Monday, April 20, 2026

Saint of the Day for Tuesday

 

St. Anselm






1. He was born in the 11th century.

In 1033, Anselm was born in a town called Aosta on the border of Burgundy and Lombardy. His clear thinking made him a stellar student, and at age 15, he decided to pursue monastic life. However, his father’s staunch opposition prevented him from becoming a monk. Years later, Anselm was finally able to realize his dream at the Benedictine Abbey of Bec in Normandy.

At age 59, he was appointed to be the archbishop of Canterbury by the ailing King Rufus, who created the office while at death’s door. When King Rufus unexpectedly recovered, he thought better of the move, and decided to take the office’s revenues for himself, limiting Anselm’s ability to operate. “I saw in England many evils whose correction belonged to me and which I could neither remedy nor, without personal guilt, allow to exist,” related Anselm.

In 1097, Anselm felt called to leave England to minister in religious communities in France. As he crossed the English Channel, Rufus passed away, leaving a more accommodating successor in his stead: King Henry I. King Henry I returned the church property to Anselm, and gave him greater freedom in managing church affairs.

Anselm of Canterbury chancel
St. Anselm portrayed in the east chancel bay of the Basilica

2. He lived in exile for about three years.

As the years went by, King Henry I became more hostile to Anselm, and sent him into exile from 1103 to 1106. During that time, Anselm made strides in winning public support and making political changes. Wherever he was placed, he continually practiced his duties with a willing obedience, remarking: “When I professed myself a monk, I surrendered myself in such a way that thereafter I could not live according to my own will, but only in accordance with obedience either to God or to the Church of God.”

3. He became one of the first high-ranking individuals in Europe to denounce slavery.

Perhaps the most significant achievement of Anselm’s lifetime was the resolution to renounce the slave trade that emerged from the Westminster Council. Anselm had called the council to resolve political and ecclesiastical conflict, but its result had a far more enduring impact, affirming the dignity and freedom of the human person.

4. Anselm penned 11 lengthy treatises during his lifetime.

Throughout his work, he was committed to the harmony between faith and reason, writing that “faith seeking understanding” was the task of the theologian. His magnum opus, Why God Became a Man, offers a theory of divine atonement and resurrection that was monumental in shaping centuries of Christian doctrine.




As we celebrate the Memorial of St. Anselm of Canterbury on April 21, we invite you to discover five facts about his life and where you can find him portrayed in the Basilica.

1. He was born in the 11th century.

In 1033, Anselm was born in a town called Aosta on the border of Burgundy and Lombardy. His clear thinking made him a stellar student, and at age 15, he decided to pursue monastic life. However, his father’s staunch opposition prevented him from becoming a monk. Years later, Anselm was finally able to realize his dream at the Benedictine Abbey of Bec in Normandy.

At age 59, he was appointed to be the archbishop of Canterbury by the ailing King Rufus, who created the office while at death’s door. When King Rufus unexpectedly recovered, he thought better of the move, and decided to take the office’s revenues for himself, limiting Anselm’s ability to operate. “I saw in England many evils whose correction belonged to me and which I could neither remedy nor, without personal guilt, allow to exist,” related Anselm.

In 1097, Anselm felt called to leave England to minister in religious communities in France. As he crossed the English Channel, Rufus passed away, leaving a more accommodating successor in his stead: King Henry I. King Henry I returned the church property to Anselm, and gave him greater freedom in managing church affairs.

Anselm of Canterbury chancel
St. Anselm portrayed in the east chancel bay of the Basilica

2. He lived in exile for about three years.

As the years went by, King Henry I became more hostile to Anselm, and sent him into exile from 1103 to 1106. During that time, Anselm made strides in winning public support and making political changes. Wherever he was placed, he continually practiced his duties with a willing obedience, remarking: “When I professed myself a monk, I surrendered myself in such a way that thereafter I could not live according to my own will, but only in accordance with obedience either to God or to the Church of God.”

