Thursday, February 5, 2026

Popular News

HomeNewsVatican'Sing with the Pope': Bursting into song in communion with God

‘Sing with the Pope’: Bursting into song in communion with God

Fr. Robert Mehlhart, OP, President of the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music, has begun offering singing lessons on social media, saying the initiative stems from a desire to help people join in song with Pope Leo XIV.

By Kielce Gussie

With over half a million videos on the first “Sing with the Pope” video, Fr. Robert Mehlhart, OP, says he is shocked at how people have responded to the series.

In an interview with Vatican News, the President of the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music shares that it was a spur-of-the-moment idea.

After watching Pope Leo XIV burst into song during his first Regina Caeli greeting, he realized he had a chance to help people get more involved. “I saw the Pope addressing his people,” Fr. Mehlhart explains, “and most people could join him.”

But he noticed there were people who “would have liked to have joined him, but they weren’t really prepared.” He immediately thought about how the Dominicans could offer a helping hand. With that, the “Let’s Sing with the Pope” series was born.

Not as easy as it seems

Fr. Mehlhart confesses that singing in St. Peter’s Square during a liturgy is not as easy as it seems. It’s hard to follow along, because, he says, “you can’t really hear the others so well.”

What does help is if the person has a background in music or if they have had the chance to listen to the song beforehand to know “what the words are and how the melody goes.”

Listen to Fr. Mehlhart share the story behind ‘Sing with the Pope’

The Dominican priest agrees that singing is an integral part of Christian celebrations. Yet, no matter whether you are classically trained or if your only experience is singing karaoke, your musical skills should not keep you from participating in Christian liturgies.

“Christians sing; lovers sing, as St. Augustine reminds us, and Christians are lovers as they love God,” Fr. Mehlhart points out. So, when we burst out into music and song—whether in tune or not—we do so “in communion with humanity and with God.”

Popular News

Nearly 1,000 feared missing in latest migrant tragedy

An Italian aid group says that scores of people are unaccounted for after many...

Cardinal Roche: St. John Henry Newman, an example of the search for truth

The Prefect of the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments...

St. John Henry Newman inscribed in General Roman Calendar

The Dicastery of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments releases a decree...

Archbishop Gallagher: Trust must be rebuilt in a world darkened by wars and divisions

Presiding over Mass in Bratislava on the 25th anniversary of the Fundamental Treaty between...