Saturday, February 21, 2026

In Saturday address Pope Leo XIV says to avoid both naivete and 'prophets of doom'

 

Pope Leo speaks to members of the Policoro ProjectPope Leo speaks to members of the Policoro Project  (@Vatican Media)

Pope: Avoid both naiveté and ‘prophets of doom’

Pope Leo receives members of the Italian Episcopal Conference’s “Policoro Project”, which supports young people in the country in finding employment.

Vatican News

“Young people, you are the beautiful face of an Italy that does not give up, that does not resign itself, that rolls up its sleeves and gets back on its feet.”

That was Pope Leo XIV's tribute on Saturday to members of the Policoro Project, created in December 1995 by Fr. Mario Operti, an Italian priest working in youth ministry.

From the outset, the initiative sought to evangelize the world of work, first in southern Italy and later throughout the country.

Born in the Mezzogiorno, or south of the country, an economically disadvantaged area plagued by organized crime, the project has since expanded beyond the workplace alone. The Pope praised its work against corruption, labour exploitation and injustice, and highlighted the transformation of assets confiscated from the mafia into social initiatives and support for young people launching businesses.



Spreading enthusiasm

Today, the Pope said, “we still need your commitment, especially in this season of demographic winter, of depopulation in the country’s most fragile areas, where young people risk becoming discouraged and withdrawing into themselves.”

Pope Leo added that “it is always time to spread your enthusiasm and sensitivity even to the most resistant environments and the most resigned people.”

To carry out its mission, the Policoro Project can rely on a “compass”: the Gospel, which holds “the true power that transforms hearts and the world,” and the Church’s social teaching, the study of which “helps us to love this age” and “provides tools to interpret reality.”

Pope Leo cautioned project members not to be “enchanted by prophets of doom who see everything negatively,” but neither to be naïve enough to think that everything is fine.

To build a society in keeping with God’s loving plan for humanity, he said, it is essential not to lose sight of the centrality of the human person, the common good, solidarity, subsidiarity, the universal destination of goods, participation, integral ecology and peace.

Community first

The third resource the Pope cited was the community, “as an incubator of the future.” While today’s culture promotes isolation, competition and the myth of the lone genius in economics, work, politics and communications, these fields in fact depend on “experts in social relationships”.

“When community life grows, in society as in the Church, we create the conditions for life to flourish,” Pope Leo said. “You will be fruitful whenever you care for community networks. Intelligence, talent, knowledge, social organization and industriousness develop thanks to good relationships.”

Those involved in the project, he added, can also rely on “spiritual fathers and mothers”, saints and witnesses whose social commitment over the centuries civic and charitable renewal. Pope Leo encouraged his listeners to learn about their lives and to share their stories, because there exists "a river of holiness that has made our communities fruitful."

Friday, February 20, 2026

Saint of the Day for Saturday

 




St. Peter Damian





St. Peter Damian is one of those stern figures who seem specially raised up, like St. John Baptist, to recall men in a lax age from the error of their ways and to bring them back into the narrow path of virtue. He was born at Ravenna and, having lost his parents when very young, he was left in the charge of a brother in whose house he was treated more like a slave than a kinsman.

As soon as he was old enough he was sent to tend swine. Another brother, who was archpriest of Ravenna, took pity on the neglected lad and undertook to have him educated. Having found a father in this brother, Peter appears to have adopted from him the surname of Damian.

Damian sent the boy to school, first at Faenza and then at Parma. He proved an apt pupil and became in time a master and a professor of great ability. He had early begun to inure himself to fasting, watching and prayer, and wore a hairshirt under his clothes to arm himself against the alurements of pleasure and the wiles of the devil. Not only did he give away much in alms, but he was seldom without some poor persons at his table, and took pleasure in serving them with his own hands.

After a time, Peter resolved to leave the world entirely and embrace a monastic life away from his own country. While his mind was full of these thoughts, two religious of St. Benedict, belonging to Fonte Avellana of the Reform of St. Romuald, happened to call at the house where he lived, and he was able to learn much from them about their Rule and mode of life. This decided him and he joined their hermitage, which was then in the greatest repute. The hermits, who dwelled in pairs in separate cells, occupied themselves chiefly in prayer and reading, and lived a life of great austerity.