3. He became one of the first high-ranking individuals in Europe to denounce slavery.

Perhaps the most significant achievement of Anselm’s lifetime was the resolution to renounce the slave trade that emerged from the Westminster Council. Anselm had called the council to resolve political and ecclesiastical conflict, but its result had a far more enduring impact, affirming the dignity and freedom of the human person.

4. Anselm penned 11 lengthy treatises during his lifetime.

Throughout his work, he was committed to the harmony between faith and reason, writing that “faith seeking understanding” was the task of the theologian. His magnum opus, Why God Became a Man, offers a theory of divine atonement and resurrection that was monumental in shaping centuries of Christian doctrine.

5. His work Proslogion is believed to be the first theological work to make an ontological argument for the existence of God.

For his significant theological contributions, he was named a Doctor of the Church in 1720, and is also regarded as the “father of Scholasticism.” You can find St. Anselm portrayed in the east chancel bay of the Basilica.

Pope Leo XIV celebrates Mass in Saurimo, Angola

 

Pope at Mass in Saurimo: 'The Risen One illumines our path and sanctifies us'

During Mass in Saurimo, Pope Leo urges the faithful of Angola to follow the Risen Lord, who leads the way and sanctifies us, and "to not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life.”

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

"He, the Risen One, illumines for us the path to the Father and with the strength of the Spirit He sanctifies us so that we may transform our way of life in conformity with His love."

Pope Leo XIV gave this comforting reminder during the Mass he celebrated in Saurimo, Angola, on Monday as the Pope continues the third leg of his four-nation Apostolic Journey.

In his homily, he recalled that in every part of the world, the Church lives as a people who walk as disciples of Christ, our brother and Redeemer, and the Good News, His Gospel message, sustains our journey. "A journey that," Pope Leo said, "has brought me here with you today!" 

READ POPE LEO XIV'S FULL HOMILY

"In the joy and beauty of our gathering, united in the name of Jesus," he invited, "let us listen with open hearts to the Word of salvation for it helps us reflect on the motive and purpose for which we follow the Lord."



Pope Leo's Mass in Saurimo, Angola (@Vatican Media)

He recalled that when the Son of God became man, He performed striking miracles in order to manifest the will of the Father. "He made light shine in the darkness by giving sight to the blind, he gave a voice to the oppressed by loosening the tongues of the mute, he slaked our thirst for justice by multiplying bread for the poor and weak," Pope Leo marveled, acknowledging that, "Anyone who heard about these works set out in search of Jesus." 

Need to seek Christ for the right reasons

At the same time, the Holy Father said, the Lord looks into our heart and asks us "whether we seek Him out of gratitude or for our own self-interest, with calculation or with love." 

The Pope remembered when Jesus said to those who were following Him: “You are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves” (Jn 6:26), as he stressed that the crowd saw the Lord "as means to an end, a provider of services." 

If He had not given them something to eat, Pope Leo said, His actions and teachings would not have interested them.

This, he warned, "happens when genuine faith is replaced with superstitious practices, in which God becomes an idol that is sought only when it is advantageous to us and only for as long as it is." The Holy Father recalled that there had been and sometimes are erroneous motives for seeking Christ, "particularly when He is considered to be a guru or a good luck charm." 

Does not reject the insincere search, but encourages conversion

Yet, Jesus, Pope Leo noted, does not reject this insincere search, but encourages its conversion. 

"He does not dismiss the crowd, but invites everyone to examine what stirs in our hearts," he said, stressing: "Christ calls us to freedom. He does not want servants or clients, rather He seeks brothers and sisters to whom He can totally dedicate Himself.  To respond with faith to this love, it is not enough to hear Jesus speak: one must accept the meaning of His words.

Neither he continued, is it enough to see what Jesus does: one must follow and imitate Him.

