Thursday, March 12, 2026

Pope Leo XIV: Look to the Holy Family as model of hospitality

 

Pope Leo XIV addresses participants in the "Cathedra of Hospitality"Pope Leo XIV addresses participants in the "Cathedra of Hospitality"  (@Vatican Media)

Pope Leo XIV: Learn hospitality from St. Joseph and Holy Family

Pope Leo XIV calls on communities to look to the Holy Family of Nazareth to rediscover their calling to welcome others and learn to walk the path of service, as he addressed participants in the "Cathedra of Hospitality."

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

“I encourage you to be educators in hospitality,” Pope Leo XIV said on Thursday in the Vatican when addressing participants in the “Cathedra of Hospitality,” a cultural and educational event now in its fourth edition, held in Sacrofano, a town north of Rome.

Organized by movements and Third Sector organizations in collaboration with Rome’s Pontifical Lateran University, the event provides spaces for dialogue and reflection on current issues. This year, the theme was “Youth and the Church: Hospitality that fosters belonging.”

In his remarks, the Holy Father offered reflections on the theme addressed by the “Cathedra." The Pope acknowledged that the days of reflection were animated by the awareness that the Christian vocation is oriented toward generating communion among people.

With this in mind, the Pope observed that communion arises from the ability to welcome others by offering listening, hospitality, and assistance.

The grace of an encounter

Pope Leo XIV said that at the heart of every authentic welcome, there is a relationship born from the grace of an encounter. He explained that it is precisely within this dynamic of encounter that the decision to dedicate the fourth edition of the “Cathedra” to young people is situated.

“In a time marked by profound cultural and social transformations,” the Pope said, “young people, who are naturally the future of society and of the Church, already constitute its living and generative present.”

The Holy Father noted that their questions and concerns invite us to renew the style of our relationships.

“Welcoming young people means, first of all,” Pope Leo said, “listening to their voices, meeting their gaze, and recognizing that, in their lives and in their languages, the Spirit continues to act and to suggest renewed paths of presence and care.”

Presence and care

The Pope said he wished to dwell on two words, namely "presence" and "care," which help illuminate the Christian meaning of hospitality.

“Each of us, from the first moment of life," he pointed out, "grows within a social reality,” citing the family, the parish, the school, the university, and the workplace. Each of these, he noted, represent models of society where different psychological, juridical, moral, pedagogical, and cultural dimensions intersect, and "are spaces of identity formation whose primary task is defined precisely by presence."

“To be present in the lives of others,” Pope Leo XIV emphasized, “means sharing time, experiences, and meaning, offering stable points of reference in which others can recognize themselves and grow.”

“Looking to the Holy Family of Nazareth,” the Pope said, “every welcoming community can rediscover its own calling and learn to orient itself along the path of service.”

The experience of the Holy Family

Pope Leo suggested that the Gospel episode in which Mary and Joseph cannot find Jesus, and, in anguish, find Him again after three days in the Temple, teaches that the presence of the other is not automatic but the result of a constant search.

“It has happened to each of us,” the Pope observed, “to lose someone or something to which we were deeply attached. In that moment we realize how precious that presence was.”

The same happens in the life of faith, he said. "We often take for granted the presence of Jesus in our existence until suddenly it seems that He is no longer where we left Him."

Called to seek Jesus

“We feel a sense of loss,” the Pope said. “In reality, it is not He who has been lost, but we who have moved away.”

When this happens, Pope Leo explained, we are called to seek Him with trust and with the courage to travel unexplored paths, looking at the world with new eyes filled with hope.

“In this way,” he said, “we will stop looking for a God made to our own measure and instead encounter Him where He dwells.”

Seeking Jesus, Pope Leo XIV added, therefore means passing from the security of our convictions to the responsibility of encounter, learning to see and welcome the presence of God who is always “beyond.”

