logo
Leitrim Priest in Rome describes sense of ‘mixed emotions' following ‘bittersweet' death of Pope Francis

Leitrim Priest in Rome describes sense of ‘mixed emotions' following ‘bittersweet' death of Pope Francis

Father Gerry Comiskey, who a priest in the Diocese of Kilmore and a native of County Leitrim, has been in Rome since January on a study programme at the Pontifical North American College.
Fr Comiskey participated in the Easter ceremonies at St Peter's Basilica over the weekend and was in the city when the news emerged that Pope Francis had passed away.
Follow Independent Leitrim on Facebook
The death of Pope Francis was announced on Easter Monday morning and The pontiff's funeral will take place at the Vatican on Saturday morning.
The Vatican said he died following a stroke and subsequent irreversible heart failure at 7.35am on Monday.
Fr Comiskey is staying in Rome until Tuesday and will attend the Pope Lying in State on Thursday and Friday, while he will also attend the funeral on Saturday.
The Pope will lie in state inside the church until his burial at St Mary Major in Rome, also on Saturday.
Speaking of Pope Francis' last appearance on Sunday, Fr Comiskey said there was great excitement but also a sense of sympathy as he appeared to be in a frail state.
'He did attend Easter Sunday Mass – the most important day in the Church's calendar and there was a crowd of around 35,000-40,000 people in St Peter's Square.
'There was great jubilation when he appeared, the moment he spoke the few words, we all recognised that his voice was very weak and he himself was frail.
'There was actually sympathy for the man.
'I think there is a profound message for us – he was there for the great Alleluia– he wanted to hear the resurrection becoming proclaimed again for one last time.
'Then quietly God called him to the Father's house on Monday morning.
'I think that is profound and mysterious. It teaches us a lesson. The Pope wanted us to believe more definitely in Jesus Christ. He wanted us to be enthusiastic and committed.
'His passing on Easter Monday is just a mystery that we should ponder,' said Fr Comiskey.
Fr Comiskey said due to the Pope's ill health, there is mixed emotions in Rome following his passing.
'I think there is very mixed emotions.
'There is great sadness because he was a much loved Pope and much loved Holy Father. But, there is a quiet acceptance that death had to come to him at some stage.
'The Catholic Church is like a great big family and when there is a death in the family, there is of course great sadness but if a grandparent or great grandparent is very elderly or feeble, finding it hard to breath, there is certain relief that their sufferings are over and in the case of the Pope that he does not have to suffer anymore.
'It is bittersweet.
'It is the most beautiful season – these 50 days of Easter.
'At home in the Northwest of Ireland, my ancestors loved to hear of someone dying in the days of Easter Week - they felt that paradise was surely a place of welcomes,' said Fr Comiskey.
Fr Comiskey met Pope Francis in 2017 and seen him earlier this year when he first arrived in Rome.
Fr Comiskey said the Pope was known for his humble and kind nature, which he displayed right until the end of his life.
Reflecting on Holy Thursday, Fr Comiskey said, 'On Holy Thursday, there was 1,800 priests concelebrating the Chrism Mass and we quietly were hoping that the Pope would come and see us that day, but instead he went to the prison to visit the prisoners and that was an amazing gesture for an old sick man.
'It really was the measure of the man,' said Fr Comiskey.
Fr Comiskey has heard many stories of Pope Francis and said he was 'a wonderful example of humility.'
'Even when he came into St Peter's Square, he came in on a small car, he never wanted to be driven in a Merc.
'One day during my studies here, I went to visit a Contemplative Order of Nuns – an enclosed order – there is 27 of them in the community.
'They told us that the Pope had visited them three times – once he came announced, but the other two times he came back unannounced.
'His secretary and himself just arrived and said we have come to pray, say Mass and to have a meal with you.
'He did not stand on ceremony or sending messengers out saying prepare the way, he would just drop in like any parish priest,' said Fr Comiskey.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

