Remembering Pope Francis CBC
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A shepherd for the world: Remembering Pope Francis on his 89th birth anniversary

Jefferson Fernando

On what would have been his 89th birthday, the memory of Pope Francis endures as one of the most quietly transformative chapters in the long history of the Catholic Church. Long after the crowds have dispersed from St. Peter’s Square and the bells have fallen silent, his legacy continues to echo—in gestures of compassion, in difficult conversations the Church dared to face, and in a renewed call to walk humbly with one another.

Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires on December 17, 1936, the future pope was shaped early by simplicity, resilience, and faith forged through adversity. The son of Italian immigrants, he grew up in a working-class environment that grounded him in the realities of everyday life. A serious illness in his youth became a turning point, deepening his spiritual discernment and leading him to the Society of Jesus—a path that would define his inner discipline, pastoral outlook, and preference for reflection over spectacle.

His journey through the priesthood and episcopacy unfolded far from the centers of ecclesiastical power. As a Jesuit leader, then archbishop of Buenos Aires, Bergoglio became known not for grandeur but for presence—riding public transport, living modestly, and standing close to the poor. When he was elected pope in March 2013 following the resignation of Benedict XVI, his choice of name spoke volumes. By calling himself Francis, he signaled a papacy inspired by Saint Francis of Assisi: a vision of the Church rooted in humility, care for creation, and solidarity with the marginalized.

From the very beginning, Pope Francis reshaped expectations. He declined the traditional papal apartments, wore simpler vestments, and emphasized service over ceremony. Yet it was not only his style that marked a departure—it was his substance. He urged a Church defined less by rules and more by mercy, less by exclusion and more by encounter. His constant refrain was that the Church must resemble a “field hospital,” tending to wounds before issuing judgments.

Throughout his pontificate, Francis placed the world’s forgotten at the center of Catholic concern: the poor, migrants, refugees, and those pushed to the margins of society. He challenged economic systems that prized profit over people, warned against environmental destruction with unprecedented urgency, and made care for the planet a moral responsibility. On the global stage, he used moral authority rather than political power—calling for peace, dialogue, and human dignity even in the most polarized conflicts.

Inside the Church, he opened doors that had long been closed. Women and laypeople were given meaningful roles in Vatican governance. Conversations once considered untouchable—about inclusion, sexuality, and shared decision-making—were brought into the open. The Synod on Synodality became the defining initiative of his later years, reflecting his belief that the Church must listen as much as it teaches, and walk together rather than dictate from above.

Francis was never a pope of easy answers. His words often unsettled, challenged, and provoked debate, both within the Church and beyond it. Yet even his critics acknowledged the sincerity of his conscience and the consistency of his moral compass. He spoke plainly against capital punishment, racism, and indifference, insisting that faith without justice was hollow.

His final years were marked by physical frailty, but his voice never wavered. In one of history’s most poignant moments, he made his last public appearance on Easter Sunday, offering a final blessing rooted in hope before his death the following day. It was a fitting farewell for a pope who believed that faith, above all, must point toward resurrection—toward renewal even after suffering.

Today, as the Church continues under new leadership, Pope Francis is remembered not simply as the first Jesuit pope, the first from Latin America, or the first in centuries from outside Europe. He is remembered as a pastor who reminded the world that greatness in leadership is measured not by power, but by compassion; not by certainty, but by mercy.

On his 89th birth anniversary, the legacy of Pope Francis lives on—in every act of kindness inspired by his witness, and in every courageously opened door that invites humanity to walk forward together.