Pope St Paul VI (born Giovanni Battista Montini, 1897–1978): Twentieth-century pontiff who concluded and implemented the Second Vatican Council reforms. He is famous for pioneering modern papal travel and writing profound documents on evangelisation and human life, including Evangelii Nuntiandi and Humanae Vitae.
Quiet Authority

In his commentary on the book of Job, Pope St Gregory the Great outlines a distinction between the imposition of power led by will and the testimony of quiet authority led by conscience:
“When Paul says to Titus: ‘Command these things, teach them with all authority’, he is not recommending the domination of power but the force of his disciple’s life. A man teaches with authority what he first practises himself before preaching to others, for when conscience is an obstacle to speech, what is taught is more difficult to accept.”
I am reminded of Pope St Paul VI’s observation that “[m]odern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses” (Evangelli Nuntiandi, 41)
