


Pope John XXIII called the council to modernize the Catholic Church and bring it up to date. He died in 1963, and didn’t live to see the end of the Council.

His birth name was Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli. He was elected pope on October 28, 1958, at the age of 77.

When all the Catholic cardinals convene to elect a pope, that gathering is called a conclave. With that in mind, here’s one of my favorite stories about Pope John.



He was a huge guy, and as he walked along one day he overheard a woman talking about how fat the pope was. He turned to her and said:

“But, Madame, you must know that the conclave is not exactly a beauty contest!”¹



He was once asked how many people worked at the Vatican. His reply: “About half.”¹ He must have been channeling Elon Musk.



Pope John replied: “Learn how to be a policeman… Anybody can be pope. The proof of this is that I have become one.”¹



I think Pope John would agree. He once wrote in his spiritual diary:

“I have never met a pessimist who accomplished any good.”²