Peter's excessive watchings brought on a severe insomnia which was cured with difficulty, but which taught him to use more discretion. Acting upon this experience, he now devoted considerable time to Sacred studies and became as well versed in the Holy Scriptures as he formerly had been in profane literature.

By the unanimous consent of the hermits, he was ordered to take upon himself the government of the Community in the event of the superior's death. Peter's extreme reluctance obliged the abbot to make it a matter of obedience. Accordingly, after the abbot's decease about the year 1043, Peter assumed the direction of that holy family, which he governed with great wisdom and piety. He also founded five other hermitages in which he places Priors under his own general direction. His chief care was to foster in his disciples the spirit of solitude, charity, and humility. Many of them became great lights of the Church, including St. Dominic Loricatus, and St. John of Lodi, his successor in the priory of the Holy Cross, who wrote St. Peter's life and at the end of his days became Bishop of Gubbio.

For years Peter Damian was much employed in the service of the Church by successive Popes, and in 1057 Stephen IX prevailed upon him to quit his desert and made him Cardinal-bishop of Ostia. Peter constantly solicited Nicholas II to grant him leave to resign his bishopric and return to the solitude, but the Pope had always refused.

His successor, Alexander II, out of affection for the holy man, was prevailed upon with difficulty to consent, but reserved the power to employ him in Church matters of importance, as he might hereafter have need of his help. The saint from that time considered himself dispensed not only from the responsibility of governing his See, but from the supervision of the various religious settlements he had controlled and reduced himself to the condition of a simple monk.

In this retirement, he edified the Church by his humility, penance and compunction, and labored in his writings to enforce the observance of morality and discipline. His style is vehement, and his strictness appears in all his works - especially when he treats of the duties of the clergy and of monks. He severely rebuked the Bishop of Florence for playing a game of chess. That prelate acknowledged his amusement to be unworthy, and received the holy man's reproof meekly, submitting to do penance by reciting the psalter three times and by washing the feet of twelve poor men and giving them each a piece of money.

Peter wrote a treatise to the Bishop of Besancon in which he inveighed against the custom by which the Canons of that Church sang the Divine Office seated in choir, though he allowed all to sit for the lessons. He recommended the use of the discipline as a substitute for long penitential fasts. He wrote most severely on the obligation of monks and protested against their wandering abroad, seeing that the spirit of retirement is an essential condition of their state. He complained bitterly of certain evasions whereby many palliated real infractions of their vow of poverty. He justly observed, "We can never restore primitive discipline when once it is decayed; and if we, by negligence, suffer any diminution in what remains established, future ages will never be able to repair the breach. Let us not draw upon ourselves so foul a reproach; but let us faithfully transmit to posterity the example of virtue which we have received from our forefathers."

St. Peter Damian fought simony with great vigor, and equally vigorously upheld clerical celibacy; and as he supported a severely ascetical, semi-eremitical life for monks, so he was an encourager of common life for the secular clergy. He was a man of great vehemence in all he said and did; it has been said of him that "his genius was to exhort and impel to the heroic, to praise striking achievements and to record edifying examples...an extraordinary force burns in all that he wrote". 

In spite of his severity, St. Peter Damian could treat penitents with mildness and indulgence where charity and prudence required it. Henry IV, the young king of Germany, had married Bertha, daughter of Otto, Marquee of the Marches of Italy, but two years later he sought a divorce under the pretense that the marriage had never been consummated.

By promises and threats, he won over the archbishop of Mainz, who summoned a council for the purpose of sanctioning the annulment of the marriage; but Pope Alexander II forbade him to consent to such an injustice and chose Peter Damian as his legate to preside over the synod.

The aged legate met the king and bishops at Frankfurt, laid before them the order and instructions of the Holy See, and entreated the king to pay due regard to the law of God, the Canons of the Church and his own reputation, and also to reflect seriously on the public scandal which so pernicious an example would give. The nobles likewise entreated the monarch not to stain his honor by conduct so unworthy.

Henry, unable to resist this strong opposition, dropped his project of a divorce, but remained the same at heart, only hating the queen more bitterly than ever. Peter hastened back to his desert of Fonte Avellana.

Whatever austerities he prescribed for others, he practiced himself, remitting none of them even in his old age. He use to make wooden spoons and other little useful things that his hands might not be idle during the time he was not at work or at prayer.