St Newman's new 'doctor' title welcomed by Irish Bishops
St Newman's new 'doctor' title welcomed by Irish Bishops

RTÉ News​

time19 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

St Newman's new 'doctor' title welcomed by Irish Bishops

The President of the Irish Catholic Bishops' Conference has welcomed news of Pope Leo XIV's decision to declare St John Henry Newman a Doctor of the Universal Church. The title is given to individuals whose writings and teachings are considered to be of particular importance and authority within the Catholic Church. Doctors of the Church must be officially declared doctors by a papal proclamation. John Henry Newman began his religious life as a member of the Anglican Church and converted to Roman Catholicism in the mid-1800s. He spent some time in Dublin where he became the founding Rector of the Catholic University, which later became University College Dublin (UCD). Viewed as one of the great modern thinkers of Christianity, his work and spirituality culminated in his canonisation in 2019. Yesterday, Pope Leo confirmed that the title of Doctor of the Universal Church would soon be conferred on St John Henry - joining 37 others including St Augustine, St Thomas Aquinas, St Teresa of Avila and St Thérèse of Lisieux The Archbishop of Dublin, Archbishop Dermot Farrell said the news was of "particular significance" to Irish bishops who, in 2023, formally approved a petition supporting the process to have St John Henry Newman conferred as a Doctor of the Church. He noted the special connection St John Henry continues to have with Dublin. "The beautiful University Church on St Stephen's Green, built on his initiative and under careful supervision, is a special place of worship for all Dubliners and reminds us to this day of his generosity, presence and work among us in that time," he said. The Dublin Archbishop expressed confidence that the new honour conferred on the saint would lead to "a renewed interest in his works, the lasting testimony to an exceptionally gifted mind".

Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honours on John Henry Newman
Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honours on John Henry Newman

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honours on John Henry Newman

Pope Leo XIV has decided to declare St John Henry Newman a 'doctor' of the church, bestowing one of the Catholic Church's highest honours on the deeply influential 19th century Anglican convert who remains a unifying figure in both the Anglican and Catholic churches. The Vatican said Leo confirmed the opinion of the Vatican's saint-making office during an audience on Thursday with its prefect, Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, and would make the decision official soon. The designation is one of the most significant decisions of Leo's young papacy and also carries deep personal meaning: Newman was strongly influenced by St Augustine of Hippo, the inspiration of Leo's Augustinian religious order. Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in St Peter's Square at the Vatican (Andrew Medichini/AP) The title of doctor is reserved for people whose writings have greatly served the universal church. Only three-dozen people have been given the title over the course of the Church's 2,000-year history, including St Augustine, St Francis de Sales and St Teresa of Avila. Newman's path to being declared a doctor has been exceptionally quick, after Pope Benedict XVI beatified him during a visit to Britain in 2010. Pope Francis made him a saint in 2019, with the then-Prince of Wales, now King, in attendance. Newman, a theologian and poet, is admired by Catholics and Anglicans alike because he followed his conscience at great personal cost. When he defected from the Church of England to the Catholic Church in 1845, he lost friends, work and even family ties, believing the truth he was searching for could only be found in the Catholic faith. Newman was one of the founders of the so-called Oxford Movement of the 1830s, which sought to revive certain Roman Catholic doctrines in the Church of England by looking back to the traditions of the earliest Christian church. Pope Benedict XVI, right, celebrates a beatification Mass for Cardinal John Henry Newman in Birmingham on September 19 2010 (Gregorio Borgia/AP) But he gave up a brilliant academic career at Oxford University and the pulpit of the university church to convert to Catholicism. As a Catholic, he became one of the most influential theologians of the era, bringing elements of the Anglican church into his new faith tradition. He died in Britain in 1890.

