logo
Pope Leo XIV at Angelus: May unity be forged in witness and forgiveness

Pope Leo XIV at Angelus: May unity be forged in witness and forgiveness

Herald Malaysia5 days ago
On the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, Pope Leo XIV highlights the enduring call to Christian unity, grounded in the shared witness of martyrdom and the transformative power of forgiveness. Jun 30, 2025
Pope Leo XIV during Angelus (@VATICAN MEDIA)
By Linda BordoniOn the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, Pope Leo XIV greeted pilgrims gathered in St Peter's Square for the Angelus prayer and reflected on Christian unity, conversion, and the witness of martyrdom that binds the Church in a deep and often hidden communion.
The Pope began by recalling the roots of the Church of Rome, founded on the testimony and blood of the Apostles Peter and Paul. He honoured their enduring legacy, linking it to the ongoing sacrifice of Christians around the world who suffer, and even die, for their faith in Christ.
'We can speak of an ecumenism of blood,' the Pope said, describing a unity forged not through theological agreements alone, but through the shared suffering of believers across confessional lines.
'This unseen yet profound unity among Christian Churches that are not yet in full and visible communion,' he added, is at the heart of his episcopal mission. 'The Church of Rome,' he reaffirmed, 'is committed by the blood shed by Saints Peter and Paul to serving in love the communion of all Churches.'
Jesus is the true rock
Reflecting on the Gospel and the foundational role of Peter, the Pope pointed to Jesus as the true rock: 'He is the rock rejected by the builders, whom God made the cornerstone.'
He observed how the grandeur of the Papal Basilicas of Peter and Paul, now central to Christian identity, once stood at the margins of society. 'Outside the Walls,' he said, using the traditional Roman expression, is where their witness began, a reminder that Gospel greatness often begins in places the world deems insignificant.
Pope Leo warned that those who follow Christ walk a difficult path, the path of the Beatitudes. He noted that poverty of spirit, meekness, and a thirst for justice are often met with opposition. Yet, it is precisely along this path that God's glory is revealed. 'God's glory shines forth in his friends and continues to shape them along the way, passing from conversion to conversion.'
Sainthood is born of forgiveness
He explained that sainthood is not born of perfection, but of forgiveness. 'The New Testament does not conceal the errors, conflicts and sins of those whom we venerate as the greatest Apostles,' the Pope said, adding that 'their greatness was shaped by forgiveness.'
Just as Christ reached out to Peter and Paul time and again, he continues to call each person, not once, but repeatedly. 'That is why we can always hope. The Jubilee is itself a reminder of this,' he said.
Concluding, the Pope called the faithful to become artisans of unity, beginning within families and local communities. 'Unity in the Church and among the Churches is fostered by forgiveness and mutual trust,' he said, "If Jesus can trust us, we can certainly trust one another in his name.'
Finally, he prayed to the Virgin Mary and the Apostles Peter and Paul, with a call for the Church to be 'a home and school of communion' in a world still marked by wounds and division.--Vatican News
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tribunal roadshow on marriage, annulment and Church teachings
Tribunal roadshow on marriage, annulment and Church teachings

Herald Malaysia

time15 hours ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Tribunal roadshow on marriage, annulment and Church teachings

he Peninsular Malaysia Ecclesiastical Tribunal (PMET), in collaboration with the Catholic Lawyers' Society, the Archdiocesan Mental Health Ministry, and the Emmaus Counselling Centre, has embarked on a tribunal roadshow to provide the faithful with a deeper understanding of the Catholic Church's tea Jul 04, 2025 KUALA LUMPUR: The Peninsular Malaysia Ecclesiastical Tribunal (PMET), in collaboration with the Catholic Lawyers' Society, the Archdiocesan Mental Health Ministry, and the Emmaus Counselling Centre, has embarked on a tribunal roadshow to provide the faithful with a deeper understanding of the Catholic Church's teachings on marriage, annulment, and pastoral care. This initiative aims to shed light on the Church's teachings on marriage, dispel common misconceptions, and offer pastoral and psychological support to those facing marital challenges. As an outreach effort, the roadshow seeks to engage with individuals who may have questions about the validity of their marriage, those struggling with marital difficulties, and even those who have undergone civil divorce and are uncertain about their standing in the Church. The roadshow includes informative sessions led by Fr William Michael, the Judicial Vicar of PMET, civil lawyers, and mental health professionals, covering topics such as: • The Sacrament of Marriage: Understanding the Church's vision of marriage as a lifelong covenant. • Procedural laws governing civil divorce: Outlining the legal grounds and conditions under which a marriage may be terminated through civil proceedings. • Healing and Reconciliation: Addressing emotional and psychological aspects with professional support. The collaboration with the Catholic Lawyers' Society ensures that attendees receive accurate legal perspectives, while the Archdiocesan Mental Health Ministry and Emmaus Counselling Centre offer professional counselling and emotional support. Together, these parties are committed to accompanying individuals with compassion and understanding, recognising the sensitive nature of marital struggles and the healing journey that follows. The tribunal roadshow has already been well-received in its initial sessions, with many participants expressing gratitude for the opportunity to seek guidance in a supportive environment. Due to the positive response, we are pleased to announce that in the second half of the year, we will continue the roadshow to more churches across the Archdiocese of Kuala Lumpur. We invite all members of the faithful — whether married, divorced, or simply seeking knowledge about Church teachings on marriage — to attend these sessions. The roadshow is an opportunity for the Catholic community to come together in faith, learn about the annulment process, and find pastoral care in their journey towards healing and reconciliation.

