Friday, March 27, 2026

Pope Leo XIV meets with U.S. Leadership Conference of Women Religious

 

Pope Leo XIV with the Presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious ( LCWR )Pope Leo XIV with the Presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious ( LCWR )

U.S. Sisters: Pope shares our concern for plight of immigrants

After meeting with Pope Leo XIV, the Presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious speaks to Vatican News about the situation of immigrants in the United States, synodality, and the involvement of women in the Church.

By Isabella H. de Carvalho

As the United States has been affected by polarization and tension regarding social and political issues, the Church in the country has tried to be a voice of peace and harmony.

An association that seeks to read and respond to the signs of the times is the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR).

Numbering approximately 30,000 members, it brings together leaders of Catholic women religious congregations and focuses on assisting them in carrying out their roles in the service of the Gospel and helping the Church respond to the changes affecting society.

On Thursday, March 26, Pope Leo XIV met with the presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) during their annual trip to Rome and the Vatican. Among the topics discussed was the situation that his home country is going through at the moment.

When the Pope “listened to our story of the heart, about how painful it is right now in the United States in regards to the treatment of human beings, not even US citizens, just human beings themselves, I could see the pain on his face,” Sr. Carol Zinn, of the Sisters of St. Joseph and Executive Director of LWCR, told Vatican News.

The meeting with the Pope also included the three sisters that make up LCWR’s Presidency: the President, Sister Vicky Larson of the Presentation Sisters, the President-elect, Sister Debra Sciano of the School Sisters of Notre Dame, and the former President, Sister Kathy Brazda of the Sisters of St. Joseph




The Gospel calls to welcome the stranger

Tensions have run high in the United States in the last year over the crackdown on immigration under the current government administration, with the situation reaching a boiling point in January 2026 after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens.

In November 2025, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops emphasized its concern over the treatment of immigrants in the country. That same month, Pope Leo expressed his support for their statement and called for migrants to be treated with human dignity and respect.

The LWCR and the Pope definitely have a “shared concern for the plight of the immigrant and the Gospel call to welcome the stranger,” Sr. Vicky Larson told Vatican News.

Sr. Zinn explained that the religious members of LCWR are “doing everything that they can to help at the grassroots level,” providing people with basic necessities such as baby food or shoes or accompanying them to court.

“We also work at the advocacy level of the federal government, so we have a foot in both worlds,” she continued, highlighting how the Pope thanked them for their work.

Promoting listening and relationships to contrast polarization

Sr. Zinn underlined that the LCWR’s work is focusing at the moment on the “transformation of consciousness,” asking “how do we transform the way we think about one another and then the words that we use when we speak to each other?”

“The issue of polarization is alive and well, not only in the United States, but it's pretty raw in the United States,” she continued. “There's a tendency to exclude the other, just about everybody, and to set up camps.”

Therefore, much of the organization’s work recently has focused on building relationships to counter polarization at the human level. “We're trying to learn the skills ourselves and then invite others—our partners in ministry, the boards of our sponsored ministries that are all lay people—into this kind of learning process also,” Sr. Zinn explained.

“One of the things that we need to do to work for justice is to work on relationships and build bridges across divides so that people understand one another and can work together,” added Sr. Larson.

Their endeavor is nourished by the fact that they are religious, as “consecrated life is really built around that concept of discernment and listening together,” Sr. Larson said.

The efforts to help people understand one another also build “on what Pope Francis called all of us to in calling the Synod on Synodality,” she noted. “I think he really gifted us with a call to look at the way that we are Church together, and that we communicate and share wisdom.”

Women and leadership in the Church: a cultural issue

The two LCWR leaders highlighted that synodality is entrenched in many of their organizational structures, saying the sisters come together to discern how to respond to the needs of the times.

They also emphasized that they “engaged in the synod process 1,000%” by sending feedback that contributed to the two sessions of the 16th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which took place in October 2023 and 2024.

Additionally, the two religious sisters explained they were very pleased to read paragraph 60 of the Final Document of the Synod, which insisted on women’s participation in the Church, highlighting that there should be no reason why women should not carry out leadership roles.

They also expressed their appreciation for the final report of one of the Synod’s Study Groups, which focused on women’s participation and leadership within the Church

“I’m pleased that the topic is being put on the table so that it can’t go away,” said Sr. Zinn. “I’m also pleased that there seems to be some understanding that's coming forth that this whole issue of the role of women in leadership in the Church is not theological, it's not ecclesial, it’s not historical, it’s not even canonical: It's cultural.”

“The conversations around the world, and certainly the United States, really need to begin at the cultural level,” she said.

Lastly, Sr. Zinn underlined the fact that both Pope Francis and Pope Leo XIV have appointed women to leadership roles in the Church, saying it shows their commitment to changing this culture regarding the role of women.

Pope Leo XIV will host the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Sarah Mullally, the 1st female Archbishop of Canterbury

 

Archbishop of Canterbury EnthronementArchbishop of Canterbury Enthronement  (PA Wire/PA Images)

Pope Leo to meet the new Archbishop of Canterbury in April

The Most Revd Dame Sarah Mullally will be received by the Pope during her visit to Rome from 25 to 28 April. The announcement comes two days after her official installation as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of the Anglican Communion.

Vatican News 

The new Archbishop of Canterbury, Sarah Mullally, will meet Pope Leo XIV during her visit to Rome, scheduled from 25 to 28 April. The official announcement of the visit comes two days after her official installation in Canterbury Cathedral.

On Thursday, in the Chapel of Our Lady of Martyrdom, the archbishop participated in a meeting and common prayer with Cardinal Kurt Koch, Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity and a high-level Catholic delegation.

