ROME — Pope Leo XIV, an avid tennis player and sports fan, marked the start of the Winter Games on Friday by extolling the positive values of sport and fair play while warning that the pursuit of profits and performance risked corrupting sport entirely.
In a message entitled ''Life in Abundance'' issued on the same day as the Milan Cortina opening ceremony, Leo traced the history of Christian philosophers and popes who had identified sports and leisure activity as beneficial for both physical and spiritual development.
And he repeated his call for world leaders to respect the ancient tradition of an Olympic truce.
But drawing on his own experience as an athlete, Leo delved into a nuanced exploration of the value of sports and the risk when the ''dictatorship of performance'' posed by doping, match-fixing and other forms of corruption win out over fair play.
''Such dishonesty not only corrupts sporting activities themselves, but also demoralizes the general public and undermines the positive contribution of sport to society as a whole,'' he warned.
He called for sport to be accessible, to both poor people and women especially, and for fans to refrain from turning sport into a fanatical religion. Athletes, too, he said, must refrain from narcissism and becoming obsessed with their image and success.
''The cult of image and performance, amplified by media and digital platforms, risks fragmenting the person, separating body from mind and spirit,'' he warned.
True sport, he said, calls for a ''shared ethical accord'' between competitors, where the rules of the game are accepted and the integrity of the contest is respected.