Planting for justice in a time of ‘unpeace' in the Philippines
Planting for justice in a time of ‘unpeace' in the Philippines

Herald Malaysia

time19 hours ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Planting for justice in a time of ‘unpeace' in the Philippines

The seeds were sown in Rome, and what grows will depend on how they are watered through solidarity, prayer, action and faith Jul 04, 2025 More than 70 representatives from various faiths and human rights groups from 13 countries attended a conference titled 'Sowing Seeds of Faith Solidarity for the Filipino People's Struggle for Peace' in Rome, on June 27-28. (Photo: Every Jubilee is a summons — an interruption of injustice and an invitation to begin again. In Rome, on the cusp of the Church's 2025 Jubilee Year of Hope, a gathering called Pagtatanim — the Filipino word for 'planting — became such a moment. It was a spiritual milestone in a long, often unseen journey. That road began more than four decades ago in Stony Point, New York, when Filipino and international faith leaders first gathered to oppose the Marcos dictatorship and stand with the poor. In Rome, those same seeds of solidarity were replanted, now watered by the cries of today's oppressed, the testimony of the disappeared, and the prophetic insistence that peace cannot come without justice. On June 27–28, more than70 faith leaders, human rights defenders, and international solidarity partners from 13 countries gathered for Pagtatanim: Sowing Seeds of Faith and Solidarity for the Filipino People's Struggle for Peace. The gathering brought together Catholic clergy, Protestant ministers, Indigenous advocates, lay leaders, and grassroots organizers in a deeply spiritual and political encounter. The conference's title captured the spirit of the moment: sowing courage, memory, and commitment into what many participants called a season of 'unpeace.' Rooted in Leviticus 25, the Year of Jubilee, participants reflected on God's call to free captives, forgive debts, return ancestral lands, and restore the earth. As one delegate said, "Jubilee is not just a metaphor: it's a command. It remains as urgent today as ever." But how do you proclaim a Jubilee in a country where the sins of the past have not only gone unconfessed but returned to power? The Marcos family, ousted by the People Power Revolution in 1986, is back in Malacañang, propped up by a machinery of disinformation and impunity. Their return was paved by Rodrigo Duterte, whose drug war left thousands dead and who is now under scrutiny by the International Criminal Court. His daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte, is herself facing impeachment scrutiny for corruption. Yet even as Duterte faces justice in The Hague, his legacy continues at home: a militarized bureaucracy, criminalized dissent, and politics driven more by dynastic feuds than democratic renewal. In this landscape, Jubilee is not just a symbol. It is a moral counterclaim, a cry from the margins for a new beginning grounded not in nostalgia, but in truth. 'Justice is not optional in our faith traditions; it is integral,' said Beth Dollaga, secretary general of the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP) Canada. 'Pagtatanim reminded me that planting seeds of justice is an act of hope, but it is also an act of defiance.' Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos, the vice president of Caritas Philippines, opened the gathering with a deeply personal keynote address. He recalled growing up in Sipalay, Negros Occidental where mining explosions shook the ground and corporate greed left communities dispossessed. 'To remain neutral in the face of injustice is to side with the oppressor,' he declared. 'The Gospel calls us to uproot the weeds of militarism, lies, and fear — not with hate, but with active, daring love.' Bishop Alminaza linked the biblical Jubilee with the Church's 2025 Jubilee Year of Hope. In his words, the work ahead is to 'plant seeds of justice, even in hostile soil.' He called on churches to accompany the disappeared, shelter the threatened, and demand peace talks, not surrender. His words resonated through the halls of the conference and were echoed in testimonies of resistance and grief. Throughout Pagtatanim, participants described the Philippine reality as one of systemic 'unpeace,' a term invoked to name the normalization of repression and violence. Charmane Maranan, from Karapatan, described unpeace as repression made legal, where resistance is criminalized, codified in the Anti-Terrorism Law, and dressed in the language of peace and development. Testimonies detailed the war on drugs under Duterte, continuing red-tagging and harassment under Marcos Jr., and the silencing of Indigenous, environmental, and faith-based defenders. This is not peace but pacification in the service of profit and foreign power. A just and lasting peace is not about silencing the guns; it is about addressing the longstanding socioeconomic roots of the armed conflict between the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines. Charlie Ocampo, a longtime ecumenical and human rights advocate, traced the seeds of Pagtatanim back to the International Conference on Human Rights in the Philippines held in Stony Point, New York, in 1981. That pivotal gathering brought together solidarity groups and church organizations from North America, Japan, Europe, and other parts of the world to challenge US support for the Marcos dictatorship. It called Christians to a faith that does justice. Four decades later, that call resounded in Rome. 'Pagtatanim encouraged me to continue responding to human rights as a faith commitment,' Ocampo said. 'Jubilee is both a reminder and a challenge for us to uphold Indigenous rights, care for creation, and walk with the oppressed, to do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly — a timeless call to action.' What began at Stony Point and continued in Rome was not simply a meeting, but part of a faith journey, one unfolding today under a restored dynasty, elite rivalries, systemic corruption, and a democracy increasingly silenced. It is telling that voices so often silenced in the Philippines and the US could speak with clarity and courage in Rome, where distance gave space for truth and solidarity offered a sanctuary. Reverend Patricia Lisson, vice-chairperson of ICHRP Global, was moved by the convergence of spiritual and political convictions she witnessed, particularly among youth and Indigenous leaders. 'Leviticus 25 reminded me that justice begins with restoration,' she said. 'It's a divine interruption of exploitation. Jubilee isn't ideology — it's covenant.' She committed to creating bilingual educational tools on faith-rooted resistance and to advocating for Canadian accountability in arms exports and corporate complicity. Speakers did not shy away from naming complicity. Several participants denounced the roles of the US, Canada, and Australia in funding militarization and enabling impunity. Coni Ledesma, of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) negotiating panel, detailed the systematic breakdown of peace negotiations and the targeting of peace consultants. She said that the Philippine government 'has used every occasion to stop, suspend, or terminate dialogue. The obstacles are not accidental. They are deliberate.' Advocates from Catalonia, Indonesia, Hong Kong, and the US shared their own solidarity efforts, affirming that support for the Filipino people's struggle is both historical and ongoing. 'We are also people of faith supporting an existing people's movement,' said one participant, 'a movement that has continued to persist and persevere in the face of roadblocks to peace.' The gathering ended with a call to faith that moves, resists, and restores. Participants vowed to plant justice where violence has taken root: to root theological reflections in the lived struggle of the marginalized, to speak against US military aid that underwrites repression, and to walk with the threatened, the defenders of land, truth, and life. They pledged to demand the release of political prisoners, to stand with the disappeared and displaced, and to push back against the machinery of red-tagging and fear. Their call also includes continuing support for victims of the drug war and the movement for justice and accountability. 'Hope,' Bishop Alminaza reminded the gathering, 'is not a feeling. It is a discipline. A seed we plant. A path we walk.' In Rome, those seeds were planted. What grows from that ecumenical gathering will depend on how they are watered: through solidarity, prayer, action, and with a faith that refuses to give