Only when in the sign of shared bread, we see the will of the Savior who gives Himself for us, Pope Leo explained, do we draw closer to a true encounter with Jesus. At that point, the Lord's admonition to the crowd, the Holy Father said, is transformed into an invitation: “Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life.” 

Jesus teaches us proper way to be sustained forever

On the contrary, the Holy Father noted, Jesus teaches us the correct way to search for the bread of life, food which sustains us forever.  He marveled therefore that the crowd receives an even greater response from Christ who "does not give us food that passes away, but bread that lasts because it is the food of eternal life."

The Pope observed that Jesus' gift sheds light on our current situation.  "We can see today how the hope of many people is frustrated by violence, exploited by the powerful and defrauded by the rich."  He lamented that when hearts are corrupted by injustice, the bread of all becomes the possession of a few. 

"In the face of these evils," the Pope reassured, "Christ hears the cry of the people and renews our history by lifting us up from every fall, comforting us in every suffering and encouraging us in our mission."

"Just as the Eucharist is the living bread that He never ceases to give us," Pope Leo said, "so too His history knows no end. "

The faith that saves life

"For this reason," the Holy Father marveled, "the Risen One opens up our lives through the power of His Spirit and removes the end of our history, that is death. Christ lives!  He is our Redeemer. This is the Gospel that we share, making all the people of the earth our brothers and sisters.  This is the proclamation that transforms sin into forgiveness.  This is the faith that saves life!"

The Easter witness, therefore, certainly pertains to Christ, the Crucified One who is risen, but -- Pope Leo said -- it also pertains even to us because in Him the proclamation of our resurrection finds its voice. 


Pope's Mass in Saurimo (@Vatican Media)


The Pope said we did not come into the world to die.  "We were not born to become slaves either to the corruption of the flesh or that of the soul," he continued, decrying, "every form of oppression, violence, exploitation and dishonesty negates the Resurrection of Christ, the supreme gift of our freedom." 

Pope Leo clarified that this liberation from death does not happen only at the end of our days, but every day of our lives.

He asked, "What must we do to welcome such a gift?  The Gospel itself teaches us: “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent” (Jn 6:29).  Yes, let us believe!"

With this sentiment, the Holy Father reminded the faithful before him of the Psalm which states: “Happy are those who walk in the law of the Lord.”

Moment during the Pope's Mass (@Vatican Media)

The way that God has opened for us never fails

The Pope stressed that the Lord leads our paths, and we are to proceed following His wise direction.

"With the Gospel in your heart," he encouraged, "you will have courage in the face of difficulties and disappointments: the way that God has opened for us, never fails." 

The Lord, he insisted, always walks with us, so that we may continue on His path. "Christ Himself," he noted, "guides and strengthens our journey."

Pope Leo concluded by reminding the faithful that through them, "the initiatives of divine grace bear good fruit" and prayed that the witness of the martyrs and of the saints encourage them to pursue a path of hope, reconciliation and peace.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Sunday Recap from Angola on Day 7 of Pope Leo's Apostolic Journey

 

Day Seven in Africa: Pope invites Angolans to begin anew, loving with a mother's heart

Pope Leo XIV wraps up his seventh day in Africa, during which he celebrated Holy Mass in Kilamba and prayed the Rosary at the Mamã Muxima Shrine, in Angola.

By Claudia Torres – Luanda, Angola

Pope Leo XIV only held two public events on his seventh day in Africa, but that didn’t detract from the day’s intensity or the people’s enthusiasm.

Holy Mass in Kilamba

The first event was Holy Mass in Kilamba, a planned urban development about 30 kilometres from the Angolan capital. People from different parts of the world gathered for the liturgy on Sunday, 19 April, despite the intense heat and high humidity.

In his homily, the Holy Father reflected on the Gospel passage about the disciples who encounter the Risen Jesus but fail to recognize him on the road to Emmaus.

