Thousands gather in Sydney for Cardinal Pell’s memorial Mass

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CARDINAL PELL MEMORIAL MASS SYDNEY
Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, principal celebrant, prays at a memorial Mass for Cardinal George Pell Jan. 10, 2024, in St. Mary's Cathedral in Sydney. He said that no Australian has done more for the church worldwide than Cardinal Pell, who died Jan. 10, 2023, of heart complications following hip surgery in Rome. Thousands gathered to remember a man who had a "big heart." (OSV News photo/Patrick J Lee, courtesy The Catholic Weekly)

SYDNEY (OSV News) — Thousands gathered at St. Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney in memory of a man they loved for his vision and “big heart” a year after his death in Rome.

Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, the principal celebrant at the memorial Mass for Cardinal George Pell, said that no Australian has done more for the church worldwide.

The archbishop concelebrated the Solemn Pontifical Requiem Mass on the first anniversary of the cardinal’s entrance to eternal life on Jan. 10 with Archbishop Julian Porteous of Hobart, retired Auxiliary Bishop Terence Brady of Sydney, Father Gerald Gleeson, who is Sydney’s vicar general, and dozens of priests from Sydney and beyond.

Present were relatives, friends and colleagues of the cardinal, with others following the early evening Mass via livestream.

A diverse congregation filled the cathedral, including many young families, university students, professionals, religious brothers and sisters, seminarians and clergy.

Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, principal celebrant, speaks at a memorial Mass for Cardinal George Pell Jan. 10, 2024, in St. Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney. (OSV News photo/Patrick J Lee, courtesy The Catholic Weekly)

In a touching moment at the end of the Mass, the entire congregation followed the closing procession to the crypt below to pause for a moment or remain for short prayers led by Archbishop Fisher at the cardinal’s tomb.

Cardinal Pell’s legacy of service to the Church

Cardinal Pell was a companion of the Order of Australia, prefect emeritus of the Vatican’s Secretariat to the Economy and former archbishop of Sydney.

In his homily Archbishop Fisher recalled Pope Francis’ recent praise of the cardinal, in which he mentioned the “zeal, conviction, determination and vision” of “our much-mourned brother George.”

“He said the cardinal understood what was needed regarding Vatican financial reforms,” the archbishop said, referring to the words of the pope.

Archbishop Fisher also praised Cardinal Pell’s “unwavering commitment to the truth and consistent willing of the good” and promotion of morality and religion in a world immersed in secularism and relativism.

This won him “many friends and not a few enemies.”

The archbishop described the late prelate as “someone who had imagination, focus and energy to attend to all the goods of human flourishing, more or less all the time.”

Unafraid to proclaim the truth, the cardinal was a passionate advocate of Catholic education and health institutions, and a defender of marriage and of life, including the most vulnerable, Indigenous, ex-prisoners and the poor, he said.

A Missionary of Charity sister touches the tombstone of Cardinal George Pell in St. Mary’s Catheral in Sydney Jan. 10, 2024, the first anniversary of the cardinal’s death. (OSV News photo/Patrick J Lee, courtesy The Catholic Weekly)

The archbishop described a man who also was deeply loyal to his family and friends, Pope Benedict XVI among them who had praised the cardinal’s “big heart.”

Outlining his many achievements, he said World Youth Day 2008, “the biggest festival in the history of our nation,” was “his most daring project.”

“But in keeping the rudder of the church in Australia fixed upon the apostolic tradition, he did more than anyone to save it from becoming the sort of confused and dying institution that it has become in some places,” Archbishop Fisher said.

Exoneration from crimes

Following his unanimous exoneration by Australia’s High Court for crimes he did not commit, he continued to be demonized by some, with some later seeking to disrupt his funeral, the archbishop recalled.

Rather than becoming embittered by his troubles, the cardinal emerged “if anything, gentler and more forgiving.”

At the conclusion of the Mass, the archbishop noted that the cardinal and Sydney sainthood candidate Eileen O’Connor, a servant of God, share the same anniversary of death and birth into eternal life.

“If George is with her now, as we hope, they will look like an amusing pair,” he said.

“Eileen was only 3 foot, 9 inches tall and George was 6 foot 4 — but they both worked to build up the church in Sydney and beyond.”

Remembered by parishioners and friends

Meadowbank parishioner Suzy Curro said she and her young daughter wanted to pray for the cardinal as they were inspired by his love for Jesus Christ and the church.

“We also admired his position on standing up for the teachings of our faith,” she said. “He never shied away from speaking the truth and defending it.”

“We will forever be grateful for the witness he left for the following generations to come,” she recalled.

A friend of the cardinal, Sarah Edwards, said her family, like many others, experienced his kindness, solicitude and humor.

“As Archbishop Fisher said in his homily, he had a gift for friendship,” she said.

“He loved family life and he always made time for us no matter how busy he was,” she said.

University of Sydney student Chris Tannous said he admired Cardinal Pell and was grateful for the spiritual, intellectual and emotional formation he gained thanks to the cardinal’s work in supporting Catholic university chaplaincies.

Marilyn Rodrigues

Marilyn Rodrigues writes for OSV News from Sydney. She is a senior journalist at The Catholic Weekly.