• Home
  • Diocese
  • Schools
  • Synod
  • Columnists
  • Revista Catolica
  • Cathedral
  • Podcasts
  • Subscribe
The Texas Catholic
The Texas Catholic

Dallas, Texas

Today is Wednesday, October 29, 2025
  • Home
  • Diocese
  • Schools
  • Synod
  • Columnists
  • Revista Catolica
  • Cathedral
  • Podcasts
  • Subscribe
  • Follow
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Linkedin
    • Instagram
Home
Pope Francis

True love leads to freedom, not possessiveness, pope says

Friday, December 9, 2022

Pope Francis is pictured through lights on the Christmas tree during his general audience in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican Dec. 7, 2022. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — True love of God or love of another person should lead to a sense of freedom, not to a need to possess or control, Pope Francis said.

“Possessiveness is the enemy of goodness and kills affection — pay attention to this,” the pope told people at his weekly general audience Dec. 7.

Cases of domestic violence, which occur too often, he said, “almost always arise from the claim to possess the affection of the other, from the search for absolute security that kills freedom and stifles life, making it hell.”

Continuing his series of audience talks about spiritual discernment, Pope Francis said that what one feels and notices after making a decision also is part of the process.

And a “good sign” that a decision was right, he said, “is the fact of remaining free with regard to what has been decided, being willing to question it, even to give it up in the face of possible contradictions” and asking what the Lord was trying to teach through the experience.

God does not want to deprive people of something they want or hold dear, the pope said, but he does want people to live “with freedom, without attachment. Only God knows what is truly good for us.”

“We can only love in freedom, which is why the Lord created us free, free even to say no to him,” Pope Francis said. “Offering him what we hold most dear is in our best interest, enabling us to live it in the best possible way and in truth, as a gift he has given us, as a sign of his gratuitous goodness, knowing that our lives, as well as the whole of history, are in his benevolent hands.”

Explaining that when one makes good choices it benefits every area of one’s life with a greater sense of peace and harmony, the pope said the spiritual life is “circular.”

He used the example of deciding to pray an extra half hour a day. The goodness of that decision will be seen in how other parts of one’s day improve, bringing more serenity, less anxiety and “even relations with some difficult people become smoother.”

  • Tags
  • Pope Francis
  • Vatican
Facebook Twitter Google+ LinkedIn Pinterest
Next article The Gift of Music virtual Christmas Concert premieres Dec. 24
Previous article Kiser named new director of communications for the Diocese of Dallas

Related Posts

Jubilee countdown: Preparations for 2025 Holy Year move into high gear Pope Francis
Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Jubilee countdown: Preparations for 2025 Holy Year move into high gear

People decide whether to bring peace to the world or not, pope says Pope Francis
Friday, April 26, 2024

People decide whether to bring peace to the world or not, pope says

Jesus laid down his life out of love for each person, pope says Pope Francis
Monday, April 22, 2024

Jesus laid down his life out of love for each person, pope says

Recent Stories
Jesus laid down his life out of love for each person, pope says

Jesus laid down his life out of love for each person, pope says

Father Esposito: How not to think about discernment

Father Esposito: How not to think about discernment

The Catholic Foundation Spring Grant Ceremony 2024

The Catholic Foundation Spring Grant Ceremony 2024

A better world can't be built 'lying on the couch,' pope tells children

A better world can't be built 'lying on the couch,' pope tells children

Father Dankasa: When receiving the sacraments becomes a graduation ceremony

Father Dankasa: When receiving the sacraments becomes a graduation ceremony

National Eucharistic Congress promises 'profound impact' for families, says family life director

National Eucharistic Congress promises 'profound impact' for families, says family life director

Hearts Unfolding: St. Ann holds its first Women’s Summit

Hearts Unfolding: St. Ann holds its first Women’s Summit

In a hostile world, the vocation of Christians is to hope, Pope Francis says

In a hostile world, the vocation of Christians is to hope, Pope Francis says

Bishop Kelly blesses new Our Lady of Guadalupe mosaic at Bishop Lynch

Bishop Kelly blesses new Our Lady of Guadalupe mosaic at Bishop Lynch

Global group of priests to share reflections on synodality with pope

Global group of priests to share reflections on synodality with pope

The Texas Catholic Newspaper

Catholic Diocese of Dallas
Michael Gresham, Editor

3725 Blackburn Street
Dallas, Texas 75219
(214) 379-2800

Our Affiliated Sites

Texas Catholic Youth

Revista Católica

Legal and Other

Contact us

Terms of service

Privacy policy

Site map

Site powered by TexasCatholicMedia

© 2013-2019 The Texas Catholic Publishing Company. All rights reserved.