Pope Francis: Legacy of a revolutionary pontiff and the longing felt this Easter of 2026
This Easter Sunday, St. Peter's Square was packed at dawn, but there was a different echo in the air. The voice of Pope Leo XIV rang out firmly as he denounced the "scandalous indifference" toward the wars bleeding across the world. Yet, amidst the embraces and the "Christ is risen", many faithful lowered their gaze for a second – remembering the one who, for nearly a decade, called everyone "brothers and sisters." The death of Pope Francis, which occurred in late 2025, is still a fresh wound. And this Easter of 2026 is the first without his wide smile and his feet dirtied from walking through the peripheries.
The pontiff who never wanted a "throne"
When Jorge Mario Bergoglio appeared on the basilica balcony in 2013, the world saw a man who refused the gold cross and kept his silver ring. For those of us from Buenos Aires, that came as no surprise. The Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, where he studied chemistry and later taught theology, has always told stories of a professor who took the bus. Later, as archbishop, he swapped the palace for a simple flat and cooked his own meals. That was Francis before he was Francis.
His Coat of Arms of Pope Francis already revealed his life's mission: the star, the spikenard, and the words "Miserando atque eligendo." No crowns or symbols of power. It was the emblem of someone who came to embrace wounds, not to be revered from a distance. I remember reading the original description at the Santo Tomás Moro Building, that building of the Argentine Catholic University named after the English martyr – and there, in the hallways, the reform Francis so passionately preached was already alive in the young people preparing Masses in the slums.
The footsteps left behind in Iraq
No one forgets March 2021. While the world was still crawling through Covid vaccinations, Francis did something that seemed insane: he landed in Baghdad. The Pope Francis's 2021 Visit to Iraq was an act of courage that security manuals would classify as "maximum risk." He went to Ur, the birthplace of Abraham, and met with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. The handshake between the two religious leaders in Najaf was worth more than a thousand speeches. Francis wanted to show that dialogue is possible even where bombs are still falling. And he succeeded.
On that trip, he said something that stuck: "War is always a defeat." Pope Leo XIV repeated that phrase this Easter Sunday, asking the world to "choose peace over the roar of war engines." The harmony is clear. The new pope, who was a close advisor to Francis, carries the same torch – but the longing for the one who sat beside the poor still tightens the chest of those who lived through those years.
Five lasting marks left by Francis
- The foot-washing at a juvenile detention centre: in 2013, his first foot-washing ceremony was with young female inmates, including two Muslims. He broke centuries-old rules in a single gesture.
- The reform of Vatican finances: he created the Secretariat for the Economy and ordered investigations into shady deals. It didn't make him popular among the "system" cardinals.
- Opening up to the LGBTQIA+ community: his famous "Who am I to judge?" echoed for decades, despite all the internal resistance.
- The Synod on Synodality: for the first time, women and laypeople voted in assemblies alongside bishops. The Church ceased to be a club of men in cassocks.
- The apology to Indigenous peoples in Canada: he wept upon hearing about residential schools. He said "sorry" on behalf of an institution that never used to apologise.
And now, with Leo XIV?
Easter 2026 will be remembered as the first of the "pope of continuity." Leo XIV used Portuguese in part of his message – "May the peace of Christ be with Brazil" – and the crowd in Aparecida cheered. But comparisons are inevitable. While Francis had the verve of a street pastor, Leo is more of a theologian, cooler in his gestures. However, in a private conversation with sources close to the Vatican, a Brazilian cardinal summed it up: "Leo XIV is the faithful disciple. He won't imitate Francis, because Francis cannot be imitated. But he will honour the legacy."
What remains, my friends, is the feeling that we had a giant walking among us. The death of Pope Francis has not erased the silent revolution he began. Every coat of arms affixed to a church in the outskirts, every student from the Pontifical University who goes out to serve the poor, every pilgrim who visits the Santo Tomás Moro Building in Buenos Aires – all of that is Francis alive. And the next time Pope Leo XIV raises his voice against indifference, remember: it's the same wind blowing from the window opened in 2013.
Happy Easter, with or without lost sheep. Francis taught us that the celebration is for everyone.