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Pope Francis says he’s thought about when it’s time to ‘take leave’

(AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) Pope Francis greets the faithful at the end of the Regina Coeli prayer he held from his studio's window overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Sunday, May 13, 2018.

Vatican City • Pope Francis said Tuesday he has thought about when it might be time to “take leave” of his flock — a cryptic comment that could hint at another papal retirement down the line or a suggestion to other bishops that it’s time to go.

Francis made the remarks during his morning homily Tuesday; as is the norm, the Vatican didn’t release the full text but only selected excerpts.

Francis was reflecting on a biblical passage of St. Paul discerning when it was time to leave his flock in the care of others, a decision Francis said all bishops must make at some point.

“When I read this, I think about myself, because I’m a bishop and I’ll have to take my leave.”

He said bishops shouldn’t consider their vocation as “climbing in an ecclesiastic career.” Rather, he reminded them they are shepherds caring for a flock and that at a certain point the time will come to turn the flock over to someone else.

“I think about the bishops, of all the bishops,” he said. “May the Lord give the grace to all of us to be able to take our leave this way, with this spirit and strength.”

Francis has said retired Pope Benedict XVI “opened a door” to future popes to retire when he resigned in 2013. While the 81-year-old Francis has said he didn’t envisage a long papacy, he hasn’t said explicitly if he’d follow in Benedict’s footsteps and retire.

Francis may have also been referring to Chilean bishops implicated in a sex abuse cover-up scandal. Francis opened three days of an emergency summit with the 34 Chilean bishops Tuesday, and there is widespread expectation that at least some of them will offer to resign by the end of it.

The Vatican has said that during their first meeting, Francis gave the bishops a list of themes to meditate on, and that the time between now and their next meeting Wednesday would be devoted “exclusively to meditation and prayer.”

It appeared that Francis was guiding the bishops through a Jesuit-style examination of conscience. This internalized self-critique has been on display in recent years when Francis has issued a brutal public dressing down of the Vatican bureaucracy at Christmas.