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Pope Francis was ambassador of ‘peace, hope and love,’ Toronto Archbishop says

Pope Francis was ambassador of ‘peace, hope and love,’ Toronto Archbishop says

Father Joshua Roldan acknowledged the sombre mood among the congregation at St. Michael’s Cathedral Basilica in downtown Toronto on Monday morning, hours after the Vatican announced the death of Pope Francis.

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Roldan’s Easter service paid tribute to the late leader of the Catholic church, with the pastor saying Francis, who died at 88 after battling illness for months, demonstrated how love can transform every human being.

Roldan reflected on watching TV as Francis first appeared before the world as Pope on the balcony overlooking St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican in March 2013. 

“I remember that beautiful image of him kneeling before the crowd and asking us to pray for him,” Roldan said during his homily. 

“It was very humbling and inspiring to see a man who was truly in love with the Lord, truly moved by the power of the resurrection and truly understanding that he too, like all of us, needs the mercy and love of God.” 

Roldan’s tribute was the latest in an outpouring of support and admiration from religious leaders to politicians to the chief of police. Cardinals from around the world, including those based in Toronto, will soon head to Rome to take part in the conclave to elect the next pope.

WATCH | Torontonians share what Pope Francis meant to them:

Toronto residents react to death of Pope Francis

As the world mourns the death of Pope Francis, Catholics in Toronto are remembering him as a humble, welcoming leader who was “of the people, for the people.”

At St. Basil’s Catholic Parish, Paddy Hardy said he came into the church with his family on Monday morning to pray for Francis after being devastated by the news. 

“We always found he was down to earth. He wasn’t into… fancy stuff,” he said. 

“He was of the people, for the people.”

Francis opted for a simple wooden coffin, the Vatican confirmed.

Ford remembers Pope’s legacy of humility and love

Francis was a “global ambassador of peace, hope and love,” the Archbishop of Toronto said Monday as the city’s Catholic community woke to news of his death.

Frank Cardinal Leo, the Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archbishop of Toronto, said in a statement Francis showed “humility, compassion and care for others, most especially the poor and marginalized.”

“May we honour his legacy and lovingly embrace his invitation to be missionaries of mercy, sharing the light of Christ in abundance as we affirm the dignity of every human life and foster a culture of care and love,” Leo said. 

Ontario Premier Doug Ford extended his “deepest condolences” to those grieving Francis’s passing in a post on X. 

“His legacy of humility, love and compassion will be forever remembered,” Ford wrote. 

Toronto police Chief Myron Demkiw also posted his condolences on social media. 

“His Holiness dedicated his life to faith, compassion, and service to others,” Demkiw said. “This is a loss for many at TPS and in the communities we serve.”

Pope will be remembered for progressive stances: bishop

The late pope’s progressive and inclusive attitude toward marginalized groups, including the 2SLGBTQ+ community, will be his legacy, a Toronto Anglican bishop said. 

“From the moment that he became Pope 12 years ago, he spoke and acted in a way that showed the church and indeed the world that he intended to do things differently and be a progressive voice around lots of different issues,” said Bishop Kevin Robertson, the suffragan, or assisting, bishop in the diocese of Toronto. 

WATCH | Francis gave historic apology for church-run residential schools in 2022:

Pope Francis has died at 88. Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the first pope from the Americas, was known as the ‘People’s Pope’ and ushered in a more open, welcoming Catholic Church during his 12-year papacy.

In June 2013, four months after he was elected, Francis said in response to a reporter’s question, “If a person is gay and seeks God and has goodwill, who am I to judge?”

Robertson said Francis’s words were “huge” for the Roman Catholic church and also gave hope to other Christian traditions that the church “was embracing something that it hadn’t been able to embrace before.” 

He said he is praying for those around the world who are grieving the Pope’s death and praying for who will be the next pontiff. 

“My own hope, not surprisingly, is that [it] will be somebody who continues this progressive spirit that we saw in Pope Francis, somebody who is going to be be a champion of the poor and the marginalized… and reach across to people who have not for some time felt welcomed in the likes of the church,” he said. 

Pope visited Canada to apologize for evil that happened at residential schools

Neil MacCarthy, the director of public relations and communications for the Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto, travelled to the Vatican to meet with Francis in late March 2022, with a delegation of Indigenous residential school survivors, elders, knowledge keepers and youth. 

The Catholic Church ran over half of the residential schools in Canada. More than 150,000 First Nations, Métis and Inuit children were forced to attend the government-funded schools between the 1870s and 1997.

Francis typically spent 15 to 20 minutes in meetings with world leaders, MacCarthy said, but he spent hours speaking with First Nations, Métis and Inuit representatives. 

Pope Francis during a visit Indigenous peoples at Maskwaci, the former Ermineskin Residential School in July 2022, in Maskwacis, Alberta. During the visit, he apologized to Indigenous peoples for the Catholic church’s involvement in the residential school system. (Eric Gay/The Associated Press)

Though MacCarthy said he was happy when Francis announced his intention to visit Canada, he was taken aback that the pope wanted to visit in July of the same year. Planning a papal visit typically takes between 18 to 24 months, he said. 

“He wanted to do it right away,” he said. “He was 85, in a wheelchair [with] significant medical issues… but said he wanted to come to Canada for this penitential pilgrimage.”

MacCarthy said it wasn’t about garnering fanfare or big crowds. “It was about saying sorry.” 

During the visit, Francis made an historic apology to Indigenous people for the involvement of the Catholic church in the residential school system.

“I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the Indigenous peoples,” Francis said in Maskwacis, Alta. He would later say a genocide happened within residential schools. 

The apology “was a very significant moment that I was grateful for as a Canadian,” said Darren Dias, the executive director of the Toronto School of Theology, which is affiliated with the University of Toronto. 

WATCH | Pope Francis visit was ‘moment of celebration’ for many Indigenous people, priest says: 

Indigenous priest reflects on Pope’s ‘reverent’ residential school apology

Rev. Daryold Corbiere Winkler, an Ojibway Catholic priest from M’Chigeeng First Nation, says Pope Francis’s apology for the Catholic Church’s role in the residential school system was a chance for healing and transformation, and part of the reconciliation journey in Canada.

In his final Christmas address, Francis delivered a message of peace, including a call to end warfare in Ukraine and the Middle East, particularly in Gaza. 

Dias said the pontiff “was a great voice in the geopolitical world that we live in.” 

“I’m grateful for that voice, but also, I thought, who will be that voice [now] in these difficult times?” he said.

In December, Dias briefly met Francis during a discussion about the future of theology. Francis had fallen the weekend before and had a visible bruise, but was keeping up with a “gruelling schedule,” he said. 

“He sat there with a smile on his face and received us with such grace and charm,” Dias said. “I was amazed at his stamina.” 

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