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Pope says No one is born a champion or saint

adminBy adminJune 15, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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On the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity, the Holy father Pope Leo has reminded everyone that sports can be a “means of reconciliation and encounter.”

In his homily as he closed the Jubilee of Sport with a Mass, at St. Peter’s Basilica in front of thousands of athletes of all levels, backgrounds and sports, the Pope Leo XIV reflected on how “unusual” the connection between the Trinity and sport might seem. However, he pointed out that since every good human activity reflects God’s infinite beauty in some way, “sport is certainly one of these.”

According to Vatican News Pope Leo said sports can help us encounter God because they challenge “us to relate to others and with others, not only outwardly but also, and above all, interiorly.” If not, sport becomes “nothing more than an empty competition of inflated egos.”

At sporting events the Italian word spectators use to cheer on athletes is “dai”, which literally means “to give”. The Pope urged everyone to reflect on this. Sports are more than just about physical achievements, he argued. They require athletes to give of themselves for others – “for our personal improvement, for our athletic supporters, for our loved ones, our coaches and colleagues, for the greater public, and even for our opponents.”

As Pope St. John Paul II, an athlete himself, said, “Sport is joy of life, a game, a celebration. It must be fostered by “by recovering its sheer gratuity, its ability to forge bonds of friendship, to encourage dialogue and openness towards others.”

Pope Leo then suggested three things that make sport a good way of developing human and Christian values: solitude, digital society, and competitive society.

First, solitude overwhelmingly marks our society as the emphasis has shifted form “us” to “me”. This has led to a decreasing concern for others. Yet, sports may offer a solution to this deficit. The Pope highlighted how sports teach the value of working together and sharing.

Consequently, sports can “become an important means of reconciliation and encounter: between peoples and within communities, schools, workplaces and families.”

Turning to the ever-growing digital society we face each day, Pope Leo stressed that sports can help counter the effects of technology that can divide people. They offer an alternative to virtual worlds and help “preserve a healthy contact with nature and with real life, where genuine love is experienced.”

The third aspect is the competitive society, which seems to only champion the strong. Sports, on the other hand, can teach us how to lose. They force us to “confront one of the deepest truths of our human condition: our fragility, our limitations and our imperfections.” This is essential as it is through these experiences that our hearts open to hope.

Pope Leo tore down the idea that athletes who never lose or make mistakes exist. “Champions are not perfectly functioning machines, but real men and women, who, when they fall, find the courage to get back on their feet”, he explained.

Pope John Paul II was not the only saint to be an athlete. Sports have played an important role in the lives of numerous modern-day saints – “both as a personal discipline and as a means of evangelization.”

Pope Leo remembered Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, the patron saint of athletes, who will be canonized on September 7 this year. He pointed out that Frassati’s life shows us that “no one is born a champion, no one is born a saint.” It is a daily training and takes us one step closer to our final championship.

Closing, Pope Leo XIV challenged the athletes present with a mission: “to reflect in all your activities the love of the Triune God, for your own good and for that of your brothers and sisters.” Urging them to entrust themselves to Mary, who will help guide them towards the “greatest victory of all: the prize of eternal life.”

 

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