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Home News Australia

Cardinal Cassidy leaves ‘remarkable legacy’ as Vatican diplomat with ‘down-to-earth’ style

byStaff writers
12 April 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Cardinal Cassidy leaves ‘remarkable legacy’ as Vatican diplomat with ‘down-to-earth’ style

High office: Cardinal Cassidy, then-president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, in 1998. Cardinal Cassidy died April 10 at the age of 96. Photo: CNS

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AUSTRALIAN Church leaders have added their voices to the tributes for Cardinal Edward Cassidy, who died in Newcastle last Saturday, aged 96.

Cardinal Cassidy is globally recognised as a former president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and member of the Secretariat of State, where he served for almost two years in a role equivalent to the Pope’s chief of staff.

After being ordained to the priesthood, Cardinal Cassidy served in parish ministry in Wagga Wagga Diocese before heading to Rome for ongoing study.

Once he completed his additional training, he spent nearly 30 years serving as a Vatican diplomat in Asia, Europe, Latin America and Africa.

He was named president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity in 1989 and elevated to the rank of cardinal in 1991. He retired from the Pontifical Council in 2001 at the age of 76.

Cardinal Cassidy was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) in 1990 in “recognition of service to religion and to international affairs”.

Brisbane Archbishop and president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, Mark Coleridge, said Cardinal Cassidy’s friendly and down-to-earth style were among his hallmarks while serving at the Vatican.

While Cardinal Cassidy was highly regarded for several reasons, it was at the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity that he “shone”, Archbishop Coleridge said.

“Cardinal Cassidy showed not only diplomatic skill and political astuteness, but also human authenticity and common sense.

“There was a simplicity in it all – the simplicity of a man called to high office in the Church but with his eyes firmly on Jesus Christ.”

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Cardinal Cassidy with German Lutheran Bishop Christian Krause at the signing of "The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification'' in Augsburg, in 1999. Cardinal Cassidy, representing the Vatican, and Bishop Krause, president of the Lutheran World Federation, signed the document marking the resolution of a doctrinal dispute that sparked the Reformation. Photo: CNS
Eyes on Christ: Cardinal Cassidy with German Lutheran Bishop Christian Krause at the signing of “The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification” in Augsburg, in 1999. Cardinal Cassidy, representing the Vatican, and Bishop Krause, president of the Lutheran World Federation, signed the document marking the resolution of a doctrinal dispute that sparked the Reformation. Photo: CNS

Sydney Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP paid tribute to Cardinal Cassidy online, saying the late cardinal “left a remarkable legacy on our Church, especially in the field of ecumenism”.

“Few other Australians have had such a profound impact on the Catholic Church on the international stage and I’m sure he will continue to inspire Church leaders for many years to come,” Archbishop Fisher said, adding that Cardinal Cassidy was a great support to him as a young bishop.

Melbourne Archbishop Peter Comensoli called Cardinal Cassidy “a wonderful man of God and servant of the Church, and a terrific Australian”.

Wagga Wagga Bishop Mark Edwards said while Cardinal Cassidy’s ministry within the diocese was relatively brief, the cardinal “gladly came to serve in the bush and is remembered with great affection by all in this area” – particularly by some lifelong friends he met in a parish youth group.

Bishop Edwards echoed others’ comments in highlighting Cardinal Cassidy’s humility, naming his willingness to return to Wagga Wagga to lead a priests’ retreat, despite his high rank, as one example.

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