St. Joseph’s powerful example

“This is precisely what Saint Joseph did in safeguarding the family entrusted to him by the Lord,” Pope Leo said.

In Joseph, the Pope explained, we recognize that welcoming, in addition to presence, is also care.

“To care,” Pope Leo said, “means to stand beside the other with attention, to respect their choices, and to take responsibility for them.”

This attitude, he noted, belongs first of all to God, whom the Bible shows as the guardian of His people. He explained that the human family, too, is called to preserve what has been entrusted to it.

“Thus Joseph,” the Pope observed, “shows us that presence and care are inseparable dimensions: one does not safeguard without being present, and one is not truly present without assuming responsibility for the other.”

Moving toward holiness

With this sentiment, Pope Leo XIV suggested that presence and care can represent two lamps along the path toward a form of hospitality capable of opening paths to holiness.

Thanking those present for their silent and discreet commitment, the Pope encouraged them to be educators in hospitality and to continue together "to create environments capable of promoting goodness and fraternity in the Christian community and in society."

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Pope Leo XIV prays for Lebanese Priest killed in bombings and prays for peace in Middle East

 

Pope Leo XIVPope Leo XIV  (@Vatican Media)

Pope mourns priest killed in Lebanon, prays for peace in Middle East

Pope Leo XIV mourns the late Lebanese priest, Fr. Pierre El-Rahi, who was killed amid the conflict in the Middle East, expressing his closeness to the Lebanese people and inviting Christians to pray for the many innocent victims of war.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

"Let us continue to pray for peace in Iran and throughout the Middle East, especially for the many civilian victims, including many innocent children. May our prayer be a comfort for those who suffer and a seed of hope for the future."

Pope Leo XIV made this appeal at his weekly General Audience in the Vatican on Wednesday, recalling that the funeral of Father Pierre El-Rahi is celebrated on Wednesday in Qlayaa, Lebanon. 

The Pope recalled that Father El-Rahi was the Maronite parish priest of one of the Christian villages in southern Lebanon, which, in these days, "are once again experiencing the tragedy of war."

"I am close to all the Lebanese people at this moment of grave trial," he said.

The Maronite rite Catholic priest was killed in Qlayaa, Lebanon, on Monday as he sought to assist parishioners whose house had been fired upon by an Israeli tank, according to Lebanese media reports.

Fr. El-Rahi rushed to the house in the mountainous area of his parish with several young people when the tank struck the house again, wounding Fr. El-Rahi. He was taken to a local hospital, where he died from his wounds.

The Pope acknowledged that in Arabic, El-Rahi means "shepherd."

"Father Pierre," he said, "was a true shepherd who always remained beside his people with the love and sacrifice of Jesus the Good Shepherd."

The Pope recalled that as soon as the priest heard that some parishioners had been wounded by a bombardment, he ran to help them without hesitation.

"May the Lord grant that the blood he shed," Pope Leo prayed, "may be a seed of peace for beloved Lebanon."

The Holy See Press Office released a statement on Monday reporting that Pope Leo XIV is praying for the cessation of hostilities in the Middle East. The Pope expressed his sorrow for the many innocent people who have died, including children and those who care for them, especially Fr. El-Rahi.

Wednesday General Audience with Pope Leo XIV 03.11.2026

Pope Leo during the General Audience (@Vatican Media)

Pope at Audience: Church is prophecy of peace and unity with space for all

During his weekly General Audience, Pope Leo XIV continues his reflection on the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 'Lumen gentium', and emphasizes the mission of the Church, as it is made up of the people of God united in Christ.

By Isabella H. de Carvalho

In a world marked by divisions and tensions, the Church unites her members through their faith in Christ and His love and therefore has the mission to reach out to everyone, Pope Leo XIV said during the Wednesday General Audience in St. Peter’s Square on March 11.

“Unified in Christ, Lord and Saviour of every man and woman, the Church can never turn inwards on herself, but is open to everyone and is for everyone,” the Pope highlighted.

