Pope: Calumny, slander is a 'diabolical cancer'

Friday, Oct. 04, 2019
By Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The act of bearing false witness to destroy someone is an attack against the body of the Church, Pope Francis said.

Christians who engage in calumny are like those responsible for the martyrdom of St. Stephen; they choose “the pettiest solution to annihilate a human being: slander and false witness,” the pope said Sept. 25 during his weekly general audience.

“We know that calumny always kills,” he said. “This ‘diabolical cancer’ of calumny – born from a desire to destroy a person’s reputation – also assaults the rest of the ecclesial body and seriously damages it when, for petty interests or to cover their own faults, (people) unite to sully someone.”

The pope reflected on the life and martyrdom of St. Stephen, one of seven deacons chosen by the apostles to serve the early Christian communities.

The ministry of the diaconate, he explained, was created by the apostles to serve the community through works of charity, and a person called to be a deacon is “the guardian of service in the Church,” not “a second-rate priest.”

“The deacon is not for the altar, he is there for service,” the pope said. “When a deacon likes to go too much to the altar, he is mistaken. This isn’t the path.”

The harmony that existed between the apostles, who preached the word of God, and the deacons, who served through works of charity, is “the leaven that makes the ecclesial body grow,” he added.

When challenged by the religious establishment of his day, “Stephen doesn’t mince words, he speaks clearly. He says the truth,” the pope said.

“The martyrs are not ‘plastic saints,’ but men and women of flesh and bone who – as the Book of Revelation says – ‘washed their clothes, making them white in the blood of the lamb,’” he said.

For questions, comments or to report inaccuracies on the website, please CLICK HERE.
© Copyright 2025 The Diocese of Salt Lake City. All rights reserved.