[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[January 26, 1999]
[Pages 106-107]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]
Remarks at the Welcoming Ceremony for Pope
John Paul II in St. Louis, Missouri
January 26, 1999
Your Holiness; Archbishop Rigali;
Archbishop Montalvo; Governor
Carnahan; Mayor Harmon; County Executive Westfall; Ambassador Boggs; Members of Congress; members of the Cabinet; our
visitors from the Vatican; my fellow Americans:
Your Holiness, on behalf of all of us gathered here today, indeed,
on behalf of all the people of our beloved Nation, we welcome you back
to America. Your return brings joy not only to the Catholic faithful but
to every American who has heard your message of peace and charity toward
all God's children. And we thank you for first going to Mexico and for
reaching out to all the people of the Americas.
We greet you, and we thank you. For 20 years, you have lifted our
spirits and touched our hearts. For 20 years, you have challenged us to
think of life not in terms of what we acquire for ourselves but in terms
of what we give of ourselves.
This is your 7th visit to the United States, your 85th visit abroad
as the Bishop of Rome. Through it all, you have given of yourself with a
boundless physical energy which can only find its source in limitless
faith. You have come in the final year of a century that has seen much
suffering but which ends with great hope for freedom and reconciliation.
It is a moment anticipated by countless prayers, brought forward by
countless hands, and shaped very much by you, Holy Father, and your 20-
year pilgrimage.
We honor you for helping to lead a revolution of values and spirit
in central Europe and the former Soviet Union, freeing millions to live
by conscience, not coercion, and freeing all of us from the constant
fear of nuclear war. We honor you for standing for human dignity, human
rights, and religious freedom and for helping people to find the courage
to stand up for themselves, from Africa to Asia to the Western
Hemisphere.
We honor you for your work to bring peace to nations and peoples
divided by old hatreds and suspicions, from Bosnia and Kosovo, to
central Africa, to Indonesia, to the Middle East, even to our own
communities. People still need to hear your message that all are God's
children, all have fallen short of His glory, all the injustices of
yesterday cannot excuse a single injustice today.
Holy Father, we are moved by your desire to mark the new millennium
with a journey to Jerusalem, to bring mercy and reconciliation to all
those who believe in one God, in the holy place where all our faiths
began.
Your Holiness, we honor you, too, because you have never let those
of us who enjoy the blessings of prosperity, freedom, and peace forget
our responsibilities. On your last visit to the United States you called
on us to build a society truly worthy of the human person, a society in
which none are so poor they have nothing to give and none are so rich
they have nothing to receive. Today you visit an America that is
thriving but also striving, striving to include those who do not yet
share in our prosperity at home and striving to put a human face on the
global economy by advancing the dignity of work, the rights of women,
the well-being of children, and the help of our common environment.
You will see an America that is not simply living for today but
working for future generations, an America working harder to be what you
have asked us to be, an example of justice and civic virtues, freedom
fulfilled, and goodness at home and abroad.
The Catholic Church in America is helping all of us to realize that
vision. Here in St. Louis, Catholic charities are helping families
conquer violence and drug abuse, helping people in need to find work and
to finance their first homes, helping refugees from war-torn lands to
build
[[Page 107]]
new lives, building housing for the elderly, including the new Pope John
Paul II Apartments, and leading countless other efforts that lift our
people's lives. All over our country, the Catholic faithful do this work
for the sake of all Americans, and they are joined in their work by
Americans of all faiths.
Your Holiness, every American welcomes you and hopes that you will
come to see us again. I am nowhere near as gifted a linguist as you are,
Holy Father, but as they say in your native Poland: Sto lat i wiecej--
may you live 100 years and more. And may you keep working and teaching
and lighting the way, for all of us and all the world.
Welcome to the United States.
Note: The President spoke at 1:50 p.m. at the Missouri Air National
Guard Hangar at Lambert-St. Louis International Airport. In his remarks,
he referred to Archbishop Justin Rigali of St. Louis; Archbishop Gabriel
Montalvo of the Holy See; Gov. Mel Carnahan of Missouri; Mayor Clarence
Harmon of St. Louis; St. Louis County Executive George Westfall; and
U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See Corinne Claiborne (Lindy) Boggs. The
transcript released by the Office of the Press Secretary also included
the remarks of Pope John Paul II.