“It is a great sign of hope—especially in our times, traversed by so many conflicts and wars—to know that the Church is a people in which women and men of different nationalities, languages, and cultures live together in faith,” he continued.


“It is a sign placed in the very heart of humanity, a reminder and prophecy of that unity and peace to which God the Father calls all His children," he said.

Pope Leo XIV continued his catechesis series on the Documents of the Second Vatican Council, focusing again on the 1964 Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium.

In this week’s catechesis, he reflected on the alliance that God has created with His people and what this means for the Church and every Christian.

“In the Church there is, and there must be, a place for everyone," he said, adding that “every Christian is called to proclaim the Gospel and bear witness in every environment in which he or she lives and works."

Christ unites His people  

The Pope explained that God “wishes to save every person,” and He thus carries out His “work of salvation in history” by “choosing a real people and dwelling among them.”

He highlighted that, in the Old Testament, God called Abraham, promised him numerous descendants, and then freed these descendants from slavery and made a covenant with them.

“The identity of this people is given by God’s action and by faith in Him,” the Pope said, adding that “they are called to become a light for other nations, like a beacon that will draw all peoples, the whole of humanity, to itself.”

In Lumen gentium, the Second Vatican Council explains that this mission takes its fuller meaning in light of “that new and perfect covenant, which was to be ratified in Christ, and of that fuller revelation which was to be given through the Word of God Himself made flesh,” the Pope underlined.

“Indeed, it is Christ who, in giving His Body and His Blood, unites this people in Himself and in a definitive way.”

Pope Leo greeting the faithful (@Vatican Media)


Church made up of the people of God united in Christ

In this regard, the Pope insisted that this is truly the identity of the Church today: “the people of God who draw their existence from the body of Christ and who are themselves the body of Christ.” It is “made up of women and men from all the peoples of the earth” who are united not by “a language, a culture, an ethnicity” but by Jesus.

“Those who belong to it do not pride themselves on merits or titles, but only on the gift of being, in Christ and through Him, daughters and sons of God,” the Pope continued.

He pointed out that “above any task or function" in the Church, what is truly important is being “grafted onto Christ” and being “children of God by grace.” That is “the only honorary title we should seek as Christians,” he insisted.

“Consequently, the law that animates relationships in the Church is love, as we receive and experience it in Jesus; and her goal is the Kingdom of God, towards which she walks together with all humanity.”

The Church is one but includes everyone

Explaining that the Church is made up of the people of God united and chosen by Christ, Pope Leo then emphasized that the mission of the Church and of every one of her faithful is to spread the Gospel to all.

The Council, through Lumen gentium, reminds us that “all men are called to belong to the new people of God,” meaning that “this people, remaining one and unique, must extend to the whole world and to all ages,” so that God’s intention of gathering together all “his children” may be fulfilled.

"Even those who have not yet received the Gospel are therefore, in some way, oriented towards the people of God,” he continued, adding that the Church “is called upon to spread the Gospel everywhere and to everyone, so that every person may enter into contact with Christ.”

This invites the Church to be open to all, meaning welcoming different cultures while at the same time “offering them the newness of the Gospel to purify them and to raise them up.”

“In this regard, the Church is one but includes everyone,” the Pope concluded, citing also French Jesuit Father Henri de Lubac, who said, "The unique Ark of Salvation must welcome all human diversity into its vast nave.”








Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Cardinal Sako resigns as Patriarch in Iraq

 

File photo of Cardinal Louis Raphaël SakoFile photo of Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako  (AFP or licensors)

Cardinal Sako resigns as Chaldean Patriarch of Baghdad

Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako, whose resignation as the Chaldean Patriarch of Baghdad has been accepted by Pope Leo XIV, issues a letter reflecting on his years of his ministry in Iraq, saying he led the Chaldean Catholic Church under extremely difficult circumstances and amid great challenges.

