Pope Francis died this morning in Rome at the age of 88, the Vatican confirmed in a video statement carried by Reuters. The first Latin‑American and first Jesuit pontiff, Francis (born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 17 December 1936) led the Catholic Church from 2013 through a period of profound cultural and institutional turbulence. Rather than summarise an already storied legacy, this article pauses to remember the words that shaped it. Each quotation below is linked to its primary source so readers can explore the full context in a new tab.
1. “If a person is gay and seeks God and has good will — who am I to judge?”
Press conference aboard the papal flight returning from World Youth Day, 29 July 2013
The five‑word question landed like a thunderclap, signalling a new pastoral tone without rewriting doctrine. Francis made the remark while fielding reporters’ questions, and the full exchange remains available in the official CNN transcript.
2. “A little bit of mercy makes the world less cold and more just.”
First Sunday Angelus, 17 March 2013
Barely a week after his election, Francis reduced his programme for reform to a single virtue: mercy. The full Angelus text is archived on Vatican.va.
3. “Throwing away food is like stealing from the tables of the poor and the hungry.”
General Audience, 5 June 2013
Francis’ swipe at consumer waste made global headlines; the phrasing is quoted verbatim in a Reuters dispatch that morning. The comment pre‑figured the ecological sweep of Laudato Si’.
4. “The future does have a name, and its name is hope.”
Video message to TED 2017, 26 April 2017
Francis became the first pope to address a TED conference, urging technologists to turn disruption into solidarity. Read or watch the complete talk on Vatican.va.
5. “Today we are not living an era of change so much as a change of era.”
Address to the Fifth National Convention of the Italian Church, Florence, 10 November 2015
The line, delivered to Italian bishops and laity, reframed the upheaval of post‑modern life. The official speech is posted here.
6. “The thing the Church needs most today is the ability to heal wounds … I see the Church as a field hospital after battle.”
Interview with La Civiltà Cattolica, published 21 September 2013
Francis sketched his pastoral vision in a lengthy conversation first translated in America Magazine. The pivotal passage appears in “A Big Heart Open to God”.
7. “Let us protect with love all that God has given us!”
Inaugural Mass Homily, 19 March 2013
From the moment he assumed the papacy, Francis welded creation‑care to human‑care. His inaugural homily is preserved on the Vatican site.
8. “Human trafficking is an open wound on the body of contemporary society … a crime against humanity.”
Address to an international conference on human trafficking, 10 April 2014
The pope’s uncompromising language stiffened Catholic and secular resolve against modern slavery. Full remarks: Vatican.va.
9. “War is madness. War is always a defeat. Enough, please!”
Homily at the Redipuglia Military Memorial, 13 September 2014
Speaking amid the graves of World War I soldiers, Francis condemned the arms trade and the politics of indifference. Read the homily on Vatican.va.
10. “Every migrant has a name, a face, and a story.”
Address to Jesuit alumni, 17 September 2016
Francis hammered this refrain whenever migration was reduced to numbers. The quote is taken from his speech archived here.
Beyond quotations
What unites these lines is their relentless insistence on encounter: seeing the other, hearing the cry, acting with tenderness and courage. Francis embedded words in gestures — paying his hotel bill in cash after his election, dining with the homeless on his birthdays, carrying a refugee child onto a plane. To repeat his sayings without inhabiting their demands would be precisely the “spiritual selfie” he warned against. If the late pope leaves the Church a task, it is to move from quoting mercy to practicing it in the field hospital he imagined.
Requiescat in pace, Holy Father.