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Church leaders should serve, not seek prestige, pope says

Francis' remarks come after release of books detailing financial mismanagement at the Vatican

Church leaders should serve, not seek prestige, pope says

Published: November 09, 2015 04:04 AM GMT

Updated: November 08, 2015 04:42 PM GMT

Christians are called to go out and serve others, not live a sheltered, comfortable life just serving themselves, Pope Francis said in a homily.

"When the church is lukewarm, closed up inside itself, even many times a wheeler-dealer," then that church is no longer one that "ministers, that serves, but rather uses others," he said at the Mass Nov. 6 in the chapel of his residence.

The pope's homily, which centered on the day's Gospel reading of Jesus' Parable of the Unjust Steward, came the day after the official release of two books by Italian journalists detailing financial mismanagement within the Vatican.

In the parable, the corrupt manager squandered his master's goods and shrewdly finagled some sweetheart deals for himself with his master's debtors before he was kicked out of his job, according to the Gospel of St. Luke. The master, who is likely corrupt as well, even praises the disgraced servant "for acting prudently" and being so clever.

"These types even exist in the church, (people) who, instead of serving and looking out for others, of building foundations, they use the church: the climbers, the ones attached to money. And how many priests, bishops we have seen like this. It's sad to say it, isn't it?" the pope said.

Instead, Jesus and the Gospels call on people "to serve, to be at the service of, not to come to a halt, always to go further, forgetting about themselves," he said.

However, it's so easy to be tempted to take advantage of the comforts that come with status and to start living "comfortably without honesty, like those Pharisees Jesus talks about, who stroll in the squares, making sure they are seen," the pope said.

Pope Francis said he is filled with so much joy when nuns and priests tell him about their decades of humble service, for example, as a missionary in the Amazon or as health care providers in Africa or for the disabled. And they are "always smiling."

"This is called serving. This is the joy of the church: always to go further, to go further to give one's life," and this is the model religious men and women are called to live up to, he said.

He asked that people pray for the grace St. Paul received, to find honor in always journeying forth and rejecting many comforts.

He asked that God "save us from temptations," which in the end is the temptation to live "a double life: I show myself off as a minister, one who serves, but deep down, I use others." 

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