Vatican News

Pope Leo XIV has accepted the resignation submitted by Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako from the office of Patriarch of Baghdad of the Chaldeans, in accordance with Canon 126 §2 of the Code of Canon Law of the Eastern Churches (CCEO).

Cardinal Sako’s letter

In a letter released on Tuesday, the Cardinal explains that he had considered resigning already two years ago, upon turning 75, had discussed it then with Pope Francis, and had been encouraged by him to remain.

The decision to submit his resignation to Pope Leo XIV—to be able to “dedicate himself quietly to prayer, writing, and simple service”—and to explain it in a letter “to avoid any misunderstanding,” confirms that he was not forced by anyone to do so and requested to resign voluntarily.

“I have led the Chaldean Church under extremely difficult circumstances and amid great challenges,” Cardinal Sako writes. “I have preserved the unity of its institutions and have spared no effort to defend it.”

Likewise, the Cardinal declares that he has acted for “the rights of Iraqis and Christians, taking a stand and maintaining a presence both inside and outside the country.”

A new Patriarch who believes in renewal

The Cardinal recounts that his 13 years of service in Baghdad “have been years of loving pastoral care, accompaniment, and growth,” thanking God “for the grace of love” granted to him, his family, those who have lived with him during the years he served as a priest in Mosul, Bishop in Kirkuk, and Patriarch in Baghdad, and his assistants.

“In these difficult times, I hope that the leadership of the Chaldean Catholic Church will be entrusted to a patriarch who possesses solid theological knowledge, courage, and wisdom,” Cardinal Sako hopes.

He also insists that in the Chaldean See of Baghdad, it is necessary to have “someone who believes in renewal, openness, and dialogue, and who also has a sense of humor.”

The testament

Finally, in the letter, the Cardinal reveals that he wrote his will while still a priest and has renewed it several times, adding that he possesses “about forty million Iraqi dinars, five thousand U.S. dollars, and five thousand euros” collected from “salaries over 52 years of priestly service, in addition to what was obtained from selling the family house in Mosul.”

Cardinal Sako further declares that he does not own a house or a car and that his “true wealth” is his “devoted service and the 45 books and numerous articles” he has published.

Maronite Catholic Priest among victims in escalating Middle East bombings

 

File photo of Pope Leo XIVFile photo of Pope Leo XIV  (@Vatican Media)

Pope Leo mourns victims in Middle East, prays for peace

Pope Leo XIV expresses his profound sorrow for the victims of bombings in the Middle East, especially children and Fr. Pierre El-Rahi, a Maronite priest killed in Lebanon.

Vatican News

The Holy See Press Office released a statement on Monday reporting that Pope Leo XIV is praying for the cessation of hostilities in the Middle East.

The Pope expressed his sorrow for the many innocent people who have died, including children and those who care for them, especially Fr. Pierre El-Rahi.

“Pope Leo XIV expresses profound sorrow for all the victims of the bombings in these days in the Middle East, for the many innocents, including many children, and for those who were helping them, such as Father Pierre El-Rahi, the Maronite priest killed this afternoon in Qlayaa,” read the statement. “He is following what is happening with concern and prays that every hostility may cease as soon as possible.”

The Maronite rite Catholic priest was killed in Qlayaa, Lebanon, on Monday as he sought to assist parishioners whose house had been fired upon by an Israeli tank, according to Lebanese media reports.

Fr. El-Rahi rushed to the house in the mountainous area of his parish with several young people when the tank struck the house again, wounding Fr. El-Rahi.

He was taken to a local hospital, where he died from his wounds.

File photo of Fr. Pierre El-Rahi


Speaking to Vatican News, Fr. Toufic Bou Merhi, Latin-rite parish priest in Tyre and Deirmimas, said the 50-year-old Fr. El-Rahi was a true pastor for the Christians of his parish.

Despite many Israeli evacuation orders for the area, Fr. El-Rahi remained to serve his parishioners.