“In this opening scene of the Gospel,” said the Pope, “I see a reflection of the history of Angola, of this beautiful yet wounded country, which hungers and thirsts for hope, peace and fraternity.”

He noted that “the conversation along the road between the two disciples, who reflected with sorrow on what had happened to their Master, brings to mind the pain that has marked [Angola]: a long civil war with its aftermath of enmities and divisions, of squandered resources and poverty.”

Given this difficult context, the Pope urged Angolans “to begin anew,” knowing that the Lord accompanies them and has compassion on them, as He did with His disciples. After Mass, he prayed the Regina Coeli with the assembly. He expressed closeness to the people of Ukraine amid intensified attacks and appealed for dialogue and diplomatic efforts in Lebanon.

Praying the Rosary at the Mamã Muxima Shrine

In the afternoon, tens of thousands of faithful gathered in Muxima, the most important pilgrimage site in Angola, to pray the Rosary with the Holy Father. Nearly 130 kilometres from Luanda, it houses the shrine of Mamã Muxima, meaning Mother of the Heart, the Kimbundu name the people of Angola reserve for the Virgin Mary.

Fr Daniel Malamba, a Divine Word Missionary, explained that “for the faithful in Angola, Mamã Muxima is everything.” Angolan religiosity is firmly rooted in love for her, he said, which is why so many people wanted to see the Pope alongside Our Lady.

Many of the faithful expressed their joy at the opportunity to join the Pope in honoring Mamã Muxima. “She listens to our prayers” and is there “for all the problems that we have,” said Conceição António, who was there with a group of pilgrims.

Fernanda, a volunteer helping out at the event, said many people had arrived days earlier, camping out in tents to prepare to welcome the Holy Father.

Their patience was finally rewarded when Pope Leo arrived in a helicopter from Luanda. He prayed inside the chapel at the shrine and left white flowers at the foot of the statue of Mamã Muxima. He then sped through the crowd in the popemobile, people cheering and running after him, trying to get as close as possible to the Successor of Peter.

After the Marian prayer, the Pope told the people present that praying the Rosary commits one “to loving every person with a mother’s heart—concretely and generously—and to dedicating [oneself] to the good of one another, especially the poorest.”

Addressing young people, he urged them to work towards a world free from war, injustice, poverty, and corruption. "It is love that must triumph, not war," he said.

The Holy Father then returned to the Apostolic Nunciature in Luanda for the night.

Saint of the Day for Monday

 

St. Agnes of Montepulciano






Nun and foundress in Tuscany. She was born circa 1268 and at the age of nine entered the monastery of Montepulciano, near her home in Gracchiano-Vecchio. Four years later she was commissioned by Pope Nicholas IV to assist in the foundation of a new convent in Procena. At fifteen she became the head of the nuns there. About 1300, the people of Montepulciano built a new convent in order to lure Agnes back to them. She established a convent under the Dominican rule and governed there until her death in 1317. Agnes was noted for her visions. She held the infant Christ in her arms and received Holy Communion from an angel. She experienced levitations and she performed miracles for the faithful of the region. She is still revered in Tuscany.

Pope Leo XIV asked today for prayers for peace in Lebanon and for the war to stop in Ukraine

 

Ukrainians in the aftermath of an attack Ukrainians in the aftermath of an attack

Pope Leo appeals for dialogue to end wars in Ukraine and Middle East

Speaking at the Regina Coeli after Mass in Angola, Pope Leo XIV expresses closeness to the people of Ukraine amid intensified attacks and appeals for dialogue and diplomatic efforts in Lebanon.

By Linda Bordoni

Pope Leo XIV on Sunday renewed his appeal for a path of dialogue to be pursued in Ukraine, which is under increased Russian attacks, and in the Middle East, where he said, a ceasefire in Lebanon is "a sign of hope."

He was speaking during the Regina Coeli address after Holy Mass in the Kilamba district of Luanda in Angola on Sunday, on the second day of his visit to the southern African nation.