When Henry, Archbishop of Ravenna, had been excommunicated for grievous enormities, Peter was again sent by Alexander II as legate to settle the troubles. Upon his arrival at Ravenna he found that the prelate had just died, but he brought the accomplices of his crimes to a sense of their guilt and imposed on them suitable penance. This was Damian's last undertaking for the Church.

As he was returning towards Rome, he was arrested by an acute attack of fever in a monastery outside Faenza, and died on the eighth day of this illness, while the monks were reciting Matins round about him, on February 22, 1072.

St. Peter was one of the chief forerunners of the Hildebrandine reform in the Church. His preaching was most eloquent and his writing voluminous, and he was declared a doctor of the Church in 1828. His feast day is February 21st.

Martyrs from present day state of Georgia (circa 16th century) will be beatified in the fall in Savannah

 

Georgia martyrs killed for defending marriage to be beatified in U.S. this October

Five Spanish Franciscan friars, collectively known as the “Georgia Martyrs,” will be beatified in Savannah, Georgia, on Oct. 31





Kate Quiñones

The five Spanish Franciscan friars collectively known as the “Georgia Martyrs” will be beatified in Savannah, Georgia, on Oct. 31, according to a recent Vatican announcement.

Cardinal Francis Leo of the Archdiocese of Toronto, Canada, will celebrate the beatification, according to the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints.

In September 1597, the five Franciscans were killed for defending the sanctity of marriage at a mission in present-day Georgia. In January 2025, Pope Francis recognized Father Pedro de Corpa, Father Blas Rodríguez, Father Miguel de Añon, Brother Antonio de Badajóz, and Father Francisco de Veráscola as martyrs.

The missionaries left their homes in Spain to evangelize and minister to the Indigenous people, about two decades before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. They lived among the native Gaule people along the coast of Georgia, evangelizing, catechizing, and providing sacraments. Often a single Franciscan friar would serve in a village of 1,000, according to the Georgia Martyrs website.

Conflict arose when an heir to a Guale chiefdom, a young Indigenous man named Juanillo, sought to take a second wife as was the Guale custom. Father de Corpa told him that as a baptized Christian, he couldn’t have multiple wives and that he would oppose his succession as chief if he persisted.

In response, Juanillo killed the priest with a stone hatchet on Sept. 14, 1597. He and a band of men proceeded to attack the other Guale missions in the area, killing all of the friars except one, Francisco de Avila, whom they kidnapped and tortured for 10 months until the governor of St. Augustine secured his release.

De Avila refused to testify against the men in a trial because he knew they would be put to death. His personal account of the episode would later be used as a source by Luís Gerónimo de Oré in “The Martyrs of Florida” (c. 1619). Though the original manuscript was never recovered, it, along with two other primary sources, are the principal sources of information for the martyrs’ stories.

The cause for canonization of the Georgia Martyrs officially began in 1950. A documentary of their lives, “For the Sake of the Gospel,” released in 2024, can be viewed here.

The SSPX defiantly rejects further talks with Rome; plans to consecrate new bishops; causing real challenges for Pope Leo

 

Pope Leo faces crisis as breakaway Catholic group rejects Vatican talks

The group said it needs the new bishops as a matter of survival to minister to its faithful

In a letter to the Vatican’s doctrine chief, the Society of St. Pius X said the Holy See's threat of sanctions and schism if it goes ahead with the 1 July ceremony "is hardly compatible with a genuine desire for fraternal exchanges and constructive dialogue." (AP)


A breakaway Catholic traditionalist group on Thursday rejected the Vatican’s offer of talks, suggesting a collision course with Pope Leo XIV over its planned consecrations of new bishops without his consent.

In a letter to the Vatican’s doctrine chief, the Society of St. Pius X said the Holy See's threat of sanctions and schism if it goes ahead with the 1 July ceremony "is hardly compatible with a genuine desire for fraternal exchanges and constructive dialogue."

The SSPX, as the group is known, celebrates the old Latin Mass and was created in opposition to the Second Vatican Council, the 1960s meetings that modernized the Catholic Church and allowed for the celebration of Mass in the vernacular.

The SSPX broke with Rome in 1988, after its founder, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, consecrated four bishops without papal consent, arguing that it was necessary for the survival of the church’s tradition.

