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| Pope Paul VI greeting the crowds at St. Peter Square. |
Pope Paul VI is now a step closer to sainthood after Pope Francis proclaimed him blessed in a Beatification Mass on Sunday, October 19. In his short but inspiring homily, Pope Francis gave tribute to Blessed Paul VI calling him a “great Pope, a courageous Christian and a tireless apostle”.
But
who is Pope Paul VI? Giovanni Battista Enrico Maria Montini was born on
September 26, 1897 in Brescia. In 1963, after the sixth ballot of the papal
conclave, he became the 262nd successor of St. Peter. For 15
years in the papacy, he left the Church his own marks that could be considered
his biggest legacies, namely:
Vatican
Council II
Pope John XXIII convoked the council but it was Pope Paul VI who continued it,
brought it to conclusion and implemented its reforms.
Papal
Trips Abroad
He
pioneered the Apostolic Trip, which brought him to six continents. He travelled
to Holy Land, India and the United Nations (1965), Fatima and Turkey (1967),
Columbia (1968), Geneva and Uganda (1969), and the Far East, Australia and Oceania
(1970). These visits earned him a nickname “the Pilgrim Pope”.
Humanae
Vitae
He
authored Humane Vitae, an encyclical
that re-affirms the teaching of
the Church on the sanctity of marriage, the inviolability of life and the
rejection of artificial forms of birth control and abortion.
He may not be as popular as his
predecessors or his successors but today the Church remembers him for always
not simply as a former pope but more so as a “blessed”.


