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‘We transmit the faith with Jesus at the center,’ Pope Leo XIV tells Italian Bishops

Pope Leo XIV invites Italy’s Bishops to embrace their primary responsibility of proclaiming and transmitting the faith, while always keeping Christ at the forefront, urging them to cultivate peace and work together.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

“First of all, a renewed impulse is necessary in the proclamation and transmission of the faith. This means placing Jesus Christ at the center…”

Pope Leo XIV gave this reminder when addressing the Italian Episcopal Conference, or the CEI, in the Vatican’s Hall of Blessings on Tuesday morning.

In his remarks, the Pope called for collegiality, witness, and, most of all, “helping people live a personal relationship with the Lord,” following the path indicated by the late Pope Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii gaudium, “so they may discover the joy of the Gospel.”

“This means placing Jesus Christ at the center, and, following the path indicated by Evangelii gaudium, helping people to live a personal relationship with Him, so they may discover the joy of the Gospel”

Returning to foundations of our faith

Saying we live in a time of great fragmentation, the Holy Father called for returning “to the foundations of our faith, to the kerygma.”

Pope Leo XIV meets with the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican

Pope Leo XIV meets with the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican   (@Vatican Media)

This, he said, is the first great commitment that motivates all the others: to bring Christ “into the veins” of humanity, by renewing and sharing the apostolic mission: “What we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you.’”

The Pope said it is about discerning ways to bring the Good News to everyone, with pastoral actions capable of reaching those who are furthest away, and with suitable tools for renewing catechesis and the language of proclamation.

‘Let us be drawn to Him’

Pope Leo invited them to join him in walking together, “with joy in our hearts and a song on our lips,” for God, he reminded, “is greater than our mediocrity.”

“Let us be drawn to Him! Let us place our trust in His providence.”

“Dearest brothers, let us walk together, with joy in our hearts and a song on our lips. God is greater than our mediocrity: let us be drawn to Him! Let us place our trust in His providence.”

The Pope told them to be a Church that embodies the Gospel and is a sign of the Kingdom of God, by proclaiming the Gospel, peace, human dignity, and dialogue.

The relationship with Christ, the Holy Father underscored, calls us to develop pastoral attention to the theme of peace.

“The Lord sends us into the world to bring His very gift: “Peace be with you!” — and to become its artisans in the places of daily life,” the Pope said, noting he thinks of parishes, neighborhoods, inner areas of the country, and urban and existential peripheries. “Where human and social relationships become difficult and conflict arises, even subtly,” he urged, “there must be a visible Church of reconciliation.” 

The Pope also urged them to promote collegiality among themselves and with the Successor of Peter and to reflect the principle of communion through cooperation with civil authorities. The CEI is, in fact, a place of dialogue and synthesis of the Bishops’ thought regarding the most important issues for the common good.

Challenges on the ground

The Pope remembered when his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI, in 2006, described the Church in Italy as “a very vibrant reality which maintains a widespread presence among people of all ages and conditions” and where “Christian traditions are still often deeply rooted and continue to bear fruit.” 

But nevertheless, Pope Leo lamented, the Christian community in this country has long been facing new challenges, “tied to secularism, a certain disaffection with the faith, and the demographic crisis.”

Yet the Holy Father echoed the late Pope Francis’ frequent reminder “to not be disturbed” and to work toward peace.

Saying every community should become a “house of peace,” Pope Leo stressed that peace “is not a spiritual utopia,” but rather a humble path, made of daily gestures.

Pope Leo XIV receives the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican

Pope Leo XIV receives the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican   (@Vatican Media)

The Pope also named challenges “that call into question the respect for the dignity of the human person,” such as artificial intelligence, biotechnologies, the data economy, and social media, which, he observed, profoundly transform our perception and experience of life.

“In this context,” he warned, “the dignity of the human being risks being flattened or forgotten, replaced by functions, automatisms, simulations,” especially since, “the person is not a system of algorithms: he or she is a creature, a relationship, a mystery.”

We are sent to proclaim the Gospel

Pope Leo expressed his hope that the journey of the Churches in Italy may include, “in coherent symbiosis with the centrality of Jesus, an anthropological vision as an essential instrument of pastoral discernment.”

“Without a living reflection on the human being — in his or her corporeality, vulnerability, thirst for the infinite, and capacity for relationship,” the Pope warned, “ethics is reduced to a code, and faith risks becoming disembodied.”

Going forward in unity

Before concluding, the Holy Father exhorted the Bishops to go forward in unity.

Urging them to look with serenity toward tomorrow and to not be afraid of courageous choices, he said, “No one can prevent you from being close to the people, from sharing life, from walking with the least, from serving the poor.”

And “no one,” Pope Leo underscored, “can stop you from proclaiming the Gospel — and it is the Gospel that we are sent to bring, because this is what everyone — ourselves first of all — needs in order to live well and to be happy.”

“No one can stop you from proclaiming the Gospel — and it is the Gospel that we are sent to bring, because this is what everyone — ourselves first of all — needs in order to live well and to be happy”

Welcoming lay faithful as ‘protagonists’

The Pope also urged them to be attentive that the lay faithful, nourished by the Word of God and formed in the Social Doctrine of the Church, “may be the protagonists” of evangelization in their workplaces, in schools, in hospitals, in social and cultural settings, in the economy, and in politics.

Before imparting his Apostolic Blessing, Pope Leo XIV concluded by entrusting the Italian Bishops to the protection of the Blessed Mother, Our Lady of Loreto, of Pompeii, and of the countless shrines that are scattered throughout Italy. 

Pope Leo XIV meets with the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican

Pope Leo XIV meets with the Italian Episcopal Conference in the Vatican   (@Vatican Media)

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