Pope Francis — "The world is full of wars, hatred, envy, jealousy, and many other things that ar…"
The world is full of wars, hatred, envy, jealousy, and many other things that are not of God.
The world is full of wars, hatred, envy, jealousy, and many other things that are not of God.
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"The Church must be a field hospital, where people are healed and cared for."
"It is not a good thing when priests become rigid. Rigidity is a sign of something bad. It is a sign of a lack of freedom, and that is a sign of spiritual worldliness."
"The world needs more tenderness."
"The Holy Spirit is a troublemaker."
"Sometimes I have to take a tranquilizer to sleep. I keep calm. If I have a problem, I write it down on a piece of paper and give it to St. Joseph. Now he sleeps on it! And I sleep too. It’s a good way…"
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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The quote is a straightforward moral diagnosis of humanity's condition — wars, hatred, envy, and jealousy dominate human behavior and stand in direct opposition to God's nature. It acknowledges reality plainly rather than offering comfort. The implication is that these forces represent the enemy of divine love, urging people to recognize how far ordinary human conduct strays from spiritual values and to treat that gap as something worth confronting.
Pope Francis, born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Argentina in 1936 and elected Pope in 2013, built his papacy around mercy, fraternity, and active peacemaking. He repeatedly condemned wars in Syria, Ukraine, and Gaza as catastrophic failures of humanity. His encyclicals Laudato Si and Fratelli Tutti directly address global conflict and inequality. This quote reflects his persistent pastoral message: that violence and division are fundamentally incompatible with authentic Christian life and human dignity.
Pope Francis leads the Church during extraordinary global violence — the Russian invasion of Ukraine from 2022, the Israel-Gaza war beginning 2023, ongoing civil wars in Sudan and Yemen, and dozens of smaller conflicts. Social media simultaneously amplifies hatred and envy at unprecedented scale. Rising nationalism, political polarization, and economic inequality deepen divisions worldwide. His observation functions less as theological abstraction and more as a plain description of what the world was visibly and undeniably experiencing.
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