Close Menu
Straightnews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Ambassadorial Postings: Enang, FFK and Omokri Get South Africa, Germany and Mexico

    March 6, 2026 --- 7:06 pm

    Hundreds Gather at Funerals for students and staffers of Iran school

    March 5, 2026 --- 3:18 pm

    18 Lawyers withdraw form Facebook User’s Case Allegedly Defaming Gov Eno

    March 5, 2026 --- 3:02 pm
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Ambassadorial Postings: Enang, FFK and Omokri Get South Africa, Germany and Mexico
    • Hundreds Gather at Funerals for students and staffers of Iran school
    • 18 Lawyers withdraw form Facebook User’s Case Allegedly Defaming Gov Eno
    • Gov Eno under Fire for Disdaining His Critics
    • N1.15tr Blunder: Tinubu Replaces Redeployed Finance Minister
    • Akwa Ibom APC Congress Reconstituted as Akpabio, Eno Celebrate Success
    • Robbery: Man Risks Death by Hanging in Akwa Ibom
    • Davido Faces N1b Lawsuit over alleged cyberbullying
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Straightnews
    • Home
    • About Us
      • About StraightNews
      • Our Philosophy
      • Editorial Board
    • News
      • Nationwide News
      • Community News
      • Regional News
        • North Central
        • North East
        • North West
        • South East
        • South South
        • South West
    • Nigeria
      • Politics
      • Economy
      • Education
      • Security
      • Energy
      • Agriculture
      • Health
      • Labour
      • Environment
      • Technology
      • Real Estate
      • Transportation
      • Judiciary
      • Electricity
    • Foreign
      • Africa
        • West Africa
        • South Africa
        • North Africa
        • East Africa
      • America
      • Asia
      • Europe
    • Social
      • Photo Gallery
      • Entertainment
      • Events
      • Fashion
      • Fitness
      • Short Stories
      • Lifestyle
      • Relationship
      • Travel
      • Specials
        • Personality Interview
        • Special Reports
        • Profile
    • Articles
      • Editorial
      • Opinion
      • Essay
    • Contact Us
    • Sports
    Straightnews
    Home»Articles»Editorial»The Enduring Legacies of late Pope Francis
    Editorial

    The Enduring Legacies of late Pope Francis

    straightnewsng.comBy straightnewsng.comApril 26, 2025 --- 8:06 pmNo Comments3 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Pope Francis buried - Straightnews
    Pope Francis buried
    Share
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The death of Pope Francis marks the end of a transformative era—not just for the Catholic Church, but for the global conscience. Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires, he shattered centuries of precedent: the first Latin American pope, the first Jesuit to lead the Church, and the first to choose the name Francis, after the saint of poverty and peace.

    He walked the talk, trading papal opulence for humility. He lived simply, washed the feet of prisoners and refugees, and made the Vatican a platform for the voiceless. In him, Catholics saw not a distant pontiff but a pastor.

    Francis gave the Church a new moral vocabulary. With Laudato Si’, he made climate change a sacred cause, challenging both fossil-fuel economies and indifferent congregations. His encyclical did more than stir debate—it placed the survival of the planet at the heart of spiritual life.

    Read also: Pope Francis buried At Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica 

    He also reached out to communities long marginalised. Though Church doctrine did not change, his pastoral approach to LGBTQ+ individuals, divorced couples, and non-Catholics softened centuries-old rigidity. His papacy suggested a Church less concerned with gatekeeping and more invested in grace.

    Francis embraced diplomacy with quiet power. From mending US-Cuba relations to engaging Islam through historic visits and the Document on Human Fraternity, he saw dialogue not as a concession but as a commandment.

    His vision was global and inclusive. He travelled to war zones and slums, embraced refugees, and consistently condemned the arms trade and economic injustice. In doing so, he reminded the world that silence in the face of suffering is not neutrality—it is complicity.

    Yet, Francis’ legacy is not without blemish. He inherited a Church broken by sexual abuse scandals, and though he acted—defrocking abusers, simplifying trials, and apologising—his early mishandling of the Chilean abuse case revealed the limits of even his empathy.

    His attempts to reform the Vatican’s entrenched bureaucracy were ambitious but incomplete. Resistance from within slowed progress, leaving his vision of a more transparent Church only partially fulfilled.

    He was a polarising figure, not least among his own clergy. His critiques of capitalism, nationalism, and inequality angered conservative politicians and traditionalist bishops. His openness to liturgical diversity and regional autonomy stirred fears of doctrinal drift.

    But for Francis, controversy was not a weakness—it was the price of relevance. He believed the Church must unsettle before it can heal.

    For Nigeria, Francis’ legacy is more than symbolic—it is instructional. In a country scarred by corruption, tribalism, and religious extremism, his life offers critical lessons.

    He modelled leadership not as domination but as service—something tragically absent in many corridors of Nigerian power. His insistence on dignity for all calls out to a society too often blind to the suffering of the poor, the displaced, and the silenced.

    He proved that religion need not divide. His interfaith overtures offer a pathway through Nigeria’s combustible mix of faith and politics. He showed that moral courage, not money, is the true currency of leadership.

    Pope Francis leaves behind not a perfect Church, but a more honest one. He challenged institutions to live their values and individuals to look beyond themselves. His papacy was less about dogma and more about daring—daring to listen, to welcome, to change.

    As Nigeria stands at a moral and political crossroads, his life’s message could not be more urgent: that the only leadership worth following is that which bends low to lift others.

    Let Nigeria take heed—before the next moral reckoning comes not from Rome, but from within.

     

    Pope Francis
    Share. WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    straightnewsng.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Editorial- Nigeria at 65: A Country at the Crossroads

    October 1, 2025 --- 9:15 am

    Editorial: Nigeria’s quest for permanent seat at UN Security Council

    September 29, 2025 --- 12:32 pm

    Editorial: Akwa Ibom at 38: From Foundation to fulfilment

    September 23, 2025 --- 2:47 am

    Comments are closed.

    Search
    Our Picks
    Don't Miss
    Government

    Ambassadorial Postings: Enang, FFK and Omokri Get South Africa, Germany and Mexico

    By straightnewsng.comMarch 6, 2026 --- 7:06 pm0

    Press Release Nigerian President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the postings of 31 career and…

    Hundreds Gather at Funerals for students and staffers of Iran school

    March 5, 2026 --- 3:18 pm

    18 Lawyers withdraw form Facebook User’s Case Allegedly Defaming Gov Eno

    March 5, 2026 --- 3:02 pm

    Gov Eno under Fire for Disdaining His Critics

    March 4, 2026 --- 9:58 am

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    The publication is committed to the principles of development journalism. We are prepared to change the public perception that the profession is a harbinger of hate, blackmail, sycophancy, prejudice and falsehood.

    We pledge to use journalism practice to give voice to the voiceless and to give people of all shades of opinions an opportunity to tell their stories.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Recent Posts
    • Ambassadorial Postings: Enang, FFK and Omokri Get South Africa, Germany and Mexico
    • Hundreds Gather at Funerals for students and staffers of Iran school
    • 18 Lawyers withdraw form Facebook User’s Case Allegedly Defaming Gov Eno
    • Gov Eno under Fire for Disdaining His Critics
    • N1.15tr Blunder: Tinubu Replaces Redeployed Finance Minister
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Advertise With Us
    © 2026 Straightnews Wire Limited

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.