The Vatican promptly excommunicated Lefebvre and the four other bishops, and the group today still has no legal status in the church.

In the decades since that original schismatic act with Rome, the group has continued to grow, with schools, seminaries and parishes around the world.

It counts 733 priests, 264 seminarians, 145 religious brothers, 88 oblates and 250 religious sisters – a Catholic reality that poses a real threat to the Vatican because it represents a parallel church.

Earlier this month, the SSPX announced it planned to consecrate four new bishops on 1 July, since there are only two left from the original group. The SSPX said it needs the new bishops as a matter of survival to minister to the SSPX faithful, whose numbers have grown around the world.

The threat of a new consecration ceremony has created the first tangible crisis for Leo, who has sought to pacify relations with Catholic traditionalists that worsened under Pope Francis.

While the SSPX is out of communion with the Holy See, plenty of Catholic traditionalists who are loyal to Rome but sympathetic to the SSPX plight are watching how Leo handles the challenge.

In a bid to head off the crisis, the Vatican’s doctrine chief Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández invited the SSPX superior, the Rev. Davide Pagliarani, to the Vatican for talks Feb. 12. He proposed a theological dialogue on Vatican II, but only if the SSPX suspends the planned consecration ceremony.

In a letter to Fernández posted on the SSPX website Thursday, Pagliarani recalled that he had proposed precisely such a dialogue in 2019 and received no reply. He said doctrinal talks now were impossible under such conditions, and that regardless they will never agree on Vatican II.

“Indeed, the hand extended to open the dialogue is unfortunately accompanied by another hand already poised to impose sanctions,” he wrote. “There is talk of breaking communion, of schism, and of ‘serious consequences.’”

With no hope for doctrinal agreement, Pagliarani asked instead for the Vatican to exercise charity, given the number of Catholic faithful who attend SSPX churches.

“The society is an objective reality: it exists,” Pagliarani wrote. “This same society asks you only to be allowed to continue to do this same good for the souls to whom it administers the holy sacraments.”

The Vatican said it had no immediate comment.

Friday Saints of the Day

 The Saints of Fatima

Feastday: February 20
Patron: of bodily ills; captives; people ridiculed for their piety; prisoners; sick people; against sickness
Birth: 1910
Death: 1920
Beatified: May 13, 2000, Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatima, Portugal, by Pope John Paul II
Canonized: May 13th, 2017, Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatima, Portugal by Pope Francis

Feastday: February 20
Patron: of bodily ills; captives; people ridiculed for their piety; prisoners; sick people; against sickness
Birth: June 11, 1908
Death: April 4, 1919
Beatified: May 13, 2000, Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatima, Portugal, by Pope John Paul II
Canonized: May 13, 2017, by Pope Francis


Francisco & Jacinta Marto were young shepherds from Fatima, Portugal. They witnessed the appearances of Mary in 1917 alongside their cousin Lucia. The Blessed Virgin entrusted to them messages of prayer, sacrifice and devotion culminating in the famous “Miracle of the Sun”. They were young yet they embraced suffering for the salvation of sinners, before succumbing to the Spanish flu.

 They were canonized in 2017 by Pope Francis, becoming the youngest non-martyr saints in the history of the Church. On May 13, 1917, in the countryside of Fatima, as they tended sheep in Cova da Iria while praying the Rosary, they witnessed a sudden flash of light and saw the beautiful lady, dressed in white, identifying herself as the Blessed Virgin Mary. For 6 months, she appeared to them on the 13th of the month, sharing messages of peace, penance, devotion to the Rosary, and the need for world peace. The local mayor literally arrested them so they were unable to meet with Mary on August 13th. The mayor wanted to silence their claims.

 Mary revealed three secrets to them; warning of war, the need to repent, and a vision of hell. She promised them heaven but warned of upcoming sufferings. They practiced acts of penance for the salvation of sinners. One day, with 70,000 pilgrims present the “Miracle of the Sun” took place. Confirmed by believers and skeptics alike, this event led to the devotion of Our Lady of Fatima.

