Pope says in upcoming memoir he has no plans to retire
Francis, 87, made the comments in an autobiography, “Life: My Story Through History,” which is being published Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of his installation as pope
AP
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Pope Francis
Vatican City, 14 March
Pope Francis says he has no plans
to resign and isn't suffering from any health problems that would require doing
so, saying in a new memoir he still has “many projects to bring to fruition.”
Francis, 87, made the comments in
an autobiography, “Life: My Story Through History,” which is being published
Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of his installation as pope. Extensive excerpts
were published Thursday in the Italian daily Corriere della Sera.
In the memoir, written with Italian
journalist Fabio Marchese Ragona, Francis traces key moments of his life and
their intersection with world events (World War II, Argentina's military
dictatorship and Vatican intrigue) and how they together inform his priorities
as pope.
Significantly, he addresses
recurring speculation about his health problems, criticism from conservatives
and what both may mean for the future of his pontificate. Such questions have
always surrounded the papacy but the prospect of a papal resignation only
became a reality with the late Pope Benedict XVI 's historic 2013 retirement.
Francis, who had part of one lung
removed as a young man, has been battling bronchitis, the flu and a cold on and
off this winter and for the past two weeks has asked an aide to read most of
his speeches. He had a chunk of his large intestine removed in 2021 and was
hospitalized three times last year, including once to remove intestinal scar
tissue from previous surgeries to address diverticulosis, or bulges in his
intestinal wall.
In his memoir, he stressed that the
papacy is a job for life but that “if a serious physical impediment” occurs, he
has already penned a letter of resignation that is being held in the
Secretariat of State. “But this is, I repeat, a distant possibility, because I
truly do not have any cause serious enough to make me think of resigning,” he
said. “Some people may have hoped that sooner or later, perhaps after a stay in
the hospital, I might make an announcement of that kind, but there is no risk
of it: Thanks be to God, I enjoy good health, and as I have said, there are
many projects to bring to fruition, God willing."
Francis acknowledged that critics
inside the Vatican and out have accused him of destroying the papacy and have
tried to block the reforms that he was mandated by cardinals to enact as a
result of his 2013 election. “There was a strong desire to change things, to
abandon certain attitudes, which, sadly, have proved difficult to eradicate,”
he said. “Needless to say, there are always some who wish to put the brakes on
reform, who want things always to stay as they were during the days of pope
kings.”
In the memoir, Francis doubled down
on his recent decision to allow Catholic priests to bless same-sex couples and
denied that the criticism that erupted could split the church. Africa's bishops
as a whole, as well as individual conservative bishops around the world, have
said they would not follow the new directive. “I just want to say that God
loves everyone, especially sinners. And if my brother bishops, according to
their discernment, decide not to follow this path it doesn't mean that this is
the antechamber to schism, because the church's doctrine is not brought into
question,” Francis said.
He reaffirmed his support for civil
unions while ruling out gay marriage, saying “it is right that these people who
experience the gift of love should have the same legal protections as everyone
else.”
He reasoned that Jesus spent time
with people who lived on the margins of society “and that is what the church
should be doing today with members of the LGBTQ+ community.” “Make them feel at
home, especially those who have been baptized and are in every respect among
God's people," he said. "And those who have not been baptized and
would like to be, or who would like to be godfathers or godmothers: let them be
welcomed, please; let them follow a careful pathway to personal discernment.”
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