Two cardinals, each dressed in black robes with red sashes, walk on the each side of Pope Francis down a corridor outside in Vatican City.

An intimate look at Pope Francis's life at the Vatican

The pope’s schedule often included time for visiting prisons, hosting audiences in St. Peter’s Square and blessing newlywed couples.

Two cardinals share time with Pope Francis during the Synod on the Family.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
ByMelissa Sartore
April 21, 2025

Each morning Pope Francis awoke before dawn in his modest accommodation at Casa Santa Marta, the Vatican guest­house. As day broke, Pope Francis prayed and meditated before delivering a homily at morning Mass.

By midday the pope had undertaken any number of duties, preferring to manage his schedule personally. Phone calls to colleagues and friends, meetings, and other appointments preceded lunch, after which he took a siesta.

His afternoons were often spent visiting prisons and juvenile detention centers, consulting with ambassa­dors to the papacy, or making appointments. Once a week he received a soccer update from a member of the Swiss Guard, a necessity since the pope stopped watching television in 1990. Though Pope Francis may have given up television, he was an active lover of the arts. He enjoyed opera, classical music, and baroque artwork, and he identified Federico Fellini's La Strada as his favorite film.

To learn more, check out Pope Francis: A Life of Service available where books and magazines are sold.

A few times a month, the pope led Papal Mass and hosted regular audiences in St. Peter’s Square or the Basilica (and sometimes both on busy days), which allowed tens of thousands of people to be in the pope’s presence. Often these individuals were from all over the world and wept and cheered when they caught a glimpse of the head of the Roman Catholic Church.

His evening meal was again taken among his fellow residents at the Casa Santa Marta. True to form, he never dined alone. Once back in his austere domicile, Pope Francis ended his day as it began—quietly. Each night, the pontiff read before drifting off to sleep.

an aerial view of About 200,000 people fill Piazza San Pietro during a Mass.
About 200,000 people fill Piazza San Pietro during a Mass to celebrate the end of the general assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the Family and the beatification of Pope Paul VI.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
Swiss Guards, dress in full regalia, escort the President of Malta through the Sala Clementine in the Apostolic Palace.
The Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace serves as a passageway for visiting with the pope. Here, the Swiss Guard oversees the entrance of a procession for Marie-Louise Coleiro Preca, the president of Malta, on a visit in 2014.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
The pope stands at an alter with his back turned to us. Four people from the clergy, two on each aside, stand with him.
Seen presiding over Mass at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome, Pope Francis celebrates the Solemnity of the Conversion of St. Paul. The Mass marks St. Paul’s conversion to Christianity on the road to Damascus.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
A nun who works in the Apostolic Sacristy helps a priest don his robes.
One of the nuns preparing for Holy Mass in the apostolic sacristy assists a priest as he dresses in his robe.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
A priest dressed in all black prepares chalices, gold and silver, and places them on a red table cloth.
Prior to Holy Mass, priests prepare the chalices, patens, and ciboria used to administer what Catholics believe to be the body and blood of Christ during the Eucharist. Liturgical prayers are recited as the bread and wine with water is distributed into the vessels.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
Pope Francis greets a bishop through a wooden railing as he walks into the assembly hall during the Synod on the Family.
In a unique moment, Pope Francis greets a bishop attending the 2014 Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of the Bishops on the Family. The two men were entering a meeting attended by some 250 participants.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
Vatican staff, standing inside, are silhouetted by shadows in front of large, tall, white drapes with sunlight glowing from the outside.
Members of the Vatican staff prepare the balcony overlooking St. Peter’s Square in anticipation of Pope Francis’s Urbi et Orbi address on Christmas Day. Thousands of people gazed up at the pope as he delivered his blessing.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
The upper body of Pope Francis is sharp while the crowd around him is blurred.
Pope Francis rides in a popemobile through the crowds attending a General Audience in St. Peter's Square. In these visits, he opted to ride in an open vehicle instead of one with protective glass to remain close to his followers.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
Pope Francis touching the abdomen of a pregnant bride.
Newlywed couples, or sposi novelli, flocked to receive a blessing from Pope Francis. While many attending couples had to be married within the previous two months, this was sometimes flexible, and some couples were able to have the pope not only bless their union but also their unborn child, as this woman did.
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection
Pictured from behind, Pope Francis stands on a balcony waving to people below in Saint Peter's Square.
Pope Francis typically gave a special address called the Urbi et Orbi—meaning “to the city and the world”—on Easter and Christmas each year. 
Photograph by Dave Yoder, Nat Geo Image Collection