Saturday, May 30, 2026

Pope Leo XIV meets with the Catholic Charismatic Renewal

 

Pope Leo meets with CHARISPope Leo meets with CHARIS  (ANSA)

Pope to Charismatic Renewal: Let Spirit lead you to communion, charity, mission

Meeting with members of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal for the first time since the beginning of his pontificate, Pope Leo XIV reflects on the movement's spiritual foundations and encourages its members to place their gifts at the service of the whole Church.

Vatican News

Pope Leo XIV welcomed representatives of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal to the Vatican on Saturday. Greeting members of communities, prayer groups, and evangelization schools from around the world, as well as leaders of CHARIS, the international service body of the Renewal, the Pope described the movement's spiritual vitality as one of the gifts with which God has blessed the Church.

The Catholic Charismatic Renewal was founded in the late 1960s and today encompasses prayer groups, communities, and evangelization initiatives across the world.

It places particular emphasis on the action of the Holy Spirit in the lives of believers through prayer, worship, Scripture and missionary outreach. Since 2019, the various expressions of the Renewal have been brought together through CHARIS, established by Pope Francis to foster communion and service.

Reflecting on the movement's development in the decades following the Second Vatican Council, Pope Leo recalled the appreciation shown by his predecessors.

He noted that Saint Paul VI saw in the Renewal a response to the growing secularization of society, while Pope St. John Paul II highlighted its missionary impulse and Pope Benedict XVI praised its emphasis on the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

The Pope also recalled Pope Francis' description of the Renewal as a "flood of grace" intended for the entire Church.

Five pillars of the Charismatic experience

Expressing his desire to strengthen the relationship between the See of Peter and the worldwide family of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, Pope Leo reflected on five key dimensions of its spiritual experience: baptism in the Spirit, prayer of praise, the Word of God, communion, and charity.

Beginning with baptism in the Spirit, he said the shared journey of faith within the Renewal has its source in "the personal experience of the Holy Spirit," which enables the grace of Baptism to become effective in the lives of believers and leads them to a deeper awareness of God's love.

The Pope explained that through this encounter, "God ceased to be a mere idea and became the real and ultimate expression of fatherhood."

The Holy Spirit, he said, brings reconciliation, peace and freedom, while opening believers to hope and to the certainty that nothing can separate them from the love of Christ.

"From this experience of the Holy Spirit comes the inner desire to be witnesses and heralds of his love," he said, as he encouraged members of the Renewal to bring God's consolation to those suffering from loneliness and emptiness.

Prayer shaped by praise

Turning to prayer, Pope Leo reflected on the place of praise and worship within the Charismatic tradition. The experience of the Holy Spirit, he explained, gives rise to a more spontaneous and sincere dialogue with God and opens the heart to thanksgiving and adoration.

"Worship and praise, which are so characteristic of your gatherings, are essential aspects of Christian prayer," he said. He noted that the Renewal has helped many rediscover these dimensions of prayer and bring them back to the forefront of Christian life.

Nourished by Sacred Scripture

The Pope also highlighted the importance of the Word of God within the life of the Renewal. The same Spirit who inspired Sacred Scripture, he said, continues to make it alive and active in the Church today.

"Scripture has therefore become for you a wonderful source of spiritual nourishment that enlightens and comforts," he said, adding that it serves as a source of discernment for daily choices and enriches communal prayer.

Unity as a fruit of the Spirit

Turning then to reflect on communion, Pope Leo stressed that "the Holy Spirit is the wellspring of communion."

He recalled the longstanding tradition of praying to the Holy Spirit for Christian unity, he said members of the Renewal have a particular appreciation for the Spirit's role in building harmony within the Church and fostering relationships with Christians of other denominations.

The Holy Spirit, he explained, creates unity among the various charisms and communities of the Renewal while strengthening bonds throughout the wider Christian family.

Love expressed in charity

Concluding his reflections, the Pope focused on charity, describing it as one of the clearest fruits of life in the Spirit.

"The renewed presence of the Spirit has awakened in you a new capacity to love," he said, a love directed both towards God and towards neighbour, particularly those who suffer.

Praising the many charitable initiatives that have emerged from the Renewal, Pope Leo encouraged members to remain attentive to the poor and vulnerable. "I invite you, then, to keep alive this love for the poor, which reveals the true face of God," he said.