 Francisco, ill from the Spanish flu, died on April 4, 1919 at the age of 10. Jacinta died on February 20, 1920 at the age of 9. They were beatified by St. John Paul II in 2000 and canonized by Pope Francis on May 13, 2027. Their devotion, coupled with continued miracles and conversions at Fatima has made their legacy a lasting source of faith for millions around the world. Saints Francisco & Jacinta, pray for us! 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Cardinals Cupich and Tobin spend Ash Wednesday with families of those detained by ICE or deported

 

'God does not need papers': Cardinals spend Ash Wednesday with ICE detainees, their families

by Camillo Barone


Chicago Cardinal Blase J. Cupich places ashes on the forehead of an attendee at the Ash Wednesday Mass near Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish, Feb. 18, 2026, in Melrose Park, a Chicago suburb. (Courtesy of Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership/Gordon Mayer)

Standing outdoors on a cold Ash Wednesday evening, Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago framed Lent as a public reckoning with fear, invisibility and faith lived under pressure in the immigrant community. 

As ashes were prepared and families gathered near Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Melrose Park, Cupich's homily drew a straight line between the ancient ritual of dust and the modern reality of detention, deportation and family separation.

"God does not need papers to know who or where you are," he said. "The world may look at your legal status, but God looks at your heart."

The outdoor Mass and community procession marked the start of Lent for thousands of Catholics organized by the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership, or CSPL, and the Scalabrinian Missionaries. It came days after a federal judge ordered the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to allow clergy access to the Broadview ICE detention facility for Ash Wednesday services.

More than 3,000 people — including relatives of those detained or deported — attended the Mass and walked the streets of Melrose Park in a peaceful procession. Families affected by immigration enforcement were among the first to receive ashes from Cupich, in a highly symbolic reversal of the marking and tracking many say defines their daily lives.

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, speaks at St. Lucy's Church in Newark Jan. 13, 2025, during an interfaith gathering of religious leaders committed to supporting immigrants facing the threat of mass deportation by the Trump administration. (OSV News/Gregory A. Shemitz)

Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, as well, began Ash Wednesday by celebrating Masses inside Delaney Hall detention center in Newark, where he met with women detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, emphasizing the church's responsibility to uphold human dignity in places of confinement. Tobin said starting the day with detainees was his priority before later celebrating Mass at St. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral.

Accompanied by auxiliary bishops from the Archdiocese of Newark, Tobin told Religion News Service that the Masses inside the facility were both sorrowful and marked by courage.

Cupich, in his homily, said: "This too is a day for those who are made to feel like dust, dust that can be swept away or treated as if they do not belong. It is a day for those who work with the dust of the earth in construction, in cleaning, in harvesting the crops of the fields, all to support their families. Yet remember from the beginning it is dust that God uses to create humanity."

Cupich's Mass was not a procession to Broadview, as previous public witness events have been, but its location and timing were inseparable from the legal and moral struggle over access to the detention center. On Feb. 12, U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman issued a preliminary injunction ordering DHS to permit clergy to minister to detainees on Ash Wednesday, writing: "The court finds that the government has substantially burdened plaintiffs' exercise of religion."

The ruling followed a lawsuit filed in November by the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership challenging DHS restrictions on prayer and pastoral access.

The group argued that its own religious freedom rights were violated under the First Amendment, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000. The court noted that DHS failed to demonstrate a compelling government interest or that its policies were the least restrictive means available.

Late Wednesday morning, DHS notified the group that it would comply with Gettleman's judicial injunction, requiring federal officials to permit a small delegation of clergy and women religious access to the Broadview ICE facility on Ash Wednesday.

Fr. Leandro Fossá, pastor at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish where Cupich celebrated Mass, was one of the religious in the delegation that entered the ICE detention center at 3 p.m. CST.

"The importance of the Mass with the people, and then the possibility of going inside the ICE detention, is because we want to guarantee the freedom of religion of this country and the possibility for every person to receive spiritual assistance from their religion," Fossá told NCR.

The choice of the parish in Melrose Park was not casual. The west suburban parish is in a neighborhood with a high concentration of families affected by deportation. In September 2025, an undocumented Mexican immigrant father of two, Silverio Villegas González, was fatally shot by ICE agents, an event that shook the parish and prompted novenas, memorial Masses and sustained organizing.

"We built a life together. He worked; he took care of us. He was a good person," Villegas' girlfriend said in an October NCR interview. She's been assisted since then by the parish community.

