Pope has a cold and skips outdoor Sunday prayers before a busy week – WFTV

Pope has a cold and skips outdoor Sunday prayers before a busy week - WFTV

ROME — (AP) — Pope Francis is suffering from a cold and will keep his Sunday blessing indoors, the Vatican said, announcing the precautions ahead of a busy Christmas season and the start of the Holy Year that will test Francis' stamina and health will be provided.

The Vatican pointed to the frigid temperatures outside and the busy week ahead for Francis after a wheezing and constipated pope delivered his annual Christmas greeting to Vatican bureaucrats earlier Saturday.

Francis, who turned 88 last week, will open his big Holy Year on Tuesday, presiding over Christmas Eve and Christmas celebrations in St. Peter's Basilica. On Thursday he is scheduled to travel to Rome's main prison to inaugurate the anniversary.

Francis has long suffered from bouts of bronchitis, especially in winter. In 2023, he ended up in the hospital to receive intravenous antibiotics. As a young man, he had part of a lung removed and he often appears to be out of breath, especially after walking or physical exertion.

Criticism of gossip

It took him several minutes to catch his breath Saturday as he delivered his annual Christmas greetings to Vatican bureaucrats and lay staff. Once again, he took the opportunity to admonish the backstabbing and gossip among his closest associates and instead urge them to speak well of one another.

“A church community lives in joyful and fraternal harmony provided its members live lives of humility and abandon evil thinking and speaking ill of others,” Francis said. “Gossip is an evil that destroys social life, sickens people's hearts and leads to nothing. People say it very well: Gossip is zero.”

“Be careful of that,” he added.

Meanwhile, Francis' annual Christmas address to the priests, bishops and cardinals who work in the Vatican Curia has become a lesson in humility – and humiliation – as Francis offers a public trivialization of some workplace sins at the headquarters of the Catholic Church.

In the most scathing edition of 2014, Francis listed the “15 Sorrows of the Curia,” accusing prelates of using their Vatican careers to gain power and wealth. He accused them of living a “hypocritical” double life and forgetting – due to “spiritual Alzheimer’s disease” – that they should be joyful men of God.

In 2022, Francis warned them that the devil lurks among them, saying it is an “elegant demon” that works in people who have a rigid, holier way of living the Catholic faith.

This year, Francis revisited a topic he had often warned against: gossiping behind their backs and speaking ill of people. It was a reference to the sometimes toxic atmosphere in closed spaces like the Vatican or in workplaces where office gossip and criticism circulate but are rarely expressed publicly.

Francis has long welcomed open and frank debate and even welcomes criticism of his own work. But he has urged critics to say it to their faces and not behind his back.

Francis opened his address on Saturday by recalling the devastation of the war in Gaza, where he said even his patriarch was unable to enter because of Israeli bombings.

“Children were bombed yesterday. This is cruelty, this is not war,” he said.

The annual appointment is the start of Francis' busy Christmas calendar, made even more strenuous this year by the start of the Holy Year in the Vatican on Christmas Eve. The anniversary is expected to bring some 32 million pilgrims to Rome in 2025, and Francis has a dizzying calendar of events to serve them.

A gentler message for lay workers

After addressing the Vatican prelates, Francis delivered a less critical address to the Vatican's lay workers, who gathered along with their families in the city-state's main audience hall. Francis thanked them for their service and encouraged them to take time to play with their children and visit their grandparents.

“If you have any particular problems, tell your superiors, we want to solve them,” he concluded. “This can be achieved through dialogue, not through silence. Together we will try to solve the difficulties.”

It was an apparent reference to reports of growing unrest within the Vatican's workforce, voiced by the Association of Vatican Lay Employees, the union closest to the Vatican. The association has in recent months expressed concern about the state of the Vatican pension system and fears of even greater cost cuts, and called on Vatican leadership to listen to workers' concerns.

Earlier this year, 49 employees of the Vatican Museums – the Holy See's main source of income – filed a class-action lawsuit with the Vatican tribunal complaining about labor problems, overtime and working conditions.

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Associated Press religion coverage is supported by the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from the Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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