Appeal for diplomatic solution to Ukraine war

“I deeply regret the recent intensification of attacks against Ukraine, which continue to affect the civilian population,” the Pope said, and he expressed his closeness and prayers to all who are suffering.

“I renew my appeal for the weapons to fall silent,” he added, “and for the path of dialogue to be pursued.”

The past week has seen Russia launch the deadliest attacks in months on Ukraine, with more than 700 drones in multiple waves, killing at least 18 people in Odesa, Dnipro and Kyiv. The intensification of strikes came after a brief ceasefire took place during the Orthodox Easter last weekend, although both sides accused each other of hundreds of violations.

Truce in Lebanon a sign of hope

Pope Leo went on to say that “the announced truce in Lebanon is a sign of hope, offering relief to the Lebanese people and to the wider Levant.”

“I encourage those engaged in seeking a diplomatic solution to continue along the path of peace, so that the end of hostilities throughout the Middle East may become lasting,” he appealed.

A 10-day ceasefire came into effect on Thursday between Israel and Lebanon, announced earlier in the day by the U.S. President. Israeli attacks targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon have killed almost 2,000 people, injured thousands and displaced tens of thousands.

United in prayer

Pope Leo, who is in Angola on the third leg of his four-nation apostolic journey to the African Continent, concluded the celebration of Holy Mass in Luanda’s Kilamba esplanade, inviting the faithful to join him in prayer.

“With this joyful hymn, we do not wish to silence or drown out the cry of those who suffer,” he said, “Rather, we seek to embrace it and join it to our own voices in a new harmony, so that even in pain the light of faith may remain alive, and with it the hope for a better world.”

Noting that Christ conquered death, he said that “united with him and in him as one body”, we must “strive today and every day to foster around us the fruits of Easter: love, true justice, and peace, beyond every obstacle and difficulty."

“May the Mother of Jesus, Mother of the Heart, help us always to feel alive and strong within us, the presence of her risen Son close at hand.”

Pope Leo XIV offers Mass and his Regina Caeli message today from Kilamba, Angola

 

Pope at Mass in Kilamba: Jesus walks beside the Church in Angola

During Mass in Luanda's suburb of Kilamba, Pope Leo XIV insists that Jesus is alive, is risen, and walks beside Angolans, and notes that if all the faithful welcome the Lord and His presence in their midst, their nation - that has seen much suffering - can be graced with a blessed and peaceful future.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

"Remain faithful to what the Church teaches, trust your Pastors, and keep your gaze fixed on Jesus, who reveals Himself in a particular way in the Word and in the Eucharist."

Pope Leo XIV insisted on this point during his Mass in Kilamba, Angola, on Sunday 19 April 2026, during his first full day in the country and in the midst of his four-nation journey to Africa.

READ POPE LEO XIV'S FULL HOMILY

In his homily, he said that with a heart full of gratitude, he celebrates the Eucharist in their midst, stressing he thanks God for this gift and for their joyful welcome.

Angola, a beautiful but wounded country

On this Third Sunday of Easter, the Pope recalled the day's Gospel according to St. Luke, which recounted the passage of the disciples on the road to Emmaus. Two of the Lord’s disciples, with their hearts wounded and sorrowful, leave Jerusalem to return to their village of Emmaus, after having seen the death of Jesus in whom they had placed their trust and whom they had followed. Initially they are despondent, but then all this changes when they recognize that Christ is in their midst, that the Lord Jesus is walking beside them.




Papal Mass in Angola - 19 April 2026 (@Vatican Media)

Pope Leo told those before him that in this opening scene of the Gospel, he sees reflected the history of Angola, "this beautiful yet wounded country, which hungers and thirsts for hope, for peace, and for fraternity."

"The conversation along the road between the two disciples, who recall with discouragement what had happened to their Master," he continued, "brings to mind the suffering that has marked your country: a long civil war, with its aftermath of enmity and division, squandered resources, and poverty."