Fr. Merhi said the parish is mourning the death of Fr. El-Rahi and are now very afraid, even as the house of another priest was directly attacked.

“Up to now, people haven't wanted to leave their homes in Christian villages, but in this situation, everything has changed,” said Fr. Merhi. “Leaving home means living on the streets or trying to rent another place, but people can't afford it, especially given the country's already dire economic situation."

The Franciscans of the Custody of the Holy Land are currently hosting 200 displaced people, all Muslims, at their monastery in Tyre, according to Fr. Merhi, noting that over 300,000 people have left southern Lebanon in search of safety.

“We say and repeat that the last thing that must not die in us is hope in the Lord, who always gives us the strength to continue,” said Fr. Merhi. “Enough war; enough violence. Weapons, as the Pope said, do not generate peace; they generate massacres and hatred. All we ask is to live with a little dignity.”


Monday, March 9, 2026

Saint of the Day for Tuesday

 

St. John Ogilvie



Born in 1579, John Ogilvie belonged to Scottish nobility. Raised a Calvinist, he was educated on the continent. Exposed to the religious controversies of his day and impressed with the faith of the martyrs, he decided to become a Catholic. In 1596, at age seventeen he was received into the Church at Louvain. Later John attended a variety of Catholic educational institutions, and eventually he sought admission into the Jesuits. He was ordained at Paris in 1610 and asked to be sent to Scotland, hoping some Catholic nobles there would aid him given his lineage. Finding none, he went to London, then back to Paris, and finally returned to Scotland. John's work was quite successful in bring back many people to the Faith. Sometime later he was betrayed by one posing as a Catholic. After his arrest he was tortured in prison in an effort to get him to reveal the names of other Catholics, but he refused. After three trials, John was convicted of high treason because he converted Protestants to the Catholic Faith as well as denied the king's spiritual jurisdiction by upholding the Pope's spiritual primacy and condemning the oaths of supremacy and allegiance. Sentenced to death, the courageous priest was hanged at Glasgow in 1615 at the age of thirty-six. His feast day is March 10.

What better way to celebrate the 250th birthday of America than to celebrate all the Saints of the United States

 

‘Catholic Saints of America’ event celebrates America’s 250th birthday


A map seen Jan. 9, 2026, outside of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion's Apparition Chapel in Champion, Wis., includes the gravesite location of Adele Brice (Brise). (OSV News photo/Sam Lucero)


OSV News) — Drawing inspiration from St. Carlo Acutis, a national shrine in Wisconsin is inviting Catholics to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States this summer by joining in prayer and learning about the holy men and women of America.

“They founded schools, cared for the sick, served the poor, and witnessed to the Gospel through lives of sacrifice, service and unwavering love for Jesus Christ,” said Father of Mercy Anthony Stephens, rector of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion. “Their example shows us what it truly means to be a faithful Catholic and to be American.”

Featuring a special novena

Scheduled for July 1-9, “Catholic Saints of America” will feature a special novena, an exhibit honoring Americans who are saints or on the path to sainthood, and an opportunity to venerate their relics. The relics or remains of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Blessed Solanas Casey and Blessed Stanley Rother will be among those on display.

All this is taking place on the site of the only Church-approved Marian apparition site in the United States.

“First, through this novena and exhibit, we hope people will come to learn about the canonization process,” Father Stephens told OSV News. “Next, we want to help people discover those who may one day be declared saints. Finally, we can help introduce people to a new devotion that inspires them to grow closer to Christ.”

‘Saints of today’

The novena prayer, which Father Stephens is writing, will seek Mary’s intercession for unity, holiness and renewal nationwide. Alongside the novena, the exhibit will feature the stories of holy men and women of America. It will highlight their lives, virtues and legacy, organizers said.

Its format was inspired by a traveling Eucharistic miracles exhibit, which was based on a website created by St. Carlo Acutis, an Italian teenager canonized last year.

