The Pope Of The Peripheries And Of Paradox
BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty Images

Opinion

The Pope Of The Peripheries And Of Paradox

Pope Francis was often cast simultaneously as a reformer and a betrayer, a prophet and a populist, a revolutionary and a regressive.

Kelsey Reinhardt

As we lay to rest Pope Francis, a man entrusted with the astonishing task of leading 1.4 billion Catholics worldwide, we must acknowledge that he was a pope who inspired devotion and yet also disillusionment.

The first non-European pope in over a millennium, the first Jesuit to hold the Chair of Peter, and the first to take the name Francis — after the saint of humility and radical poverty — he came to the papacy with the power of symbolism already at his side. But symbols alone do not make a legacy. His pontificate has been marked by deep paradoxes, extraordinary global events, and the unrelenting scrutiny of a digital age that magnifies every gesture, every silence, and every word into global significance.

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