A call to humble service

Bringing his address to a close, the Pope encouraged members of the Renewal to continue their mission within the Church.

"Put yourselves at the service of your dioceses and parishes," he urged. "Take care never to give way to the desire for self-promotion, or the pursuit of power or personal prestige."

Pope Leo concluded by praying that the Spirit would always be "a light and a source of strength" on their personal and communal journey.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Saint of the Day for Saturday

 

St. Joan of Arc

Feastday: May 30
Patron: of soldiers and France
Birth: 1412
Death: 1431
Canonized: Pope Benedict XV




St. Joan of Arc is the patroness of soldiers and of France.

On January 6, 1412, Joan of Arc was born to pious parents of the French peasant class in the obscure village of Domremy, near the province of Lorraine. At a very early age, she was said to have heard the voices of St. Michael, St. Catherine, and St. Margaret.

At first the messages were personal and general, but when she was 13-years-old, she was in her father's garden and had visions of Saint Michael, Saint Catherine, and Saint Margaret, each of whom told her to drive the English from French territory. They also asked that she bring the Dauphin to Reims for his coronation.

After their messages were delivered and the saints departed, Joan cried, as "they were so beautiful."

When she was sixteen-years-old, she asked her relative, Durand Lassois, to take her to Vaucouleurs, where she petitioned Robert de Baudricourt, the garrison commander, for permission to visit the French Royal Court in Chinon.

Despite Baudricourt's sarcastic response to her request, Joan returned the following January and left with the support of two of Baudricourt's soldiers: Jean de Metz and Bertrand de Poulengy.

Jean de Metz admitted Joan had confided in him, saying, "I must be at the King's side ... there will be no help if not from me. Although I would rather have remained spinning [wool] at my mother's side ... yet must I go and must I do this thing, for my Lord wills that I do so."

With Metz and Poulengy at her side, Joan met Baudricourt and predicted a military reversal at the Battle of Rouvray near Orléans, which were confirmed several days later by a messenger's report. When Baudricourt realized the distance of the battle's location and the time it would have taken Joan to make the journey, he concluded she had seen the reversal by Divine revelation, which caused him to believe her words.

Once she had Baudricourt's belief, Joan was granted an escort to Chinon through hostile Burgundian territory. For her safety, she was escorted while dressed as a male soldier, which later led to charges of cross-dressing, but her escorts viewed as a sound precaution.

Two members of her escort confirmed they and the people of Vaucouleurs gave her the clothing and had been the ones to suggest she don the outfit.

When she arrived in the Royal Court, she met in a private conference with Charles VII and won his trust. Yolande of Aragon, Charles' mother-in-law, planned a finance relief expedition to Orléans and Joan asked to travel with the army while wearing armor, which the Royal government agreed to. They also provided Joan's armor and she depended on donations for everything she took with her.

With a donated horse, sword, banner, armor, and more, Joan arrived to Orléans and quickly turned the Anglo-French conflict into a religious war.

Charles' advisors worried Joan's claims of doing God's work could be twisted by his enemies, who could easily claim she was a sorceress, which would link his crown to works of the devil. To prevent accusations, the Dauphin ordered background inquiries and a theological exam at Poitiers to verify Joan's claims.

In April 1429, the commission of inquiry "declared her to be of irreproachable life, a good Christian, possessed of the virtues of humility, honesty and simplicity." Rather than deciding on whether or not Joan was acting on the basis of divine inspiration, theologians at Poitiers told the Dauphin there was a "favorable presumption" on the divine nature of her mission.

Charles was satisfied with the report but theologians reminded him Joan must be tested. They claimed, "[t]o doubt or abandon her without suspicion of evil would be to repudiate the Holy Spirit and to become unworthy of God's aid."

They suggested her test should be a test of her claim to lift the siege of Orléans, as she originally predicted would happen.

In response to the test, Joan arrived at Orléans on April 29, 1429, where Jean d'Orléans, the acting head of the ducal family of Orléans, ensured she was excluded from war councils and kept ignorant of battles.

During the five months prior to Joan's arrival to Orléans, the French had only attempted one offensive assault, which resulted in their defeat, but after her arrival, things began to change.

Though Joan claimed the army was always commanded by a nobleman and that she never killed anyone in battle since she preferred only to carry her banner, which she preferred "forty times" better than a sword, several noblemen claimed she greatly effected their decisions since they accepted she gave Divinely inspired advice.