"We Catholics are moved by hope, despite the difficulties, despite the fear of many who don't go to work without measuring the consequences, many children who go to school and have anxiety because they don't know if — when they go back from school — their parents are going to be home," said Fossá.

Over the past year, the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership has organized a series of highly visible religious activities: a people's Mass outside the Great Lakes Naval Station, a Eucharistic procession at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish to grieve Villegas and multiple processions and Masses outside the Broadview facility calling for pastoral care and Communion inside.

During that same period, according to the coalition's lawsuit, ICE has denied access to advocates and clergy, while reports of deteriorating and inhumane conditions inside the facility have increased. Illinois elected officials were also denied access, according to media reports.

As ashes were imposed outside the Melrose Park parish, Cupich addressed the fear many families carry. "Today many of you live in fear of being marked and tracked, careful about names, identities, and lists," he said. "But today, you step forward freely to receive this mark, the sign of the cross."

He described the cross traced in ash as "more permanent than any government identity or record," telling worshippers, "It is a declaration that no matter what laws change, no matter what politicians say, and no matter what uncertainties you face, you are children of God."

For Fossá, that message has had a tangible effect on parishioners since the start of 2026. "We see hope, and many people say, 'Father, we know that we don't stand alone, and we know that those who do injustice will have to answer to God.' "

"We also see people that are not afraid. They know of the possible consequences, but they are not afraid because they know that they are not alone," he said.

What Pope Leo XIV had to share in meeting with the Legionaries of Christ

 

Pope Leo XIV holds an audience with Legionaries of Christ on February 19, 2026Pope Leo XIV holds an audience with Legionaries of Christ on February 19, 2026  (@Vatican Media)

Pope to Legionaries of Christ: Religious authority is service, not domination

Meeting with the General Chapter of the Legionaries of Christ, Pope Leo XIV says the role of authority in religious life is to focus the community on Christ, not as a means to dominate members.

By Devin Watkins

Pope Leo XIV met on Thursday with participants in the General Chapter of the Legionaries of Christ, a religious congregation founded in Mexico in 1941.

In his address, the Pope said General Chapters offer religious orders an opportunity to listen to the Holy Spirit and engage in communal discernment so as to guide the community into the future.

The Legionaries have received a charism within the Church, despite historical expressions and scandals that have led to pain and crises, he noted.

Pope Leo encouraged the congregation’s members to continue to recall their history and seek renewal constantly in order to remain faithful to the Gospel, saying their charism offers a “valuable contribution” to the Church and the spiritual family of Regnum Christi, a lay movement.

“A charism is a gift of the Holy Spirit,” he said. “Every institute and each of its members are called to embody it personally and in community, in a continuous process of deepening their own identity that places them and defines them within the Church and within society.”

Yet, he added, each charism contains various forms and styles of life, which should be welcomed and discerned in order to live out fidelity to God’s call.

“Remember, then, that you are not owners of the charism, but its custodians and servants,” he said. “You are called to give your life so that this gift may continue to be fruitful in the Church and in the world.”

Pope Leo XIV invited the Legionaries of Christ’s leaders to recall that authority in religious life must serve the common life and focus a congregation’s members on Christ, while “avoiding every form of control that does not respect people’s dignity and freedom.”

“Authority, in religious life, is not understood as domination, but as spiritual and fraternal service to those who share the same vocation,” he said. “Its exercise must be expressed in the ‘art of accompaniment’.”

Leaders of religious orders must seek a form of governance characterized by “mutual listening, co-responsibility, transparency, fraternal closeness, and communal discernment,” he said.

Healthy forms of governance added the Pope, foster subsidiarity and responsible participation of all members.

Missionary unity is not uniformity and elimination of differences, he said, but rather harmonizes diversity and divergences so that all may benefit.

“This process requires humility to listen, interior freedom to speak sincerely, and openness to accept shared discernment,” he said. “It is a demand inherent in every vocation that is lived in community.”

In conclusion, Pope Leo XIV exhorted the Legionaries of Christ to avoid particular or regional interests but instead to guide their congregation in interior freedom.

“May this Chapter open you to a time of hope. The Lord continues to call and send; to heal and to purify,” he said. “Therefore, your task is to discern how to respond with fidelity to the present that God places in your hands.”

