Faithful mourn Benedict XVI at funeral presided over by pope

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A woman holds a cross as she waits the funeral mass for late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. Benedict died at 95 on Dec. 31 in the monastery on the Vatican grounds where he had spent nearly all of his decade in retirement, his days mainly devoted to prayer and reflection. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

VATICAN CITY ā€“ Pope Francis joined tens of thousands of faithful in bidding farewell to Benedict XVI at a rare requiem Mass Thursday for a dead pope presided over by a living one, ending an unprecedented decade for the Catholic Church that was triggered by the German theologianā€™s decision to retire.

Bells tolled and the crowd applauded as pallbearers emerged from a fog-shrouded St. Peterā€™s Basilica and placed Benedictā€™s simple cypress coffin before the altar in the square outside. Wearing the crimson vestments typical of papal funerals, Francis opened the service with a prayer and closed it by solemnly blessing the casket and bowing his head.

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In between, Francis made only fleeting reference to Benedict in his homily, offering a meditation on Christ instead of a eulogy of his predecessor's legacy before the casket was sealed and entombed in the basilica grotto.

Heads of state and royalty, clergy from around the world and thousands of regular people flocked to the ceremony, despite Benedictā€™s request for simplicity and official efforts to keep the first funeral for a pope emeritus in modern times low-key.

Many mourners hailed from Benedictā€™s native Bavaria and donned traditional dress, including boiled wool coats to guard against the morning chill.

ā€œWe came to pay homage to Benedict and wanted to be here today to say goodbye,ā€ said Raymond Mainar, who traveled from a small village east of Munich for the funeral. ā€œHe was a very good pope.ā€

Ignoring exhortations for decorum at the end, some in the crowd held banners or shouted ā€œSanto Subito!ā€ ā€” ā€œSainthood Now!ā€ ā€” echoing the spontaneous chants that erupted during St. John Paul IIā€™s 2005 funeral.

The former Joseph Ratzinger, who died Dec. 31 at age 95, is considered one of the 20th centuryā€™s greatest theologians and spent his lifetime upholding church doctrine. But he will go down in history for a singular, revolutionary act that changed the future of the papacy: He retired, the first pope in six centuries to do so.

Francis has praised Benedictā€™s courage in stepping aside, saying it ā€œopened the doorā€ for other popes to do the same. But few, including Benedict himself, expected his 10-year retirement to last longer than his eight-year papacy, and the prolonged cohabitation of two popes in the Vatican Gardens sparked calls for protocols to guide future resignations.

Some 50,000 people attended Thursday's Mass, according to the Vatican, after around 200,000 paid their respects during three days of public viewing.

Only Italy and Germany were invited to send official delegations, but other leaders took the Vatican up on its offer and came in their ā€œprivate capacity.ā€ They included several heads of state and government, delegations of royal representatives, a host of patriarchs and 125 cardinals.

Among those attending was Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen, who was given special court permission to attend the funeral. Zen was detained in May on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces under China's national security law after he fell afoul of authorities over his participation in a now-silenced democracy movement. His passport was revoked when he was detained.

Benedictā€™s close confidants were also in attendance, most prominently the former popeā€™s longtime secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein. He bent down and kissed a book of the Gospels that was left open on the coffin before the ceremony began.

After it ended, the coffin was brought to the basilica grotto, placed first into a zinc casket, sealed, then placed into an oak one.

A choir's hymn echoed in the crypt as the casket was lowered into the ground, featuring Benedict's papal coat of arms, a cross and a plaque noting in Latin that it contained his body: ā€œCorpus Benedicti XVI PM," for ā€œpontifex maximusā€ or ā€œsupreme pontiff.ā€

Matteo Colonna, a 20-year-old seminarian from Teramo, Italy, said he came to Rome in part because of the historic nature of the funeral ā€” but also because it had personal resonance for him.

ā€œThe first spark of my vocation started under the pontificate of Benedict, but then it became even stronger under Pope Francis,ā€ Colonna said, while sitting in prayer in St. Peterā€™s Square at dawn. ā€œI see a continuity between these two popes and the fact that today Francis is celebrating the funeral in Benedictā€™s memory is an historical event."

But the service was also significant for what it lacked: the feeling of uncertainty that would normally accompany the passing of a pope before a new one is elected.

ā€œBenedict has been the bridge between John Paul and Francis,ā€ said Alessandra Aprea, a 56-year-old from Meta di Sorrento near Naples. ā€œWe could not have Francis without him.ā€

Early Thursday the Vatican released the official history of Benedict's life, a short document in Latin that was placed in a metal cylinder in his coffin before it was sealed, along with the coins and medallions minted during his papacy and his pallium stoles.

The document gave ample attention to Benedict's historic resignation and referred to him as ā€œpope emeritus,ā€ citing verbatim the Latin words he uttered on Feb. 11, 2013, when he announced he would retire.

The document, known as a ā€œrogitoā€ or deed, also cited his theological and papal legacy, including his outreach to Anglicans and Jews and his efforts to combat clergy sexual abuse ā€œcontinually calling the church to conversion, prayer, penance and purification.ā€

Francis didnā€™t mention Benedictā€™s legacy in his homily and only uttered his name once, in the final line, delivering instead a meditation on Jesusā€™ willingness to entrust himself to Godā€™s will.

ā€œHolding fast to the Lordā€™s last words and to the witness of his entire life, we too, as an ecclesial community, want to follow in his steps and to commend our brother into the hands of the Father,ā€ Francis said.

During St. John Paul IIā€™s quarter-century as pope, Ratzinger spearheaded a crackdown on dissent as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, taking action against the left-leaning liberation theology that spread in Latin America in the 1970s and against dissenting theologians and nuns who didnā€™t toe the Vaticanā€™s hard line on matters like sexual morals.

His legacy was marred by the clergy sexual abuse crisis, even though he recognized earlier than most the ā€œfilthā€ of priests who raped children, and actually laid the groundwork for the Holy See to punish them.

As cardinal and pope, he passed sweeping church legislation that resulted in 848 priests being defrocked from 2004 to 2014, roughly his pontificate with a year on either end. But abuse survivors still held him responsible, for failing to sanction any bishop who moved abusers around, refusing to mandate the reporting of sex crimes to police and identifying him as embodying the clerical system that long protected the institution over victims.

Mike McDonnell of the U.S. abuse survivor group SNAP said while Benedict passed new canon laws, he could have done far more to influence John Paul to take firm action. Referring to Benedict's nickname as ā€œGodā€™s Rottweiler,ā€ he said: "In our in our view, it was a dog bark without a bite. Certainly he could have done more.ā€

A group representing German clergy abuse survivors called on German officials attending Benedictā€™s funeral to demand more action from the Vatican on sexual abuse. Eckiger Tisch asked leaders to demand that Francis issue a ā€œuniversal church lawā€ stipulating zero tolerance in dealing with abuse by clergy.

The funeral ritual itself is modeled on the code used for dead popes but with some modifications given Benedict was not a reigning pontiff when he died.

While Thursday's Mass was unusual, it does have some precedent: In 1802, Pope Pius VII presided over the funeral in St. Peterā€™s of his predecessor, Pius VI, who had died in exile in France in 1799 as a prisoner of Napoleon.

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Associated Press journalist Trisha Thomas contributed.

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Follow APā€™s coverage of Pope Benedict XVI at https://apnews.com/hub/pope-benedict-xvi


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