On May 4, the Armagnacs captured the fortress of Saint Loup and the next day led to fortress Saint-Jean-le-Blanc, which was deserted. With Joan at the army's side, English troops approached the army to stop their advance but a cavalry charge was all it took to turn the English away without a fight.

The Armagnacs captured an English fortress build around the Les Augustins monastery and attacked the English stronghold Les Tourelles on May 7. Joan was shot with an arrow between her neck and shoulder as she held her banner outside Les Tourelles, but returned to encourage the final assault to take the fortress. The next day, the English retreated from Orléans and the siege was over.

When Joan was in Chinon and Poitiers, she had declared she would show a sign at Orléans, which many believe was the end of the siege. Following the departure of the English, prominent clergymen began to support her, including the Archbishop of Embrun and the theologian Jean Gerson, each of which wrote supportive treatises.

After the Orléans victory, Joan was able to persuade Charles VII to allow her to march into other battles to reclaim cities, each of which ended in victory. When the military supplies began to dwindle, they reached Troyes, where Brother Richard, a wandering friar, had warned the city about the end of the world and was able to convince them to plant beans, which yields an early harvest. Just as the beans ripened, Joan and the army arrived and was able to restore their supplies.

Following their march to Troyes, Joan and the French military made its way to Paris, where politicians failed to secure Duke Philip of Burgundy's agreement to a truce. Joan was present at the following battles and suffered a leg wound from a crossbow bolt. Despite one failed mission - taking La-Charité-sur-Loire" - Joan and her family were ennobled by Charles VII in reward of her actions on the battlefield.

 A truce with England came following Joan's ennoblement but was quickly broken. When Joan traveled to Compiègne to help defend against an English and Burgundian siege, she was captured by Burgundian troops and held for a ransom of 10,000 livres tournois. There were several attempts to free her and Joan made many excape attempts, including jumping from her 70-foot (21m) tower, landing on the soft earth of a dry moat, but to no avail. She was eventually sold to the English for 10,000 gold coins and was then tried as a heretic and witch in a trial that violated the legal process of the time.

Clerical notary Nicolas Bailly, who was responsible to collect testimony against Joan, was unable to find any evidence against her. Without evidence, the courts lacked grounds to initiate trial but one was opened anyway. They denied Joan the right to a legal advisor and filled the tribunal with pro-English clergy rather than meeting the medieval Church's requirement to balance the group with impartial clerics.

When the first public examination opened, Joan pointed out that the partisans were against her and she asked for "ecclesiastics of the French side" to provide balance, but her request was denied.

Jean Lemaitre, the Vice-Inquisitor of Northern France, objected to the trial from the beginning and many eyewitnesses later reported he was forced to cooperate after the English threatened to kill him. Other members of the clergy were threatened when they refused as well, so the trial continued.

The trial record includes statements from Joan that eyewitnesses later claimed astonished the court since she was an illiterate peasant who was able to escape theological traps. The most well-known exchange was when Joan was "[a]sked if she knew she was in God's grace, she answered: 'If I am not, may God put me there; and if I am, may God so keep me.'"

The question is a trap because the church doctrine was that no one could be certain of being in God's grace. If she answered yes, she would have been charged with heresy, but if she answered no, she would have been confessing her own guilt. Notary Boisguillaume later testified that "[t]hose who were interrogating her were stupefied."

Many members of the tribunal later testified important parts of the transcript were altered.

Joan was held in a secular prison guarded by English soldiers, instead of being in an ecclesiastical prison with nuns as her guards per Inquisitorial guidelines. When Joan appealed to the Council of Basel and the Pope to be placed in a proper prison, Bishop Cauchon denied her request, which would have stopped his proceeding.

While imprisoned, Joan wore military clothing so she could tie her clothing together, making it harder to be raped. There was no protection in a dress, and a few days after she started wearing one she told a tribunal member that "a great English lord had entered her prison and tried to take her by force." Following the attempted rape, Joan returned to wearing male clothing as a precaution and to raise her defenses against molestation.

Jean Massieu testified her dress had been taken by the guards and she had nothing else to wear.

When she returned to male clothing, she was given another count of heresy for cross-dressing, though it was later disputed by the inquisitor presiding over court appeals after the war. He found that cross-dressing should be evaluated based on context, including the use of clothing as protection against rape if it offered protection.