Faced with all of this, the Holy Father acknowledged that when one has long been immersed in a history so marked by suffering, one risks becoming like the disciples of Emmaus, losing hope and remaining paralyzed by discouragement. One is weary, not knowing how to begin again or whether it is even possible.

Yet the Lord, he reminded the faithful, draws near to the two discouraged disciples and by becoming their companion on the journey, "helps them piece together that story, to look beyond their pain, to discover that they are not alone on the path, and that a future—still inhabited by the God of love—awaits them."

He walks beside us, granting us grace to set out again

"Dear friends, the Good News of the Lord, also for us today, is precisely this," Pope Leo underscored. "He is alive, He is risen, and He walks beside us as we journey along the road of suffering and bitterness. He opens our eyes to recognize His work and grants us the grace to set out again and to rebuild the future." Here, then, is the path set before us—and for you, dear brothers and sisters of Angola—to begin again: on the one hand, the certainty that the Lord accompanies us and has compassion for us; on the other, the commitment that He asks of us.

The Holy Father explained that above all we experience the Lord’s companionship in our relationship with Him.

He said we encounter God in prayer, in listening to His Word, which makes our hearts burn within us, as it did for the two disciples, and above all in the celebration of the Eucharist.

"For this reason," he cautioned, "we must always be attentive to those forms of traditional religiosity which, while certainly part of the roots of your culture, also risk confusing and mixing in magical and superstitious elements that do not help us on the spiritual journey."

"Remain faithful," he said, "to what the Church teaches, trust your Pastors, and keep your gaze fixed on Jesus, who reveals Himself in a particular way in the Word and in the Eucharist. In both, we experience that the Risen Lord walks beside us, and united with Him, we too overcome the deaths that besiege us and live as those who have been raised."

Healing wounds and rekindling hope

Knowing that we are not alone, the Holy Father said, this must drive us to heal wounds and rekindle hope.

"The history of your country, the still difficult consequences you endure, the social and economic challenges, and the various forms of poverty," Pope Leo underscored, "all call for the presence of a Church that walks alongside her people and is able to hear the cry of her children. A Church that, with the light of the Word and the nourishment of the Eucharist, can revive lost hope."


Pope Leo delivers homily (AFP or licensors)

He said the Church needs people like you, who give themselves as Jesus breaks the bread for the two disciples of Emmaus.

Angola, he said, needs Bishops, priests, missionaries, men and women religious, and lay faithful who have in their hearts the desire to break their own lives and give them to one another.

Constructing a future of hope is possible

By the grace of the Risen Christ, he noted, "we too can become this broken bread that transforms reality. And just as the Eucharist reminds us that we are one body and one spirit, united in the one Lord, so we too can—and we wish to—build a country where old divisions are definitively overcome, where hatred and violence disappear, and where the wound of corruption is healed by a new culture of justice and sharing."

"Only in this way," he insisted, "will a future of hope be possible, especially for the many young people who have lost it."

Pope Leo concluded his homily by encouraging the faithful of the country to look to the future with hope and to build the hope of the future. "Do not be afraid to do so! The Risen Jesus, who walks the road with you and breaks Himself as bread for you, encourages you to be witnesses of His Resurrection and protagonists of a new humanity and a new society."

He also reassured that on this journey, the nation's Catholics can count on the closeness and prayers of the Pope, and he said, as he entrusted them to the Blessed Mother, that he knows he can count on them too.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Pope Leo XIV speaks with Angolan civil authorities

 

Pope to Angolan authorities: Don't suppress youth's visions or the elderly's dreams

Pope Leo addresses Angola’s authorities, civil society and members of the diplomatic corps and encourages them to use their positions to promote peace and stability.

Vatican News

The first public event of his visit to Angola saw Pope Leo XIV meet with the country’s authorities, representatives of civil society, and members of the diplomatic corps at the Presidential Palace in Luanda on Saturday afternoon.

