Pope Francis — "The poor are at the center of the Gospel."
The poor are at the center of the Gospel.
The poor are at the center of the Gospel.
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"A little bit of mercy makes the world less cold and more just."
"A priest who is a saint told me: 'Women are the ones who move history forward.'"
"Do not be afraid of joy."
"To be a Christian is not a burden, but a gift."
"An economic system that has as its center the god of money needs to be denounced, because it is a system that kills."
First Latin American and Jesuit pope (2013-), who has steered the Catholic Church toward pastoral inclusion on LGBTQ pastoral care, divorced Catholics, and climate. Closely associated with Pope John XXIII (the Vatican II reformer pope) and Cardinal Walter Kasper (his theological ally on pastoral reform). For an intellectual contrast, see Cardinal Raymond Burke, American traditionalist cardinal, former head of the Vatican Apostolic Signatura — Burke is the public face of Catholic traditionalism that views Francis's pastoral approach as doctrinally dangerous — he has formally challenged Amoris Laetitia and other Francis reforms.
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People living in poverty deserve to be the primary focus of Christian faith and action. This isn't charity as an afterthought — it means structuring institutions, priorities, and personal choices around serving those with the least. Genuine faith requires active solidarity with the poor, not just sympathy. Ignoring poverty while claiming religious devotion is a fundamental contradiction of what the Gospel actually teaches.
Born Jorge Bergoglio in Buenos Aires, Francis grew up in a working-class immigrant family and chose to live simply as Archbishop — riding public transit, cooking his own meals. As the first Latin American pope, he emerged from a continent shaped by liberation theology. His 2013 apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium explicitly attacked trickle-down economics and called inequality 'the root of social evil.'
Francis became pope in 2013 amid growing global inequality, the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, and rising populist movements. Wealth concentration accelerated sharply — the richest 1% held more than half of global assets by 2015. His papacy coincided with mass migration crises, austerity politics across Europe, and debates about capitalism's moral legitimacy, making poverty-centered theology politically charged and urgently relevant.
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