In accordance to the inquisitor's doctrine, Joan would have been justified in wearing armor on a battlefield, men's clothing in prison and dressing as a pageboy when traveling through enemy territory.

The Chronique de la Pucelle states it deterred molestation when Joan was camped in the field but she donned a dress when men's garments were unnecessary.

Clergy who testified at the posthumous appellate trial confirmed that she wore male clothing in prison to deter molestation.

Though the Poitiers record did not survive the test of time, Joan had referred the court to the Poitiers inquiry when questioned about her clothing and circumstances indicate the Poitiers clerics approved the practive. She had also kept her hair short through the military campaigns and during her imprisonment, which Inquisitor Brehal, theologian Jean Gerson and all of Joan's supporters understood was for practical reasons.

Despite the lack of incriminating evidence, Joan was condemned and sentenced to die in 1431.

Eyewitness accounts of Joan's execution by burning on May 30, 1431 describe how she was tied to a tall pillar at the Vieux-Marché in Rouen. She asked Fr. Martin Ladvenu and Fr. Isambart de la Pierre to hold a crucifix before her and an English soldier made a small cross she put in the front of her dress. After she died, the English raked the coals to expose her body so no one could spread rumors of her escaping alive, then they burned her body two more times to reduce it to ashes so no one could collect relics. After burning her body to ash, the English threw her remains into the Seine River and the executioner, Geoffroy Thérage, later said he "... greatly feared to be damned."

In 1452, during an investigation into Joan's execution, the Church declared a religious play in her honor at Orléans would let attendees gain an indulgence by making a pilgrimage to the event.

A posthumous retrial opened following the end of the war. Pope Callixtus III authorized the proceeding, which has also been called the "nullification trial," after Inquisitor-General Jean Bréhal and Joan's mother Isabelle Romée requested it.

The trial was meant to determine if Joan's condemnation was justly handled, and of course at the end of the investication Joan received a formal appeal in November 1455 and the appellate court declared Joan innocent on July 7 1456.

Joan of Arc was a symbol of the Catholic League during the 16th century and when Félix Dupanloup was made bishop of Orléans in 1849, he pronounced a panegyric on Joan of Arc and led efforts leading to Joan of Arc's beatification in 1909. On May 16, 1920, Pope Benedict XV canonized her.

Centuries after her death, Joan became known as a semi-legendary figure. There were several sources of information about her life, time on the battlefield and trials, with the main sources being chronicles.

Many women have seen Joan as a brave and active woman who operated within a religious tradition that believed a person of any class could receive a divine calling.

Joan of Arc has been depicted in several works by famous writers such as William Shakespeare (Henry VI, Part 1), Voltaire (The Maid of Orleans), Mark Twain (Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc), and many many more.

Cardinal Cupich discusses Pope Leo's 1st encyclical

 

Cardinal Blase CupichCardinal Blase Cupich  (2025 Getty Images)

Cardinal Cupich: Pope's encyclical 'a new lens' for Church's Social Doctrine

In an interview with Vatican News, the Archbishop of Chicago, Cardinal Blase Cupich, says Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical 'Magnifica humanitas' recognizes that "new technology has the potential to overtake our capacity to control it, and the Pope is giving us a wake-up call to seize this moment with urgency."

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

“This document provides us with a new lens to read the entire Social Doctrine of the Church.”

In an interview with Vatican News, Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, reflected on Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical, Magnifica humanitas, on safeguarding the human person in the age of artificial intelligence.

The Cardinal discussed the Pope’s warning against technological self-sufficiency, the social implications of artificial intelligence, and the relevance of Catholic social teaching in the digital age.

 

Cardinal Cupich, what do you see as the significance of Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical, Magnifica humanitas?

The document’s principal contribution comes in the Holy Father’s challenge to humanity to make a choice: either to build the new Jerusalem or another Tower of Babel.

The first image is anchored in the story of the prophet Nehemiah, who brings families together after the exile. As the Pope writes, Nehemiah “assigned each of them a section of the wall to rebuild, listened to their concerns, coordinated their efforts and addressed any opposition.” This city comes to birth not through the initiative of one powerful individual, but through “the shared responsibility of all: men, women, priests, artisans, heads of households and young people all play a part. It is an undertaking with God at the center, which rebuilds relationships before rebuilding with stones.”

