“What Pope Benedict tried to show to the world was that God is not a threat to the freedom of man but on the contrary, grants him the true freedom that he always longed for,” Archbishop van Megen who started his service as Apostolic Nuncio in Sudan in 2014 said.
In his homily during the Eucharistic celebration that was concelebrated by some other Bishops including the Local Ordinary of Nairobi Archdiocese, Archbishop Philip Anyolo, the Nuncio also reflected on the theological prowess of the former Pontiff.
“Listening to him was like going on an intellectual theological adventure. He would take you by the hand and lead you through the beautiful landscape of theology,” the 61-year-old Apostolic Nuncio said.
The former Pope, he further said, “would guide you to the highest mountains to have a new and overwhelming view of God and His creation and he would make you inhale the fresh air of the Holy Spirit that will make you feel dizzy at that height.”
The representative of the Holy Father in Kenya and South Sudan went on to describe the late Pope emeritus as an intellectual giant in his own right and that he was exceptional for he was gifted in explaining “difficult things in a simple way”.
The Dutch-born Vatican diplomat also reflected on Pope Benedict XVI’s life as a lecturer, saying that students would flock to his lectures due to his intellectual prowess, which he said remained with him even during his Papacy.
“During his time as a professor at different universities in Germany, students would flock to his lectures; not only students who were studying theology but also from other faculties such as psychology,” Archbishop van Megen said in his January 5 homily.
He further said that the former Pontiff “was not a dry intellectual; in everything he said, he was always thinking on how to bring about the inner beauty of God’s creation.”
The Nuncio said that Benedict XVI’s theological thinking even during his tenure as Pope was not based on power and position but on “a deep and nearly child-like approach of wonder on the world and its creator.”
Born Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger, the late former Pontiff was elected to the papacy in April 2005, taking the name Benedict XVI.
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