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Pontiff admits to 'darkness' in own faith

Pope Francis celebrates a mass at the Santa Maria parish in Setteville, on the outskirts of Rome, during a pastoral visit on January 15, 2017
Pope Francis celebrates a mass at the Santa Maria parish in Setteville, on the outskirts of Rome, during a pastoral visit on January 15, 2017
"At certain times, I have also encountered moments of darkness in my faith and that faith decreased a lot," the Pope said.
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"At certain times, I have also encountered moments of darkness in my faith and that faith decreased a lot, but with a little bit of time we rediscover it," the Pointiff told parishioners after saying mass in a village near Rome.

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"Some days we can't see faith, everything is in darkness.

"Yesterday, for example, I christened 13 children in areas devastated by earthquakes and there was a father who had lost his wife, and we ask ourselves if this man can have faith.

"We understand that there is darkness, we must respect this darkness of the soul. We don't study to get faith, we receive it like a gift."

Francis also urged believers to spend more time talking to their family.

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"If I say I'm Catholic and every Sunday I go to mass but then I don't talk to my parents, I don't help my grandparents, the poor, I don't visit the sick, then there's no point," said Francis.

"In that way, we're nothing but a Christian parrot: words, words, words."

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