This is a harmony that arises when people assume their proper role and recognize that their strength comes from the Lord.

The Tower of Babel, on the other hand, represents a city aspiring to reach heaven without God’s blessing. Built on pride and claims of self-sufficiency, communication breaks down, and people no longer understand one another.

Chicago is globally recognized as a center of business, technology, innovation, and industry. What reaction are you seeing to this text, which also engages the tech world and calls for safeguarding humanity in the age of artificial intelligence?

The first news reports in Chicago focused on the reactions of university students, and we need to listen carefully to them because this new technology will have profound consequences for their future.

From those interviewed, students were very laudatory of the Holy Father and expressed a keen interest in reading the document.

Which of Pope Leo’s concerns in the text resonates most with you? What would you most like people in your Archdiocese to take away from it?

This document provides us with a new lens through which to read the entire Social Doctrine of the Church. The Pope makes this clear in the first chapter, where he offers a brilliant review of the initiatives of the Popes since Leo XIII. Pope Leo XIV is clear that this is Church doctrine and not simply a body of teaching that Catholics may choose to accept or ignore.

Thinking of Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum novarum, which Pope Leo XIV frequently references, do you believe the digital revolution can be compared, in terms of its scale and impact, to the Industrial Revolution?

There are similarities, but there are also important differences.

This new technology has the potential to overtake our capacity to control it, and the Pope is giving us a wake-up call to seize this moment with urgency.

New York Archbishop Ronald Hicks shares perspective on Pope Leo's 1st encyclical

 

Archbishop Ronald Hicks of New York in St. Patrick's CathedralArchbishop Ronald Hicks of New York in St. Patrick's Cathedral  (AFP or licensors)

Archbishop Hicks of New York: 'Magnifica humanitas' to shape future generations

In an interview with Vatican News, Archbishop Ronald Hicks of New York calls Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical 'Magnifica humanitas' essential for generations to come and insists that Pope Leo is raising the right issues, especially on the transforming nature of work, as young people of his Archdiocese ask: 'Am I studying for a career that won't exist in 10 years?'

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

"I feel that the Holy Father has his finger on the pulse of the real issues of what's going on in this world. He's addressing them. AI is here to stay"

In an interview with Vatican News following Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical, Archbishop Ronald Hicks of New York expressed this, as he welcomed the Holy Father’s decision to address AI early in his pontificate.

Describing Magnifica humanitas as “timely,” “relevant,” and essential for generations to come, the Archbishop of New York recognizes that artificial intelligence is here to stay and praises Pope Leo for confronting the issue directly and working to ensure technological development remains rooted in human dignity and the common good.

He expresses his gratitude to the Holy Father "for giving us in such an early stage of his pontificate, something like this, of substance and something that's relevant and needed."




Archbishop Hicks, what do you see as the significance of Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical, Magnifica humanitas?

First of all, I'm really grateful for this encyclical. I feel that the Holy Father has his finger on the pulse of the real issues of what's going on in this world. He's addressing them. AI is here to stay, and it's something that everyone is talking about. I think our Holy Father, from the very beginning, he's demonstrating that as a Church, we're going to engage in the world and we're going to engage in real topics. This is a timely issue. This is a relevant issue. What I also appreciate about what he's set up in this encyclical is that he's taking dialogue seriously. He wants to have conversations around AI and what's the best way to use it. He's not saying, let's just hide from it and let's pretend it doesn't exist. He's saying it does exist, but where is there going to be some ethical governance; where is there going to be some shared responsibility; where's there going to be the cooperation in actually how we use AI for the common good.  I'm not only grateful, I'm really excited about this encyclical. I think the world needs it. It's being very well received. I can't wait for us to continue with this dialogue in this conversation with each other about it.

Right. Pope Leo certainly is not fearful of technology. He has a passion for mathematics. He has a bachelor’s degree in mathematics... You are the Archbishop of New York, a city often seen as a center of power, business, technology, and innovation. What reaction are you seeing to this text, which also engages industry and calls for safeguarding humanity in the age of artificial intelligence?

I have heard and seen nothing but a sense of openness, acceptance, gratefulness, of receiving this encyclical from the Holy Father. Everyone is saying that there are so many things that we don't understand about AI. So let's start talking about it, and the fact that the Holy Father himself, and that the Catholic Church is in the center of this. Even people who aren't practicing faithful Catholics are engaged in this conversation. It is a very welcome and open conversation that's happening. And I think people want to ask those questions: Are we just going to let AI drive itself? Are we just going to let it be controlled by a few people only to be profit driven? Or can it be used for the good of the world, for the good of humanity?

