Pope Benedict Honors Paul VI In Italian Birthplace
Pope Benedict Visits Italian Roots Of Paul VI, Pontiff Who Made Him Cardinal In 1977
Thousands held umbrellas or pulled jackets tightly about them as a chilly rain fell during Benedict's Mass in Paul VI Square outside the cathedral in Brescia, 90 kilometers (55 miles) east of Milan.
A canopy sheltered Benedict from the downpour as he hailed Paul VI's achievements as a reforming pope.
In 1977, a year before Pope Paul VI died, he elevated German prelate Joseph Ratzinger, then 50 - relatively young to become a "prince of the church" - to the rank of cardinal. Ratzinger took the name Benedict XVI when he was elected pontiff in 2005.
Later Sunday, Benedict toured a house in the village of Concesio, where Giovanni Battista Montini - the future Paul VI - was born in 1897. The house is now in the care of a priest and dedicated to the memory of the late pontiff.
Paul VI was elected pope in 1963, taking over from John XXIII who began the Second Vatican Council, a landmark initiative to modernize the policies and practices of the Roman Catholic Church. Paul led the council to its completion, which Benedict attended as an up-and-coming theologian.
In his homily, Benedict quoted extensively from Paul VI's 1968 speech in which he noted the Catholic faithful's expectations that the pope should lead with "impressive, energetic and decisive interventions."
"Even the pope needs to be helped with prayer," Benedict quoted Paul as saying.
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