EWTN Vatican
Pope Francis: What would happen if we prayed more and complained less?
Demo 2 Image
Pope Francis prays during his general audience on Wednesday, May 1, 2024, in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican. | Credit: Vatican Media

“What would happen if we prayed more and complained less?” Pope Francis asked Aug. 2 on his official profile on X.

He then invited the faithful to ask the Lord for “the grace to know how to pray for one another.”

The Holy Father posted this message as part of the Year of Prayer 2024, which he proposed as a preparation for the upcoming Jubilee of Hope 2025.

The pope inaugurated the current Year of Prayer on Jan. 21, and since then he has invited the faithful to place themselves before the presence of the Lord on numerous occasions, especially through the hashtag #YearofPrayer.

Throughout his pontificate, Pope Francis has often reiterated the importance of avoiding complaining about others and “gossip,” which he has referred to as “a plague on people’s lives.”

On the occasion of an Angelus prayer last September, he lamented that “the first thing that is usually created around those who make mistakes is gossip, in which everyone finds out about the mistake, with all the details, except the person affected. This is not right and does not please God,” he affirmed.

“I never tire of repeating that gossip is a plague in the lives of people and communities, because it brings division, suffering, and scandal, and never helps [people] to improve and grow,” the Holy Father reiterated.

On another occasion, he warned that gossip is a “deadly poison” and something “very bad” that destroys “human communion.” 

“Never speak ill of one another. If you have a problem with a sister or brother, go and tell them face to face. And if you can’t do it, swallow it, but don’t go around spreading unrest that does harm and destroys,” the Holy Father advised.

 

This article was originally published by CNA.


Author Name

Almudena Martínez-Bordiú is a Spanish journalist and correspondent for ACI Prensa in Rome and the Vatican, with three years of experience in religious information. She has a double degree in Journalism and Advertising from San Pablo CEU University in Madrid. She has a passion for investigative journalism and for telling stories in a close way. 

Trending
Pope Francis names 21 new cardinals, including archbishops of Tehran and Toronto
Is the Next Pope at the Synod?
What’s behind the viral photo of Pope Francis venerating a chair?
Pope Francis calls for global day of prayer and fasting amid escalating conflict in Holy Land
The Three Secrets of Fatima Explained