I also like that in the encyclical that Pope Leo is really reflecting on what does it mean to be human. In a world that is growing with more sophistication in technology and in the ways that AI can act, I think there are some good questions being posed on what does it mean to be human? It's being embraced by everyone because at the end of the day, we're all human. We're all in this game together and I hope all of our hearts are united and we want to promote that human dignity for all. There are so many things contained in this beautifully dense text.

Which of Pope Leo’s concerns expressed in the text resonates most with you? What would you like to see people take away from it, even in your Archdiocese?

I think sometimes we want to reduce it to a couple of sound bites. Yet I think it's one of those documents, one of those encyclicals, that we should sit with, discern over, pray with, and talk about and reflect. To your question, what's something that really popped for me? I think that's [how he] connects in this world. He has a part there about how is AI going to affect the job market. I listened to our young adults, our young people, and this topic of AI is very, very much at the center of their concerns, of what they're thinking about, what they're worrying.

Young people are asking the question, am I studying for something right now, for a job, for a career that's not going to exist in the next decade or so because AI is going to take it over? There's a worry, there's a concern, and they're looking for some direction also. I think this encyclical gives us a very practical roadmap to even how to address some of those very practical issues that people of all ages are looking at.

Thinking of Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum novarum, which Pope Leo references repeatedly, do you truly believe that the digital revolution can be compared, in terms of the scale of its impact, to the Industrial Revolution?

You said it very well, and there's a direct correlation with Rerum novarum, that industrial revolution, changed the entire world. And when you think about how it changed the job market, people were concerned, are there going to be any human dignity in the work that we do, in the jobs that we have? Are we just going to be turned into profit driven slaves or robots? Those things needed to be addressed in the Industrial Revolution. Rerum novarum did exactly that.

I think this encyclical, for decades and generations to come is going to be used in a similar way. AI is here to stay. It's here to stay. It's going to change everything. I think we're going to ask some of the same questions. Is it only going to be profit driven, or is there going to be something that we look at for the good of humanity so that we're not just slaves and robots to profit? But how is it going to affect the common good? So your point is well taken. There's a direct correlation to Rerum novarum. And I think this particular encyclical by Pope Leo is going to be highly significant for so many generations to come.

Archbishop Hicks, Magnifica humanitas is a social encyclical. Is there any aspect of it that you believe is especially important for the Church's pastoral mission as well? We've heard often that even during the presentation where Pope Leo presented the document himself that it's an encyclical not only on artificial intelligence, but it is on safeguarding the human person in the time of artificial intelligence. How is this important to the church's pastoral mission from your point of view?

Absolutely. You're so correct in saying that at the end of the day, the encyclical asks what does it mean to be human? And for the Catholic Church, we're obviously going to embrace that as part of our message and our mission. Jesus himself calls us to be fully human for Jesus who came, who was fully human and fully divine. And he wants us to share in that eternal life with him and have a reflection of of the life of Jesus in all of our lives. This encyclical is directly connected to that. How do we relate to each other? What does it mean to be human? How do we see the face of God in each other in creation, and see our brothers and sisters in each other's faces? Those are all things that are are connected to our humanity, which is part of the teaching of the Church and part of the mission of the Church. AI is going to affect all of that. So as Pope Leo connects the two together, I think it's timely, I think it's relevant, and we certainly need it. And it's going to be used for for such a long time.

Anything else you would like to add, Archbishop?

I just want to express my gratitude to the Holy Father for giving us in such an early stage of his pontificate, something like this, of substance and something that's relevant and needed. It's I'm grateful for his leadership, and I look forward to where the conversations go and some of the decisions go because of it. He's helping to shape what the world looks like. And he's doing so within the context of Catholic social teaching and also the mission of the Church, which comes from Jesus Christ. I am really grateful to the Holy Father.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Pope Leo XIV to Bishops; it's not just numbers that proves effectiveness & fruitfulness; much more is important

 

Pope Leo met with members of the Italian Bishops' Conference this morningPope Leo met with members of the Italian Bishops' Conference this morning  (@Vatican Media)

Pope to bishops: Church's fruitfulness should not be based on numbers

In an audience with members of the Italian Episcopal Conference at the conclusion of their 82nd General Assembly, Pope Leo urges a “focus on the essential” and keeping the priority on the Gospel, which “awakens us” in today’s world “marked by complexity.”