Ukrainian and Vatican summer camp children receive visit by Pope Leo
Ukrainian and Vatican summer camp children receive visit by Pope Leo

Herald Malaysia

time2 days ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Ukrainian and Vatican summer camp children receive visit by Pope Leo

Pope Leo XIV meets with over 600 children in the Paul VI Hall, including participants from the Vatican's summer camp and Ukrainian children hosted by Caritas Italiana. Jul 03, 2025 The meeting with the children (@VATICAN MEDIA) VATICAN: Shortly before noon and following the conclusion of his audiences, Pope Leo XIV took the time to greet over 300 children and young people participating in the 'Estate Ragazzi in Vaticano' summer camp, gathered in the Paul VI Hall. They were joined by another 300 children and adolescents from Ukraine, welcomed to Italy for the summer by Caritas Italiana. After being welcomed by the young volunteers working at the summer camp, the Pope spent time speaking with the children and answering several of their questions. Recalling his own childhood, he shared memories of attending Mass, a place where he encountered other children and friends, but above all, 'the best friend of all: Jesus.' Reflecting on the themes of diversity and welcome, Pope Leo addressed the Ukrainian children with words of greeting in English. He highlighted the importance of mutual respect and the need to look beyond differences: 'It is important to build bridges, to create friendship. We can all be friends, brothers, and sisters,' he said. Builders of peace and friendship In response to a question about war, the Holy Father encouraged the children to become builders of peace and friendship, even from a young age. 'Do not enter into war or conflict. Never promote hatred or envy,' he said, reminding them that 'Jesus calls us all to be friends,' and he explained the importance of 'learning from childhood to respect one another and to see the other as someone like myself.' The children presented Pope Leo with a variety of gifts, including handmade crafts created during the summer camp, as well as drawings and artwork prepared by the Ukrainian children. At the conclusion of the encounter, after taking group photos, Pope Leo invited everyone to pray the Hail Mary together and imparted his blessing on all those present.--Vatican News

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store