Chapter 66
The Last Pope's Confession
Not long, however, after Zarathustra had freed himself from the magician, he again saw a person sitting beside the path which he followed, namely a tall, black man, with a haggard, pale countenance: THIS MAN grieved him exceedingly. “Alas,” said he to his heart, “there sitteth disguised affliction; methinketh he is of the type of the priests: what do THEY want in my domain? What! Hardly have I escaped from that magician, and must another necromancer again run across my path,— —Some sorcerer with laying-on-of-hands, some sombre wonder-worker by the grace of God, some anointed world-maligner, whom, may the devil…
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Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"I was seeking the pious man, a saint and an anchorite, who, alone in his forest, had not yet heard of what all the world knoweth at present."
Context: The pope explains why he's wandering in the mountains, looking for someone who doesn't know that God is dead.
This reveals how some people desperately seek those who still believe the old truths, hoping to find comfort in ignorance. The pope wants to find someone who hasn't faced the reality that's destroying him.
In Today's Words:
I was searching for the last person who hadn't heard the terrible news yet, someone still living in the old certainty that gave the rest of us purpose. I thought if I found him, there might still be a corner of the world where the faith I devoted my entire life to still meant something.
"O Zarathustra, thou art more pious than thou believest, with such an unbelief!"
Context: The pope recognizes something sacred in Zarathustra's honest rejection of false beliefs, seeing his rigorous authenticity as more genuinely spiritual than conventional faith.
This paradox suggests that honest questioning can be more spiritually authentic than blind faith. The pope sees that Zarathustra's 'godlessness' contains more truth and integrity than traditional piety.
In Today's Words:
There's something genuinely sacred in your rejection of false beliefs, more honest than a lifetime of institutional devotion. Your refusal to pretend has more integrity than all my years of service. Some deeper force has made your very skepticism into a spiritual practice more real than anything I ever achieved in the church.
"At last, however, he became old and soft and mellow and pitiful, more like a grandfather than a father, but most like a tottering old grandmother."
Context: Describing how God became progressively weaker through excessive pity and sympathy, losing all authority and force.
This shows how the pope sees God's downfall - not through cruelty, but through becoming too soft and permissive. The imagery of a 'tottering grandmother' suggests complete loss of authority and strength.
In Today's Words:
By the end, he had lost all authority and strength, becoming so permissive and sentimental that his power to inspire or demand anything simply dissolved. A God who tries to be everyone's comforting grandparent eventually stops being a God at all, just a well-meaning elder too soft to hold anyone accountable for anything.
"For that old God liveth no more: he is indeed dead."
Context: Zarathustra's final words to the pope, offering shelter in his cave while speaking the shared truth plainly and without cruelty.
This blunt statement closes the conversation not as a taunt but as a compassionate acknowledgment of shared reality. Zarathustra offers the pope refuge precisely because he understands that living honestly with this truth is better than the pope's lonely wandering.
In Today's Words:
The era you built your entire life around is genuinely finished, not metaphorically or temporarily but actually done, and no amount of loyalty or continued service will revive it. Staying honest about this is the only thing that can give you any kind of meaningful footing now that the old certainties are gone.
Thematic Threads
Identity
In This Chapter
The pope's entire identity was built on serving God, leaving him lost when that purpose dies
Development
Continues Zarathustra's exploration of self-creation versus inherited roles
In Your Life:
You might recognize this when your job title or family role becomes more important than what you actually contribute
Institutional Decay
In This Chapter
Both the church and the hermit saint have died, leaving only empty forms and confused followers
Development
Introduced here as a major theme about outdated systems
In Your Life:
You see this when organizations you once respected prioritize self-preservation over their original mission
Honest Questioning
In This Chapter
Zarathustra's godlessness is more spiritually pure than the pope's compromised faith
Development
Builds on earlier themes about the courage to reject inherited answers
In Your Life:
You experience this when asking difficult questions feels more authentic than accepting comfortable lies
Sacred Contradiction
In This Chapter
The pope finds blessing in Zarathustra's rejection of everything the pope represents
Development
Continues the theme that truth often appears opposite to expectations
In Your Life:
You might find that people who challenge your beliefs teach you more than those who simply agree
Purposeless Wandering
In This Chapter
The pope wanders the mountains seeking meaning after his life's work became meaningless
Development
Echoes earlier themes about the disorientation that follows rejected certainties
In Your Life:
You feel this when major life changes leave you unsure of your next steps or core values
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.
- 1
What does the last pope confess about how God died, and what does his confession reveal about how he truly felt about the God he served all his life?
analysis • surfaceOne way to read it
The pope says God suffocated from excessive pity for humanity, becoming weak and soft over time. This confession reveals that despite his lifelong service, the pope saw God's flaws clearly, suggesting loyalty and honest perception coexisted uncomfortably.
- 2
How does the pope's declaration that Zarathustra is 'more pious than thou believest' challenge the usual separation between genuine faith and honest doubt?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
The pope recognizes that Zarathustra's rigorous honesty produces something purer than conventional belief. This challenges the idea that faith and doubt are opposites, suggesting authentic questioning can embody more real spiritual integrity than institutional practice.
- 3
Think of someone you know who stayed committed to a job, organization, or relationship long after it stopped serving its original purpose. What kept them there, and what finally allowed them to see clearly?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
People often stay because their identity has merged with the institution, and leaving feels like admitting wasted years. Change usually comes when the gap between stated purpose and actual behavior becomes too large to ignore or justify.
- 4
Zarathustra criticizes God as 'equivocal' and 'indistinct,' saying good taste requires clarity. What belief or system in your own life might benefit from being held to the same standard of honest, critical examination?
application • deepOne way to read it
Productive answers might examine political affiliations, family traditions, or career narratives accepted without scrutiny. Honest examination often reveals gaps between stated values and actual function that have been quietly tolerated for years.
- 5
The pope says he is perhaps 'the most godless of us at present.' What does it mean when someone who devoted their life to a belief becomes the least connected to it, and have you seen this pattern anywhere?
reflection • deepOne way to read it
Deep institutional investment can blind us to gradual erosion of meaning. When someone finally admits they have lost faith in what they built their life around, the recognition itself becomes a form of devastating clarity that outsiders cannot access.
Critical Thinking Exercise
Audit Your Commitments
List three major commitments in your life - your job, a relationship, an organization, or a belief system. For each one, write down: What was the original purpose? What is the current reality? Are you staying out of genuine belief or just habit? This isn't about making dramatic changes, but about honest assessment.
Consider:
- •Consider whether your loyalty serves the original mission or just maintains the status quo
- •Think about what you might be avoiding by not examining these commitments closely
- •Ask yourself who you would be if you stepped away from commitments that no longer serve their purpose
Journaling Prompt
Write about a time when you realized something you believed in or committed to had changed or failed. How did you handle the gap between your investment and the reality? What did you learn about the difference between loyalty and wisdom?
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 67: The Ugliest Man's Confession
Zarathustra continues his mountain journey, but his search for the 'higher men' takes an unexpected turn. Despite the difficult encounters he's had, his heart fills with gratitude for the strange wisdom these meetings have brought him.