Sydney got the Opera House and we had Ardnacrusha. It's time for that kind of ambition again
Sydney got the Opera House and we had Ardnacrusha. It's time for that kind of ambition again

Irish Times

time4 days ago

  • Irish Times

Sydney got the Opera House and we had Ardnacrusha. It's time for that kind of ambition again

The imposing cathedral of St Cecilia of Albi sits in the middle of a modest French town in the Languedoc region, towering over everything around it. Built as a fortress against heresy and rebelliousness and as a symbol of episcopal power, it is the largest brick cathedral in the world, with an estimated 25 million bricks used to build it. Constructing such a monumental symbol of authority takes time and immense resources. Albi Cathedral took 200 years to build. It is estimated that the cost of building it would have run to hundreds of millions if not billions of euro in today's money. READ MORE One study suggests that between 1100 and 1250 the building of Gothic churches in the Paris Basin alone consumed on average 21.5 per cent of the regional economy. Luckily Bishop Bernard de Castanet of Albi was able to sell spiritual indulgences to his parishioners which helped to pay for its construction. The great cathedrals of the Middle Ages were built at a time when the Catholic church was the dominant source of power in Europe and long before the nation state had emerged to shape and direct the aspirations of the masses. Many, if not most, of these remarkable buildings have also become cultural icons and house artistic and architectural treasures intended to inspire – and terrify – the parishioners into religious obedience. Nowadays it is impossible to imagine such a project. I'm guessing that present generations lack the patience or naivety to bet their faith and taxes on a project that would take generations to complete, and religious threats are unlikely to have much sway these days. Yet the 20th century saw the completion of magnificent megaprojects, the construction of which was often controversial at the time. One example is the Sydney Opera House. Originally commissioned in 1959, it took 10 years longer to build than originally envisaged and it went over budget by 1,360 per cent. The project was plagued by political interference, changes in government and constant budget scrutiny that ultimately led to lead architect Jørn Utzon's resignation in 1966. He left Australia and never came back to see the project completed. Yet within two years after opening, the Opera House had been paid for, thanks to a lottery that had been set up to fund it. The Sydney Opera House is now a Unesco world heritage site. In comparison to other European countries, Ireland has few modern standout buildings. Our national contribution to world architecture and engineering is modest and associated with colonial grandeur rather than public buildings or large infrastructural projects. There are compelling historical reasons for the impoverished state of Ireland's public infrastructure until independence in 1922, though perhaps the nation's railway network is an exception. One of the first initiatives of the Irish Free State was the construction of the Ardnacrusha hydroelectric scheme in Co Clare, which was completed in 1929. At a projected cost of £5 million (which was about 20 per cent of the national budget in 1925), it was an enormous sum for a post-Civil War state. Critics argued for smaller, less ambitious projects or said the money would be better spent directly on agriculture. Today's megaprojects are more likely to serve functional rather than cultural needs, such as the national children's hospital or MetroLink , a tunnelled metro system that will connect the city centre with the airport and towns of Fingal. (I am a member of the board of Transport Infrastructure Ireland , which is the sponsoring agency for MetroLink.) Many large-scale infrastructure projects have been hugely damaging to the environment, for example the Three Gorges Dam in China. But large-scale projects do not necessarily need to be environmentally destructive. We need to think of supergrids, forests, bog restoration, metro and light railway schemes as megaprojects that are consistent with our climate goals. Nature restoration and climate adaptation, too, are a long-term, expensive endeavours that require government leadership and multigenerational financial commitments. Such megaprojects benefit the public good and the environment, and their economic benefits are spread widely. For this reason, committing to nature restoration, public transport and a renewable energy system is ultimately the hallmark of a mature democracy in the 21st century. The State (or its proxies) will have to plan for the future, acquire land portfolios and shoulder long-term investments that inevitably carry risk. Long-term, large-scale projects require a political vision combined with a strong administrative state to secure the funding to see them through to completion. Megaprojects are complex, expensive, high-risk but ultimately transformational. When MetroLink is ready to take passengers from the early 2030s, there will be no doubt it was worth the long wait. Sadhbh O'Neill is an environmental and climate researcher. She is writing in a personal capacity

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store