DiscoverThe Pillar‘Showing the true face of the Church’
‘Showing the true face of the Church’

‘Showing the true face of the Church’

Update: 2025-10-09
Share

Description

Pope Leo XIV on Thursday published Dilexi te, the first major document of his pontificate.

<figure>
<source type="image/webp" />
<svg class="lucide lucide-refresh-cw" fill="none" height="20" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewBox="0 0 24 24" width="20" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><path d="M3 12a9 9 0 0 1 9-9 9.75 9.75 0 0 1 6.74 2.74L21 8"></path><path d="M21 3v5h-5"></path><path d="M21 12a9 9 0 0 1-9 9 9.75 9.75 0 0 1-6.74-2.74L3 16"></path><path d="M8 16H3v5"></path></svg>
<svg class="lucide lucide-maximize2 lucide-maximize-2" fill="none" height="20" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewBox="0 0 24 24" width="20" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><polyline points="15 3 21 3 21 9"></polyline><polyline points="9 21 3 21 3 15"></polyline><line x1="21" x2="14" y1="3" y2="10"></line><line x1="3" x2="10" y1="21" y2="14"></line></svg>
<figcaption class="image-caption">Bishops present Dilexi te at an Oct. 9 Vatican press conference. Credit: Vatican Media.</figcaption></figure>

The roughly 20,000-word apostolic exhortation follows Pope Francis’ October 2024 encyclical Dilexit nos (“He loved us”).

In the text, Leo acknowledges that he worked from a draft already prepared by Francis. But media reports indicated that Leo rewrote several sections of the original draft, which had allegedly been written by Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, former president of the Pontifical Academy for Life and the John Paul II Institute.

So how are bishops and cardinals receiving the first major document of Leo’s pontificate?

The Pillar spoke with bishops and cardinals around the world, for their first public reactions to Dilexi te.

Some comments have been translated from Spanish and Portuguese and have been edited for clarity and length.

Leave a comment

Cardinal Michael Czerny, SJ - Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development

Dilexi te is a moving meditation on our tradition -- going all the way back to Jesus -- and consistent with it, the more recent magisterium on the place of the poor in the mission of the Church. It’s a good reminder that the preferential option for the poor wasn’t invented by Pope Francis and Pope Leo XIV! Let’s join Pope Leo in praying that Dilexi te helps the Church to serve the poor and helps bring the poor to Christ!

Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández - Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith

I believe it is very important to make an effort to show that caring for the poor is a choice that forms part of the great Tradition of the Church, from the Scriptures, the Fathers, and throughout its entire history. On the other hand, it is important to highlight the explicit connection [made] with Dilexit nos in such a way that the supernatural meaning of this choice is clear.

Cardinal Jaime Spengler - Archbishop of Porto Alegre, Brazil, and president of CELAM, the episcopal council of Latin America

Human existence today, marked by productivity and consumption, is absorbed by activity. Even free time becomes something functional within production. Without the recognition and conditions necessary for rest, an ideology is imposed that reduces human beings to a function. The acceleration of life gets us used to seeing and judging what is truly at stake in a partial, if not erroneous, way. [We are called to see] the poverty of those who have no rights, no place, no freedom; of those who do not have the means to give voice to their dignity and their abilities; of those who experience material, moral, spiritual, cultural, and human poverty in their daily lives!

Recognizing and being willing to welcome with respect all those who are wounded and deprived of their dignity, freedom, and identity is an ethical imperative, a call to conscience, particularly for Christians.

To carry out this mission, [the pope] calls us to move from the world of ideas and discussions to concrete actions and gestures, uniting the best forces of society for this purpose. The commitment to the common good of society and the promotion of the weakest and most disadvantaged commits every man and woman of good will.

Share

Cardinal Anders Arbolerius, OCD - Bishop of Stockholm, Sweden

Pope Leo follows in the footsteps of Pope Francis. He shows us the true face of the Church as Mother of the Poor and Destitute. He reminds us of our vocation to love and venerate the Poor just as Jesus did.

Cardinal Stephen Brislin - Archbishop of Johannesburg, South Africa

Although I have not yet had the opportunity to study Dilexi te sufficiently, it is quite clear that the apostolic exhortation is consistent with the teaching of the Church through the centuries. It is faithful to the writings of Fathers of the Church and, indeed, with the Gospel.

Part of its intention is to shake those in a bubble of luxury and who live an elitist lifestyle disconnected and unconcerned about the vulnerability and suffering of others, or who even treat others as a “throwaway” commodity. The appeal is to live the teachings of the Gospel in terms of respect of human dignity, equality and solidarity.

It is a document that challenges not only personal lifestyles but, as did Pope Francis, denounces the dictatorship of an economy that favours the wealthy. It is a document that should make us question the status quo we so easily take for granted and to be a neighbour to the weak and vulnerable following the example of the Good Samaritan.

Archbishop Jesús González de Zárate - Archbishop of Valencia, Venezuela, and president of the Venezuelan bishops’ conference

Pope Leo has given us a beautiful and profound reflection on a theme that is at the very heart of the Gospel: love for the poor. This exhortation highlights how, throughout history and in various social and cultural contexts, the Church, through various forms of service to the most needy and vulnerable, has shown, and continues to show, the profound unity between love of God and love of neighbor.

It takes up some of the themes of Pope Francis’ teaching on the faces of poverty today and its causes in the structures of sin that generate it. It carries with it a call to contribute to transforming these realities.

This exhortation confirms us as a pilgrim Church in Latin America in “the preferential option for the poor” and in the desire to be a “poor Church among the poor.”

It is a pastoral program for the Church and a prophetic sign for today’s world.

What was expressed in No. 120 of the exhortation immediately caught my attention: “By its very nature, Christian love is prophetic: it works miracles and knows no limits. It makes what was apparently impossible happen. Love is above all a way of looking at life and a way of living it. A Church that sets no limits to love, that knows no enemies to fight but only men and women to love, is the Church that the world needs today.”

Bishop Raimo Goyarrola - Bishop of Helsinki, Finland

I think the content is something that needs to be read calmly and prayerfully. There is nothing new [in the document] in the sense that the Church has indeed from the beginning lived with the poor, for the poor, and among the poor.

I also would like to emphasize that the pope also says in this text that Jesus lived poor, died, was born, lived, and died poor.

So it is important to emphasize this spiritual, inner poverty. It is very important as a virtue for all Christians. You cannot be a saint, you cannot be very Christian if you do not live the virtue poverty. It is about generosity, about being free from the things of the world to have a heart free to love and clean eyes to see our brothers.

My church in Helsinki is an example of a poor church, so I know what the Pope is talking about and I know what poverty is. There are many types of poverty. Here, we may not be starving, but there is poverty among many immigrants and refugees, poverty in a diocese without money, where we cannot make ends meet in several parishes and cannot build churches or find places of worship because we have no money. I fully sympathize with this text in this apostolic exhortation.

Comments 
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

‘Showing the true face of the Church’

‘Showing the true face of the Church’

Edgar Beltrán