Addressing President João Lourenço and those gathered, the Pope began by expressing his gratitude for the invitation and emphasized, "I come to you to meet your people, as a pilgrim seeking the signs of God’s passage in this land loved by Him".

President João Lourenço offered a welcome greeting to the Pope   (@Vatican Media)

He took time to acknowledge the recent flooding in Benguela province, assuring his "prayer for the victims" and expressing "closeness to the families who have lost their homes". He also noted the national response, observing that Angolans are "united in a great chain of solidarity in support of those affected".

The resilience of Angolans

In his address, Pope Leo highlighted what he described as the country’s most important resources, not material but human, stating that "your people possess treasures that cannot be sold or stolen". Among these, he emphasised a resilience rooted in experience. "There is within them a joy that not even the most adverse circumstances have been able to extinguish", he said.

Meeting with authorities and civil society was the first public event of the Angolan leg of the Apostolic Journey (@Vatican Media)

At the same time, the Pope warned against longstanding patterns of economic exploitation. "Too often your regions have been, and still are, looked upon in order to give - or more often, to take something", he said, calling for "this chain of interests, which reduces reality and life itself to a commodity", to be broken.

Africa of joy and hope

Pope Leo then went on to speak of Africa more broadly. He described the continent as "a reserve of joy and hope" for the world, pointing in particular to its younger generations. "Its young people and its poor still dream, still hope, do not settle for what already exists", he said. This, he continued, represents a deeper force for change than political programmes alone.

The Pope also addressed the impact of extractive economic models, which he said have led to "suffering, deaths, and social and environmental disasters". He warned that such systems continue to promote "a model of development that discriminates and excludes yet still claims to impose itself as the only possible one".

Quoting Saint Paul VI, he recalled criticism of a "commercial, hedonistic, materialistic civilization" that presents itself as the future despite being "completely anachronistic". In contrast, he noted that "this generation is waiting for something else".

Life flourishes only in encounter

Turning to the political and social challenges facing many African nations, Pope Leo emphasised the importance of dialogue. "Life flourishes only in encounter. In the beginning is dialogue", he said, while acknowledging that disagreement can escalate into conflict.

Quoting Pope Francis, he then outlined three possible responses to conflict, highlighting the need to transform it constructively. "The most appropriate way… is to accept it, resolve it and transform it into a link in a new process. 'Blessed are the peacemakers'", he said. 

Place the common good first

He then addressed those in positions of responsibility in Angola directly, encouraging an inclusive approach to governance by urging them not to "fear disagreement; do not suppress the visions of the young or the dreams of the elderly".  He then went on to urge them to "place the common good before particular interests, never confusing your own part with the whole". 

The Pope described the political dimension of hope and joy. These, he said, are not merely private sentiments but forces that shape society. Moreover, they are "an intense and expansive force that counters resignation and the temptation to withdraw". 

He warned against political strategies that rely on division and discouragement. Again, he referred to Pope Francis, who noted that "the best way to dominate… is to sow hopelessness and constant mistrust". Such approaches, the Argentine pontiff had stressed, lead to "polarization" and weaken social cohesion.

Instead, Pope Leo encouraged "true joy", describing it as a source of renewal. He linked it to Christian faith, saying "the fruit of the Spirit… is love, joy, peace". He stressed that social life depends on relationships grounded in dignity and mutual recognition as "without joy there is no renewal; without encounter there is no politics; without the other there is no justice".

The future of Angola

Bringing his address to a close, Pope Leo expressed confidence in Angola’s future, calling for a shared commitment to development that includes all sectors of society. He reaffirmed the Catholic Church’s role as a partner in this process, stating that it seeks "to foster the growth of a just model of coexistence".

Finally, he recalled the psalm, "The stone rejected by the builders has become the cornerstone", before offering a final blessing: "God bless Angola!"