Vatican News

Meeting with participants in the 82nd General Assembly of the Italian Bishops' Conference in the Vatican today, Pope Leo XIV expressed his affection to “all the Churches throughout Italy, to the priests, deacons, consecrated persons, families…and also to those who, perhaps without realizing it, carry in their hearts a thirst for God.”

This gift, he continued, is something he has had the grace to witness “even in a time like ours, marked by complexity.” The Pope explained he saw it firsthand on his trips to Pompeii, Naples, and Acerra.

Pope Leo added that there are many signs that reveal tiredness, fragmentation, and loneliness in people's lives. Sometimes, in communities, people can feel the challenge of passing on the faith and engaging younger generations. Yet, the Pope stressed, “the Gospel awakens us.”

The harvest is abundant

Continuing his greeting, Pope Leo reflected on a verse from Luke's Gospel - “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore, pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.”

As a tireless Sower, God enters the world day after day and “scatters” on people’s hearts the desire for the infinite, “for a life fulfilled, for a salvation that sets free.” Pope Leo noted that it is thanks to God the harvest is abundant. Our task, he said, is to take the Lord’s gaze and make it our own.



The Pope urged focusing on what is "essential", not the numbers (@Vatican Media)

We are not meant to merely “complain about hardened soil or dwell only on statistics.” Rather, the Pope stressed, we are called to “know how to see, with the eyes of the Risen Christ,” the harvest God is preparing for us.

Speaking directly to the Italian bishops, Pope Leo prayed that the Holy Spirit will bestow upon them hearts that are on fire with “the zeal of Christ”, and that many workers will work “alongside us.”

The priority is the Gospel

Keeping this in mind, “the priority is the Gospel”, the Pope explained. This is a thread that has run throughout the entire history of the Church—from St. Francis of Assisi to St. Paul VI to Pope Francis. Faith is born from the Gospel, “as a living encounter with Christ, dead and risen, present in His Church.”

In today’s world, Pope Leo noted that bringing the Gospel back to the center “is both the gift that gives enthusiasm to our lives as Bishops and the urgency that drives us onward.”

As a result, the bishops must ask themselves these two questions:

1.     What face of God do we allow to shine through in our preaching, catechesis, liturgy, charity, and in the life of our communities?

2.     How do we foster an encounter with Christ, and what does it mean today, for us and for our Churches, to initiate others into the Christian life?

Pastors, the Pope urged, should always themselves these questions, “never taking the answers for granted.”

Handing on the faith

This is where a renewed attention to the Christian tradition is important, but one which is more than just preparation for the Sacraments. The Sacraments are the “womb” in which a community “gives birth to faith and introduces people into the Paschal life, into communion with the Lord, into ecclesial fraternity.”

It is in living and welcoming communities that the faith can be handed on and grow. It is in the communities that listen and pray, that keep the Eucharist as “the source and summit”, that see the poor as brothers and sisters, and where families are not left behind.

For this purpose, bishops are called to be deep listeners to the Word of God, the People of God, and the signs of the times. When genuine listening is present, the community does not turn inward. Rather, it grows into a place of mission and discernment and therefore, knows how to renew itself.

This is what the Synodal Journey means. “A synodal Church is one in which each person, according to his or her vocation, can offer the gift received from the Spirit for the common building up,” Pope Leo highlighted.

That means participation is not optional. Rather, it is a “requirement of communion and mission and must therefore become method, responsibility, and accountability.”

Not based on numbers

The Pope stressed that God does not ask us to measure the fruitfulness of the Church according to numbers, visibility, or influence.

Instead, he urged the bishops to “have the courage to focus on what is essential.” The focus should be on an ongoing initiation and formation in Christian life, welcoming and missionary parishes where families can gather, and listening to young people without limiting their questions, among others.

Closing, Pope Leo entrusted the Italian bishops’ journey to Mary, the Mother of the Church. “May she help you to be ‘rooted and built up in Him, steadfast in the faith’ (Col 2:7), to safeguard what is essential, to generate faith, to walk with the People of God, and to recognize the voice of the Lord who still calls, consoles, and sends forth.”