Don’t lose your sense of humor and become sour, like something preserved in vinegar, Pope Francis told a group of pilgrims from Spain.
When a Christian, especially a religious, loses his sense of humor he becomes sour, like something “preserved in vinegar” and loses the vibrancy that can help him appeal to others, Pope Francis said on November 7, 2024, in a meeting with a group of pilgrims from Spain who came to Rome to celebrate the 450th anniversary of the foundation of the Monastery of the Augustinian Nuns of Talavera de la Reina in Toledo.
In his speech, Pope Francis encouraged his audience to be holy and joyful and to remember to be grateful for what they have. He referenced saints like St. Philip Neri.
“Please, do not lose your joy, do not lose your sense of humor. Do not lose it. When a Christian, even more so a man or woman religious, loses their sense of humour, they ‘turn sour.’ And it is so sad to see a priest, a religious, a nun, ‘turn sour.’ They are preserved in vinegar,” the Pope said. “Holiness is always joyful […]. Have a smile that comes from the heart, that is not false, that is always full.”
Here the Pope got the crowd chuckling, especially the women religious, by warning them against having a merely superficial smile like a flight attendant might have. (His imitation is at the end of the video below.)