A letter from the Pope

The event commemorated the 60th anniversary of the Common Declaration of 24 March 1966—the first formal ecumenical declaration between the Anglican Church and the Roman Catholic Church, signed by Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey. On the occasion, Cardinal Koch delivered a letter of good wishes and blessings from Pope Leo to Archbishop Mullally at the start of her public ministry in the Church of England and worldwide Anglican Communion.

Archbishop Mullally’s gratitude 

A statement released by Lambeth Palace said the Archbishop thanked the Pope for his prayers and assured him of her own.

“I am deeply grateful for his kind letter and for the assurance of his prayers on the occasion of my installation as Archbishop of Canterbury,” she wrote. “His words of encouragement and his invocation of the guidance of the Holy Spirit are received with deep appreciation.”

“As Archbishop of Canterbury,” Mullally continued in her message to Pope Leo XIV, “I too am called to serve as an instrument of communion within the Anglican Communion and to seek the full and visible unity to which the Lord calls us all.”

Concluding, she added: “I look forward to meeting His Holiness soon and to continuing to strengthen the bonds of friendship and our shared commitment.”

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Saint of the Day for Friday

 

St. Rupert




Bishop and missionary, also listed as Robert of Hrodbert. A member of a noble Frankish family, he was appointed bishop of Worms, Germany, and then dedicated himself to spreading the faith among the Germans. With the patronage of Duke Thedo of Bavaria, he took over the deserted town of luvavum about 697, which was renamed Salzburg, Austria. Rupert founded a church, a monastery, and a school; brought in groups of missionaries; and established a nunnery at Nonnberg with his sister, Eerentrudis, serving as the first abbess. He died at Salzburg and is venerated as the first archbishop of this major diocese in the West. Rupert is revered as the Apostle of Bavaria and Austria.

When Pope Leo XIV addressed the French Bishops he gave encouragement to those Catholic attached to the Latin Mass

 

Sanctuary of LourdesSanctuary of Lourdes  (AFP or licensors)

Pope writes to French Bishops on education, abuse, and liturgy

Pope Leo XIV sends a message to the French Bishops’ Conference for its Spring Plenary Assembly in Lourdes, encouraging the Bishops to defend Catholic education, remain steadfast in confronting abuse, and reflect on ways to welcome communities attached to the Vetus Ordo.

By Jean-Charles Putzolu

At the opening of their Spring Plenary Assembly, the Bishops of France were greeted by Pope Leo XIV in a message signed by Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin.

Education, abuse and liturgy formed the three central themes of the letter addressed to the bishops. These same themes will guide their discussions over four days at the Marian shrine in Lourdes.

Defending Catholic education

Amid ongoing public concern over recent abuse scandals in educational institutions, Pope Leo XIV acknowledged “a climate of growing hostility," but urges perseverance in defending Catholic education.

In particular, he called for its Christian identity—it's very “raison d’être”—to be safeguarded “with determination,” while continuing to promote openness and respect for the convictions of all.

Abuse: mercy for all

The second issue the Bishops are addressing is the abuse of minors. The Church in France has carried out sustained efforts to confront the crisis, especially since the creation of the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church (CIASE) on February 8, 2019, just weeks before the Vatican meeting convened by Pope Francis.

At that meeting, Pope Francis had stressed the Church’s “duty to listen attentively” to the “stifled, silent cry” of victims.

Echoing this, Pope Leo called on the French Bishops to continue listening to and caring for victims, highlighting the need for long-term prevention measures and for extending God’s mercy to all.

On this point, the Pope added that “priests guilty of abuse should not be excluded from this mercy but should be the subject of your pastoral reflection.”

At the same time, he offered the Bishops words of encouragement and renewed his trust in them, acknowledging that many have been “deeply affected” by the consequences of abuse committed by some of their fellow clergy.

Liturgy and the Tridentine Mass

Finally, the Pope addressed an issue to which he is “particularly attentive”: the growing number of communities attached to the Vetus Ordo (the celebration of the Mass in Latin according to the liturgy in use before the Second Vatican Council).

In this regard, Pope Leo XIV expressed concern that this situation could open “a painful wound within the Church regarding the celebration of the Mass,” which he described as “the very sacrament of unity.”

If the Church is a mother who cares for her children, he said, she must heal wounds and learn to look upon others “with renewed understanding and greater sensitivity."

He therefore invites the Bishops, with the help of the Holy Spirit, to seek “concrete solutions” that will generously include those sincerely attached to the Vetus Ordo, while remaining faithful to the directions of the Second Vatican Council.

Clear signs of hope

While acknowledging the “difficult times” facing the Church, Pope Leo XIV also pointed to “signs of hope and of God’s presence in people’s hearts.” One such sign is the significant rise in the number of catechumens over the past ten years.

The number of candidates who will receive baptism at the Easter Vigil on April 4 will be announced shortly by the French Bishops’ Conference, but the upward trend appears set to continue into 2026. There were 17,800 catechumens in 2025, and the figure could exceed 20,000 this year.

This reflects a renewed spiritual interest, though one that must be seen in the wider context of more than two decades of declining baptism requests.

At the recent meeting with Pope Leo XIV, permission given to rename the soon to be renovated Cathedral Rectory: the Pope Leo XIV Center for Evangelization

 

In collaboration with campaign chair Mrs. Gayle Benson, the CCF hosts the “Our City, Our Cathedral” campaign fund on behalf of the Cathedral and the Archdiocese to ensure its care for generations to come.

That is why I am honored to share this historic news with you.