“There are fewer than 15 American saints, and only a little more than 70 people whose causes (for sainthood) have been opened” in the U.S., Father Stephens said. “Each of these holy men and women has a beautiful story and powerful example, yet so few people know about them.”

‘We have saints of today’

“We do not have saints from 2,000 years ago; we have saints of today,” he added. “This shows that God is still at work, calling people to himself.”

Americans who have been canonized are Sts. Elizabeth Ann Seton, John Neumann, Marianne Cope, Katharine Drexel, Damien de Veuster of Molokai, Junípero Serra, Kateri Tekakwitha, Théodore Guérin, Frances Xavier Cabrini and Rose Philippine Duchesne. St. Teresa of Kolkata was given honorary American citizenship in 1996, the year before she died. 

Beatified Americans include Blesseds Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, Stanley Rother, Solanus Casey, Michael J. McGivney, Francis Xavier Seelos and Carlos Manuel Cecilio Rodríguez Santiago of Puerto Rico. Five Franciscan friars known as the Georgia martyrs will join them Oct. 31, and the beatification of Archbishop Fulton Sheen is also expected soon.


A worshipper venerates the Jubilee Mission Cross used during a 2025 Jubilee Year procession at the National Shrine of Champion in Champion, Wis., July 20. Jesuit Father Francis Xavier Weninger, a pastor to German Catholics in Green Bay in the 1800s, erected mission crosses in each parish he visited, including the one used for the procession. The cross is inscribed with the message: “He who perseveres will be blessed forever.” (OSV News photo/Sam Lucero)

Promoters of more than 35 causes

The shrine is in the process of inviting promoters of all U.S. causes to participate. So far, the promoters of more than 35 causes have confirmed they will collaborate in some way. Some will help create their respective exhibit displays, and many will attend in person, Father Stephens said.

While the novena and exhibit take place July 1-9, many of the promoters and representatives of these causes will be present July 3-5.  For those days, guest speakers will also “engage with pilgrims, share the stories of these holy men and women, and provide opportunities to learn more about the path to sainthood in America,” said Kim May, the shrine’s event and volunteer coordinator.

Organizers expect that more than 15,000 pilgrims could attend, which would make this the largest event hosted by the shrine.

A special recognition 

The exhibit will recognize in a special way the cause of Servant of God Adele Brice, a Belgian immigrant who reported seeing the Blessed Virgin Mary three times in 1859. She is buried at the shrine, which marks the site where they met. The cause for her sainthood opened in January.

Mary, as she appeared to Brice (sometimes also spelled “Brise”), is honored under the title of “Our Lady of Champion” for the nearby town of Champion, 15 miles northeast of Green Bay. 

Father Stephens, who as the shrine’s rector serves as the actor or promoter of Brice’s cause, said the upcoming event will mark the 130th anniversary of the catechist’s death July 5.

Mass to pray for Brice’s sainthood cause

The shrine plans to celebrate Mass that day at 11:30 a.m. local time to pray for Brice’s cause for canonization and for her continued intercession, he said. 

“The afternoon will include guest speakers representing sainthood causes and catechetical presentations, continuing the mission Our Lady entrusted to Adele to teach the faith and lead souls to salvation,” he said.

The shrine will also host a picnic that day. In addition to Mass and speakers, videos and educational presentations will highlight America’s holy women and men.

An invitation to all

The shrine, May said, is entrusting the event to the patronage of Mary under her titles of Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas; the Immaculate Conception, patroness of the United States; and Our Lady of Champion.

The all-age event will include interactive activities for families. The shrine will offer history scavenger hunts, children’s activity pages and more.

“Our hope,” May said, “is that families will come together to celebrate this historic moment, learn about the holy men and women who shaped our nation, and be inspired to grow in faith.”

Katie Yoder is an OSV News correspondent. She writes from Maryland.