The Morning: The pope’s funeral
We’re live from the Vatican.
The Morning

April 26, 2025

Good morning. The open-air funeral for Pope Francis has just finished in St. Peter’s Square. His body is now on its way to be placed in a tomb. We’ve got a live dispatch from our Rome bureau chief, Jason Horowitz, and other Times journalists on the ground.

Melissa Kirsch will be back in your inbox next Saturday.

Pallbearers carry a coffin through St. Peter's Square.
In St. Peter’s Square. Eric Lee/The New York Times

‘A pope among the people’

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By Jason Horowitz

I’ve covered Francis since he was selected in 2013.

VATICAN CITY — A patchwork of clergy in red, white, purple and black vestments. World leaders including President Trump seated on the stairs of St. Peter’s Basilica for an outdoor ceremony. A simple cypress casket. Haunting chants and some 200,000 faithful embraced by Bernini’s colonnade.

In a solemn and majestic funeral that ended moments ago, the Roman Catholic Church laid to rest Pope Francis, the first South American pope, whose humble style and pastoral vision both reinvigorated and divided the institution that he led for a dozen years. He was 88.

It’s warm and clear here in Rome. A group of refugees and homeless people, like those Francis advocated for around the world, joined presidents, prime ministers and the church’s cardinals — one of whom will be the next pope — to bid the Holy Father farewell.

Catholic clergy in bright red vestments.
During the funeral. Eric Lee/The New York Times

“He was a Pope among the people, with an open heart towards everyone,” Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re said in the homily. “The guiding thread of his mission was also the conviction that the church is a home for all, a home with its doors always open.”

He spoke in Italian. Texts were also read in English, Spanish, French, Arabic and Portuguese.

Before the service, priests from Myanmar talked about how Francis had energized their small church when he visited and elevated their bishop to a cardinal. Pilgrims from Ecuador said he had made them feel seen. Conservative clerics from the Czech Republic said they still weren’t sure what to make of him.

But as bells tolled a death knell, the piazza fell silent except for the sound of sea gulls. Pallbearers carried the pope’s coffin through a corridor of cardinals in their brilliant red vestments, and a choir sang a psalm.

His plain coffin was laid near the giant statue of the very first pope, Saint Peter. A slight breeze lifted the pages of an open Gospel placed on the casket. The bright sun made it hard for mourners to see the screens broadcasting the service across the vast expanse.

Thousands of people at the funeral in St. Peter’s Square.
Mourners at the open-air ceremony. James Hill for The New York Times

During the “sign of peace,” President Trump shook hands with President Emmanuel Macron of France, as well as several other world leaders in his vicinity. Scores of priests scattered through the crowd to distribute communion.

People clapped as the pallbearers carried the coffin back into the basilica. Some held signs: “Thank you Francis.” “Goodbye Father.”

Francis requested that the traditional pomp and pageantry be pared back for his final Mass. But for a pope, simplicity is relative.

After the service, the popemobile, which carried Francis thousands of time around St. Peter’s Square and to meet the faithful around the world, drove his body to St. Mary Major, a church he loved. The Vatican said a group of “poor and needy” people would greet him at the steps before a private burial in a tomb with a frieze of a cross and the one-word inscription “Franciscus.”

As the caravan moved slowly through Rome, huge crowds formed on the sides of the road. It was strange to not see the pope waving back.

Read the pope’s obituary. Plus: the homily, the music (mostly Gregorian chant) and the biblical readings from the Mass.

World leaders

A picture made available by the Ukrainian presidential Press Service shows President Trump meeting privately with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine on the sidelines of the funeral for Pope Francis on Saturday.
President Trump met with Volodymyr Zelensky, a handout photo from the Ukrainian government shows. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service
  • Trump met with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine before the funeral, their first face-to-face since a televised blowup in the Oval Office two months ago.
  • Seating chart: Among the visiting dignitaries were sworn enemies — a minister from Iran and an ambassador from Israel, for example. The Vatican handled it by making the seating alphabetical.
  • Partisan divide: Two decades ago, President George W. Bush gave two of his predecessors, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, a ride to Pope John Paul II’s funeral on Air Force One. Not this time: Joe and Jill Biden flew in on their own.

The mourners

People wait in line to access St. Peter’s square
Young people wait in line to access St. Peter’s Square. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
  • A good view: There are many young people in St. Peter’s Square this morning. CNN talked to a group that slept in a nearby church to secure prime spots at the funeral.
  • Seeking miracles: A nun from Egypt said she prayed to Francis, who suffered from knee ailments, to relieve her own leg pain so she could make it to St. Peter’s Square. She did.
  • Deep feelings: Norah O’Donnell of CBS News got emotional as a couple told her why they’d made the trek from Miami. Watch the video on Instagram.
  • Hungry reporters: Some 2,700 journalists were registered to cover the funeral, and they had devoured almost everything in the vending machine near the Vatican press office. Still available at 8 a.m.: a bag of crackers, a pack of gum and five chocolate bars.
  • Addio, Holy Father: Motoko Rich, who will soon take over from Jason as Rome bureau chief, spent 2.5 hours in line Friday with the throngs waiting for a final viewing of Francis. She met a sheriff’s deputy from Michigan whose partner was killed in the line of duty, a woman from Taiwan who had spent the last several months exploring death and a baby wearing a suit.

What’s next

  • Vatican finances: The new pope will inherit a church with an $89 million deficit. Bernhard Warner, a Rome-based correspondent for our DealBook newsletter, looks at what Francis did to root out corruption, create transparency and develop big donors for the church. (Sign up here to get DealBook delivered to your inbox.)
  • Ask the Morning: Laura Murphy of New York wondered, “Can a pope be made a saint?” Elisabetta Povoledo, one of our Rome-based correspondents, reports that a “pontiff is not a shoo-in.” Overall, 80 of history’s 266 popes have been canonized, including 48 of the first 50 and two of the last five before Francis.

FRANCIS’ FAVORITE

A group of men in fancy clothing from the Middle Ages around a table in a darkened room, with a shaft of light from a window illuminating faces in the center.
Caravaggio’s “Calling of St. Matthew,” completed in 1600. Mauro Magliani/Getty Images

Pope Francis’ favorite painting was Caravaggio’s “Calling of St. Matthew,” which hangs in a chapel near where he would stay in Rome before he became pope. The painting depicts Matthew, third from left, in a black velvet hat. Jesus is in the doorway, pointing at Matthew. Based on his expression, Matthew seems to question his appointment, as he points to his own chest in disbelief.

“It is the gesture of Matthew that strikes me,” Francis said shortly after his elevation to the papacy. “This is what I said when they asked me if I would accept my election as pontiff.”

See the painting up close, with descriptions from our critic Jason Farago.

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