Wednesday, 20 August 2014

'I only have two to three years left to live':- Pope Francis

 Questions: Francis's admission may lead commentators to speculate as to whether the 77-year-old has any undisclosed health problems. He only admitted to having 'some nerve problems', which required treatment

Pope Francis has said he might have only two or three years left to live.

He speaks for first time about his own death as he hints at 'nerve problems' and early retiremen

On a plane trip back from South Korea, he told journalists he believed he only had limited time left to complete his reforms of the Roman Catholic Church.
He also called off trips to a shrine in February and a seminary in May.
‘Those were very demanding days. And now I have to be a bit more sensible,’ he said, adding that he had been sleeping more over the past two months. But he said the last time he took a holiday away from home was ‘with the Jesuit community in 1975’.
The Pope has kept up a whirlwind of activity since his election in March 2013. However he has some underlying health problems, including sciatica. He also had part of a lung removed in his youth.
He also admitted that his advisers have been encouraging him to rest more after he cancelled a series of engagements earlier in the year.
In June he cancelled a visit to the Gemelli Hospital in Rome due to a ‘sudden ailment’.
At the time he told Catholic television station TV2000: ‘We are not masters of our own lives, we cannot arrange things to suit us. We have to accept fragility.’
Some observers claim the pontiff has gained weight and is having difficulty breathing, which could be signs of a heart condition.
He instructed advisers to clear his schedule yesterday so he could recuperate from his trip, calling off a visit to a shrine near Rome.

Asked about how he copes with his popularity, he said: ‘I try to think of my sins, my mistakes, so as not to think that I am some- body important.’
He then added with a smile: ‘Because I know this is going to last a short time, two or three years and then… to the house of the Father.’
According to a Vatican source, the 77-year-old has previously told those close to him that he thought he only had a few years left.
He also revealed that he would consider retiring if he felt he could no longer perform his duties.
His predecessor Pope Benedict XVI resigned in February last year.

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