Acting in his capacity as bishop
of Rome, Pope Francis offered words of encouragement to his diocesan
priests, assuring them that recent and current scandals cannot overcome
the church's holiness and urging them to keep their vocations alive
through love of God.
The pope made his remarks Sept. 16 at a meeting with diocesan clergy in the Basilica of St. John Lateran, the cathedral of Rome.
Pope Francis devoted the first part of the meeting, which lasted more
than two hours, to answering a letter he had received a few days earlier
from an elderly parish priest, writing of his struggles as a pastor.
"The letter is beautiful, I was moved," the pope said, speaking without a
text. "The letter is simple. The priest is mature and he shared with me
one of his feelings: fatigue."
While voicing sympathy, the pope said that such an experience is an inevitable part of priestly life.
"When a priest is in contact with his people, he gets tired," he said,
according to a report by Vatican Radio. "When a priest is not in contact
with his people, he gets tired, but in a bad way, and to fall asleep he
needs to take a pill."
"The people have so many demands, so many demands, but they are the
demands of God," the pope said. "That makes one seriously tired, right?
And one doesn't need pills."
The pope then took questions from five of the priests in the audience, who asked him about specific pastoral challenges.
As he has done on other occasions, Pope Francis urged priests to make
their churches more welcoming, suggesting, among other ideas, that
marriage courses for engaged couples be scheduled at more convenient
times.
The pope offered success stories from his native Argentina, including
one about a counterintuitive technique of fundraising that appealed to
natural generosity.
"One priest -- not from my diocese, from another -- once told me: 'But I
don't make them pay anything, not even for Mass intentions. I have a
box there, and they leave what they want. But, Father, I get almost
twice what I got before!'"
According to the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, the pope urged
the priests to keep alive the memory of the beginning of their
vocations, born in the love of Jesus, as an antidote to what he called
"spiritual worldliness."
In an 11-page document that he assigned the priests to read before the
meeting, Pope Francis defined spiritual worldliness as an
"anthropocentric attitude" which aims at human spiritual perfection
"instead of the glory of God."
This temptation, then-Cardinal Jorge
Mario Bergoglio wrote in 2008, is "infinitely more devastating" to the
church than "simply moral worldliness," such as that exemplified by
libertine popes in the past.
The pope reassured the priests that the church continued to produce
saints, some of them widely recognized, such as Blessed Teresa of
Kolkata, and many others unheralded. He pointed to the example of an
Argentine woman who had recently written him a letter on a paper napkin,
recounting her efforts to support a drug-addicted son with her job as a
cleaner in the Buenos Aires airport.
"I dare to say that the church has never been so well as it is today,"
he said, in spite of scandals such as that over clergy sex abuse. "The
church will not collapse, I am sure, I am sure.
"Sanctity is stronger than scandals," he said.