Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Pope Francis leads an audience to exchange Christmas greetings with members of the Roman Curia in Clementine Hall at the Vatican Dec. 22. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope Francis' Christmas greeting to the Vatican bureaucracy this year was an extended warning against a host of spiritual ills to which he said Vatican officials are prone, including "spiritual Alzheimer's," "existential schizophrenia," publicity-seeking, the "terrorism of gossip" and even a poor sense of humor.

The pope made his remarks Dec. 22, in a biting half-hour speech to heads of the Roman Curia, the church's central administration, and to cardinals resident in Rome.

Popes have often used their annual Christmas speech to review events of the previous year and lay out priorities for the next. Pope Francis' nine-member Council of Cardinals is currently working on an overhaul of the Curia, but the pope's speech did not address specific reforms. Instead, he spoke in general terms of virtues and values, saying he hoped his words might serve officials as a "support and stimulus to a true examination of conscience" in preparation for the sacrament of reconciliation.

The pope, who has made criticism of the church's leaders a common theme of his preaching, called the Curia a "dynamic body" naturally vulnerable to "maladies, to dysfunction, to infirmities."

He offered what he called a "catalog" of 15 such diseases. Most corresponded to vices for which he has frequently rebuked the hierarchy, including self-promotion, greed and a focus on bureaucratic efficiency over pastoral solicitude. But the pope's rhetoric this time was especially impassioned and forceful.

Following a year in which Vatican officials and other bishops aired differences to a remarkable degree in the press, especially during the October Synod of Bishops on the family, Pope Francis warned against "exhibitionism," the "malady of persons who seek insatiably to increase their power and to that end are capable of calumniating, defaming and discrediting others, even in newspapers and magazines."

The pope denounced the "hypocrisy typical of the mediocre" and said an apostle who puts excessive faith in planning becomes a mere "bookkeeper or accountant" who would "confine and control the liberty of the Holy Spirit." He said an official who forgets his personal relationship with Jesus becomes completely dependent on his "passions, whims and manias," "incapable of carrying out any autonomous activity, living in a state of absolute dependence on his often imaginary views."

Officials who idolize their bosses are "victims of careerism and opportunism," "mean persons, unhappy and inspired only by their own fatal egoism," the pope said, acknowledging that bosses often encourage such attitudes to obtain "submission, loyalty and psychological dependence" from their staff.

Deriding a "gruff and grim" manner he described as characteristic of the insecure, Pope Francis called for a "joyous spirit, full of humor and even self-mockery, that makes us amiable persons, even in difficult situations." The pope said that every day he recites a prayer, which he attributed to St. Thomas More, asking God for a sense of humor.

The pope wound up his remarks on a note of encouragement, saying that the failings of a few have discredited the virtuous majority of the church's ministers. He quoted an adage that "priests are like airplanes, they make news only when they fall, but there are so many that fly."

After the speech in the Vatican's Clementine Hall, the pope spent about half an hour exchanging Christmas greetings with individual cardinals and curial members.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Beth Cioffoletti
10 years 5 months ago
Much in this talk that applies to all of us, not just Curial cardinals and bishops. This pope draws from a deep well of personal security.
Ernest Martinson
10 years 5 months ago
The pope is probably cognizant of the Peter Principle in his criticism of the leaders of the church. The Peter Principle holds that in a hierarchy, employees tend to rise to their level of incompetence. This denunciation of the hypocrisy of the mediocre is straight from the Chair of Peter. Pope Francis prescribes a little humor as an antidote as well as a joyous spirit that seeks not to contain and control the Holy Spirit.

The latest from america

Pope Leo told his ecumenical audience: “By celebrating together this Nicene faith and by proclaiming it together, we will also advance towards the restoration of full communion among us.”
Gerard O’ConnellJune 07, 2025
Blessed Carlo Acutis offers a counterexample for our digital age: a teenager who embraced technology not as an escape, but as a tool for communion—with others, and with God.
Grace LenahanJune 06, 2025
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attends an event at the Liberal Party election night headquarters in Ottawa April 29, 2025. (OSV News photo/Jennifer Gauthier, Reuters)
“Carney is responding to the [immigration] backlash but also to the Trump effect, which is placing more pressure on Canada to tighten its border.”
Grace CoppsJune 06, 2025
The war in Gaza has become one in which “the heart-rending price is being paid by children, the elderly and the sick.” Israel, along with its allies, especially including the United States, must reckon that cost as well.
The EditorsJune 06, 2025