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Some reports indicate that Pope Francis died leaving only 100 dollars.
Yes, a hundred dollars. Less than 90 euros.
No house.
No bank account.
No investment in his name.
And yet, he was the head of the Catholic Church.
A post that could have earned him about €340,000 a year.
But he refused that money.
Every year.
Since 2013.
Why?
Because he was a Jesuit, and the Jesuits take a vow of poverty.
Rather than living in the luxurious Vatican apartments like his predecessors, he chose to move into the Casa Santa Marta, a simple, modest residence.
No gilding.
No personal servants.
Just a bed, a desk, and his faith.
He wore his old worn-out black shoes, refusing traditional red moccasins.
He was moving in a small Ford Focus, while other religious leaders are driving in limousines.
He ate with the Vatican employees, not in a private dining room.
He simply dressed, without special adornment, just his white outfit and an iron cross.
An invisible wealth...
While some cling to their property, their property, their image...
Pope Francis has chosen to own nothing to offer everything.
No millions.
No complex wills.
Just 100 dollars... and a powerful message: "It's not what you own that matters. That's what you are. What you do for others."
The world is shocked... but inspired.
At a time when wealth often becomes an ultimate goal, Pope Francis leaves an eternal trace without ever having sought to enrich himself.
He did not bequeath any material fortune.
He left a moral fortune. A lesson in humility. A vision of service.
He wasn't a luxury pope.
He was a pope of heart.
A man who has proved that to live simply is to reign differently.
What about you? What will you leave behind?
Money?
Things? Or a real inspiration?
The above was copied from the book of faces....for me it was a traveling preacher who.said he was down to two suitcases, his entire life in two suitcases....he used the money from one gig to get to the next, rented furnished rooms in boarding houses.
I ain't there yet, but a boy can dream...I miss the days hitching around the country with nothing but a backpack..I'd like to return to that before I go...RIP Francis.