President Bush's Statement on the Death of Pope John
Paul II
President George W. Bush, CNSNews.com
"Laura and I join people across the Earth in mourning the
passing of Pope John Paul II. The Catholic Church has lost its shepherd, the
world has lost a champion of human freedom, and a good and faithful servant of
God has been called home. Pope John Paul II left the throne of St. Peter in the
same way he ascended to it -- as a witness to the dignity of human life. In his
native Poland, that witness launched a democratic revolution that swept Eastern
Europe and changed the course of history. Throughout the West, John Paul's
witness reminded us of our obligation to build a culture of life in which the
strong protect the weak. And during the Pope's final years, his witness was made
even more powerful by his daily courage in the face of illness and great
suffering. All Popes belong to the world, but Americans had special reason to
love the man from Krakow. In his visits to our country, the Pope spoke of our "providential"
Constitution, the self-evident truths about human dignity in our Declaration,
and the "blessings of liberty" that follow from them. It is these truths, he
said, that have led people all over the world to look to America with hope and
respect. Pope John Paul II was, himself, an inspiration to millions of Americans,
and to so many more throughout the world. We will always remember the humble,
wise and fearless priest who became one of history's great moral leaders. We're
grateful to God for sending such a man, a son of Poland, who became the Bishop
of Rome, and a hero for the ages."