Francis was asked en route home from Mexico yesterday about reports of a close friendship between St. John Paul II and a philosopher, Anna Teresa Tymieniecka, that emerged from their correspondence. Officials at Poland's National Library who have read the letters say they indicate that she may have been in love with John Paul but that the pope kept the relationship on a friendly and intellectual level.
Francis said he knew of their friendship and that, in general, any man who is unable to have a good friendship with a woman "is missing something."
"A friendship with a woman is not a sin, it's a friendship," he said. "A romantic relationship with a woman who is not your wife, that is sin. Understand?"
"But the pope is a man," he continued. "And the pope, too, has a heart that can have a healthy, holy friendship with a woman."
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"We have not understood the good that a woman can do for the life of a priest and of the church in the sense of counsel, help, of healthy friendship," he said.
His comments about the positive aspects that a "healthy, holy" friendship with women can bring even to celibate priests in many ways breaks a taboo. Francis noted that there have been famous friendships in the course of church history" St Francis and St. Clare of Assisi, John of the Cross and Teresa of Avila.