardinal Terence Cooke of New 
York. In May 1983 he was appointed Bishop of 
Scranton, Pennsylvania. He held that post less 
than a year before being chosen to succeed 
Cardinal Cooke - who died of cancer - as the 
Archbishop of New York. He was elevated to Cardinal in May 1985.

On his 75th birthday, as required by Church law, 
he submitted his resignation, but Pope John Paul 
II asked him to stay on and he did for another 
five years. On January 16, 2000, the Sunday Mass 
at St. Patrick’s Cathedral celebrated the 
Cardinal’s birthday, one day after he turned 80. 
As he entered the Cathedral, Cardinal O’Connor 
received a standing ovation from the 3,000 people 
gathered. During his remarks, the Cardinal said 
his Sundays in the Cathedral had been among his happiest times.

During his years in the Archdiocese of New York, 
Cardinal O’Connor was active in many areas – from 
ministering to both the rich and down trodden, to 
preaching it was important to live your faith in 
both politics and even on the baseball field. He 
would donate his Social Security benefits to a 
black scholarship fund and give blood to the Red 
Cross and ask others to "give" too. In the quiet 
of the night, he was known to visit AIDS patients 
at an archdiocesan hospital and could be found 
listening to them, cleaning their sores and changing their bedpans.

Perhaps one person who touched his life most 
deeply was Mother Teresa. He once stated,

"Mother Teresa offered me one of the most 
precious gifts that I have received by telling 
me, ‘Only if we share the light of Almighty God 
do our lives become truly meaningful.’ " It is 
interesting to note that the last public 
appearance of Cardinal O’Connor was at St. 
Patrick’s Cathedral on March 5, 2000, when he spoke about Mother Teresa.

The Funeral Mass for John Cardinal O’Connor was 
held on Monday, May 8, 2000, and he was buried in 
the crypt beneath the main altar of the Cathedral at St. Patrick’s in New York.

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