Pope Leo XIV announces visits across Italy from May - August

 

Pope Leo XIV will visit Pompeii, Naples, and Lampedusa this yearPope Leo XIV will visit Pompeii, Naples, and Lampedusa this year  (@Vatican Media)

Pope to visit Pompeii, Naples, and Lampedusa on pastoral tour of Italy

The Prefecture of the Papal Household announces Pope Leo’s pastoral day visits in Italy this year, including Pompeii, Naples, Acerra, Pavia, Assisi, Rimini, and Lampedusa.

By Salvatore Cernuzio and Kielce Gussie

Pope Leo XIV is scheduled to make a number of trips in Italy, including to the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa, in 2026. The Prefecture of the Papal Household today announced the calendar of pastoral visits in Italy. The months of May, June, July, and August will be marked with these visits, meetings, and moments of prayer.

One year anniversary – in Pompeii and Naples

May 8 marks the one-year anniversary of Pope Leo’s election to the papacy and it will signal the start of this Italian tour. The Holy Father will begin his visits in Pompeii on this day.

One year prior, the newly elected Pope Leo XIV stepped out onto the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica and said, “Today is the day of the Supplication to Our Lady of Pompeii. Our Mother Mary always wants to walk with us, be close, and help us with her intercession and love.”

In 2026, the Pope will spend the day at the Pontifical Shrine of the Blessed Virgin of the Holy Rosary of Pompeii. This has been a pilgrimage destination for four Popes and millions of people who come gather for the Supplication to the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompeii twice a year, in May and November.

Pontifical Shrine of the Blessed Virgin of the Holy Rosary of Pompeii

St. Bartolo Longo, whom Pope Leo canonized in October 2025, founded the Shrine and wrote the prayer that is used during this Supplication. The Pope will pray this same prayer after presiding over Mass.

He will stay for lunch in the city before heading to Naples in the afternoon. There, two events are scheduled: a meeting with the clergy and religious in the Cathedral and a gathering with the citizens in Plebiscito Square.

A trip long in the making

Just a few weeks later, Pope Leo will travel to Acerra—one of the towns in the “Land of Fires”. This is an area between Naples and Caserta which has been plagued for decades by the illegal disposal of toxic waste and the burning of plastic and industrial materials.

Together with Nola and Marigliano, Acerra makes up what international scientific journals have called the "Triangle of Death," due to the high mortality rate linked to environmental pollution

On May 24, 2020, Pope Francis was planning to visit the town of Acerra to commemorate the anniversary of the signing of the encyclical Laudato si’. However, the COVID pandemic postponed the trip, which in the end did not take place.

On Augustinian soil

After almost a month, Pope Leo will make his next pastoral visit in Italy to the city of Pavia. On June 20, the Holy Father—who has repeatedly described himself as a “son of St. Augustine”—will travel to this city linked to the bishop of Hippo. In 722, St. Augustine’s remains had been transferred to the Basilica of San Pietro in Ciel d’Oro (Saint Peter in the Golden Heaven), where they remain to this day.


Across the sea…to Lampedusa

On July 4, the Pope will visit an island that held a special place in Pope Francis’ heart after his journey in 2013—the first of his pontificate. In the morning, Pope Leo will travel to the island, which has become a gateway for thousands of migrants from Africa and the Middle East to Italy and Europe.


During his visit, Pope Francis threw a wreath into the seas in honor of all the victims who have lost their lives trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea for a better life. Following in his predecessor’s footsteps, Pope Leo XIV will return to Lampedusa to offer comfort and encouragement to the guests at various hotspots and to those who assist them.

Back to Assisi

After a visit to Assisi to conclude the 81st General Assembly of the Italian Bishops’ Conference last year, the Pope will return to the Italian hillside city on August 6. During the first journey, the Holy Father promised the Franciscans he would come back for the celebrations of the 800th anniversary of St. Francis’ death.


Pope Leo praying at the tomb of St. Francis of Assisi in 2025

On the calendar for this August visit, Pope Leo is scheduled to meet with young people and preside over Mass at the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli.

One final visit

His final visit will be to participate in the 47th edition of the Meeting for Friendship among Peoples in Rimini. Besides meeting with the participants, the Pope will also preside over a Eucharistic celebration with the faithful of the Diocese.