Two of my thoughts on the late Pope (and one from elsewhere)
I should add the late Pope John Paul II to the 1980s Coalition of Globalization. His influential opposition to Marxism -- political or theological -- and support of social and economic conservativism certainly qualify him.
However, his outreach attempts to other Christian and Jewish communities, widely lauded, never felt genuine to me. With one hand he was visiting the Western Wall and acknowledging Judaism as the"elder brother" of Christianity, and with the other, like Jacob with Esau, he was canonizing baby-snatchers and anti-Semites. I never could reconcile the two enough to feel that progress was being made.
Thomas Cahill argues in the NYTimes that John Paul II wasn't all that good for Catholicism, either:
But John Paul II's most lasting legacy to Catholicism will come from the episcopal appointments he made. In order to have been named a bishop, a priest must have been seen to be absolutely opposed to masturbation, premarital sex, birth control (including condoms used to prevent the spread of AIDS), abortion, divorce, homosexual relations, married priests, female priests and any hint of Marxism. It is nearly impossible to find men who subscribe wholeheartedly to this entire catalogue of certitudes; as a result the ranks of the episcopate are filled with mindless sycophants and intellectual incompetents. The good priests have been passed over; and not a few, in their growing frustration as the pontificate of John Paul II stretched on, left the priesthood to seek fulfillment elsewhere.I think the rapid growth of the church outside of the liberal West speaks against Cahill's assessment as a global one, however.