Born on December 17, 1936, in Buenos Aires to Italian immigrant parents, Jorge Mario Bergoglio grew up in a working-class neighborhood. Trained initially as a chemical technician, he experienced a profound calling to the priesthood after a severe illness in his youth, which included pneumonia leading to the partial removal of a lung. He joined the Jesuits in 1958, was ordained a priest in 1969, and later served as provincial superior of the Jesuits in Argentina. His early ministry emphasized pastoral care, education, and closeness to the poor. In 1998, he became Archbishop of Buenos Aires, and Pope John Paul II named him a cardinal in 2001. Known for his humility—he rode the bus, lived simply, and focused on the marginalized—Bergoglio's election as pope broke centuries of tradition: the first from the Americas, the first Jesuit, and the first non-European in over 1,250 years.
Pope Francis's pastoral approach was rooted in mercy, outreach to the "peripheries," and a profound emphasis on encountering people where they are. He famously urged priests and bishops to be "shepherds with the smell of the sheep," drawing from his 2013 Chrism Mass homily and his apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium. This meant leaving the comfort of ecclesiastical structures to engage the hurting, the poor, migrants, and those on society's edges. His motto, Miserando atque eligendo ("by having mercy, he chose him"), captured a vision of a merciful Church that accompanies rather than condemns. He prioritized dialogue, synodality, environmental stewardship (as in Laudato Si'), and care for the vulnerable, modeling a Church that is "bruised, hurting, and dirty because it has been out on the streets."
Not everyone welcomed this vision. From the outset, conservative and traditionalist Catholics voiced strong opposition, often intense criticism bordering on hostility. Some accused him of ambiguity on doctrine, particularly regarding issues like communion for the divorced and remarried in Amoris Laetitia, or of downplaying traditional liturgy (as with restrictions on the extraordinary form of the Latin Mass). Others saw his focus on social justice, migration, and environmental concerns as overly political or aligned with liberal agendas, leading to vocal resistance from figures in the U.S. and elsewhere. Petitions, conferences, and online campaigns portrayed him as straying from orthodoxy, with some even questioning his legitimacy. This backlash reflected deeper tensions between a more rigid, rule-focused Catholicism and Francis's emphasis on mercy and accompaniment.
Yet, recent revelations in the Epstein files have shed light on orchestrated efforts to undermine him. Documents show discussions between Jeffrey Epstein and Steve Bannon, among others, explicitly aiming to "take down Francis," including plans tied to anti-Francis narratives and conservative Catholic networks. These attempts to silence or discredit him highlight how his prophetic voice challenged powerful interests.
Pope Francis was orthodox—1000% Catholic in faith and morals—yet deeply pastoral. He did not run the Church as a businessman or executive but as a shepherd who went among the sheep, acquiring their scent. He upheld timeless doctrine while applying it with compassion, refusing to wield it as a club.
Thanks to his leadership—and, of course, to God's grace—we are witnessing a genuine springtime in Catholicism. Recent years have brought massive surges in conversions and adult baptisms, especially among young people in places like France (over 10,000 adult baptisms in 2025, the highest in decades), the U.S. (dioceses reporting 50-75% increases in Easter converts), and elsewhere. Young adults, often from non-practicing backgrounds, are drawn to the faith's authenticity, mercy, and call to holiness amid a secular world.
Pope Francis's pontificate proved he was right all along: a Church that goes to the margins, smells like the sheep, and leads with mercy flourishes. He led the world literally during the pandemic when governments chose to shut down. The video of him walking in an empty St. Peter's Square will always remain epic. His legacy endures, and one day, we may joyfully hail him as St. Pope Francis. May he rest in peace, and may his example continue to inspire the Church he loved so deeply.

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