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To live the gospel, be ready to flip some tables

Last March, I was invited to offer a Lenten reflection at St. Thomas More in Atlanta. I was also honored to give the keynote address at the Fortunate and Faithful Families Retreat—a gathering for LGBTQ+ Catholics, their parents, and their families. Throughout that weekend, questions echoed again and again: What do we need to keep […]

The post To live the gospel, be ready to flip some tables appeared first on U.S. Catholic.

New Pew study reveals percentage of Catholics who voted for Trump in 2024

null / Credit: roibu/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 26, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).

A new Pew Research Center report reveals that about 22% of those who voted in the 2024 election and cast their ballot for President Donald Trump were Catholic.

The new edition of its validated voter study “Behind Trump’s 2024 Victory,” released on June 26, looks at how Americans — new voters and voters who turned out in previous elections — voted in the 2024 presidential election. It reveals that Trump had support from the majority of voting Catholics, with 55% casting their vote for him.

Pew surveyed 8,942 U.S. citizens ages 18 and older who are members of American Trends Panel (ATP) and verified their turnout in the five general elections from 2016 to 2024 using commercial voter files.

In order to validate 2024 election turnout, Pew “attempted to match adult citizens who are part of the ATP to a turnout record in at least one of three commercial voter files: one that serves conservative and Republican organizations and campaigns, one that serves progressive and Democratic organizations and campaigns, and one that is nonpartisan.”

The research found that in 2024, Trump gained voters among multiple religious groups including Catholics, Protestants, and those who reported that they attend religious services on at least a monthly basis.

Trump had a 12-point advantage of Catholic voters over Kamala Harris, who won 43% of the group’s vote. In 2020, the Catholic vote was split almost evenly with 50% voting for Joe Biden and 49% for Trump.

The report noted that Trump benefited from 7% of Catholic voters switching their political party from 2020 to 2024. Only 4% of Catholics who favored Trump in the 2020 election shifted to Harris in the most recent election.

Majority of Trump voters identified as Christians

Trump received the majority of the Christian vote in 2024 — about 80% of his voters identified as Christian, compared with only about half of Harris voters.

Of Protestant voters specifically, 62% favored Trump in 2024. This was an increase from 56% in 2016 and 59% in 2020. There was a particularly large shift in Black Protestant voters with 15% voting for Trump in 2024, which was 6 percentage points higher than 2020.

The study also found that voters who attend some kind of religious service favored Trump more in 2024 than in 2020. In the most recent election, 64% voted for him, which increased from 59%. In 2024, only about a third of this group (34%) supported Harris.

In all three elections, Trump received more votes from people who reported that they attend a religious service “monthly or more often” than voters who said they attend “a few times a year or less.” For each election, the Democratic candidate received more votes from those who attend less frequently than those who attend more often. 

More Hispanic voters went for Trump 

Another notable find from the report was Trump’s steady progress with Hispanic voters over the course of the 2016, 2020, and 2024 elections. 

In 2016, 28% of validated Hispanic voters reported they voted for Trump, 36% did in 2020, and 48% did in 2024. While the Hispanic vote for the Republican candidate increased each election, the Hispanic vote for the Democratic candidate decreased each year.

The research found that from 2020 to 2024, Trump made gains among citizens who were born outside the U.S. In 2020, 59% of naturalized citizens who voted cast their ballot for Biden, and in 2024 51% voted for Harris. 

While the Democratic Party received fewer votes from this group, Trump received more in 2024. In 2020, 38% of naturalized citizens voted for Trump, but in 2024 47% did. 

Overall, research found that 85% of Trump’s 2020 voters cast their ballot for him again in 2024. Of the other voters, 3% switched and supported Harris, 1% switched and supported another candidate, and 11% declined to vote again in the 2024 election.

New Pew study reveals percentage of Catholics who voted for Trump in 2024

null / Credit: roibu/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 26, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).

A new Pew Research Center report reveals that about 22% of those who voted in the 2024 election and cast their ballot for President Donald Trump were Catholic.

The new edition of its validated voter study “Behind Trump’s 2024 Victory,” released on June 26, looks at how Americans — new voters and voters who turned out in previous elections — voted in the 2024 presidential election. It reveals that Trump had support from the majority of voting Catholics, with 55% casting their vote for him.

Pew surveyed 8,942 U.S. citizens ages 18 and older who are members of American Trends Panel (ATP) and verified their turnout in the five general elections from 2016 to 2024 using commercial voter files.

In order to validate 2024 election turnout, Pew “attempted to match adult citizens who are part of the ATP to a turnout record in at least one of three commercial voter files: one that serves conservative and Republican organizations and campaigns, one that serves progressive and Democratic organizations and campaigns, and one that is nonpartisan.”

The research found that in 2024, Trump gained voters among multiple religious groups including Catholics, Protestants, and those who reported that they attend religious services on at least a monthly basis.

Trump had a 12-point advantage of Catholic voters over Kamala Harris, who won 43% of the group’s vote. In 2020, the Catholic vote was split almost evenly with 50% voting for Joe Biden and 49% for Trump.

The report noted that Trump benefited from 7% of Catholic voters switching their political party from 2020 to 2024. Only 4% of Catholics who favored Trump in the 2020 election shifted to Harris in the most recent election.

Majority of Trump voters identified as Christians

Trump received the majority of the Christian vote in 2024 — about 80% of his voters identified as Christian, compared with only about half of Harris voters.

Of Protestant voters specifically, 62% favored Trump in 2024. This was an increase from 56% in 2016 and 59% in 2020. There was a particularly large shift in Black Protestant voters with 15% voting for Trump in 2024, which was 6 percentage points higher than 2020.

The study also found that voters who attend some kind of religious service favored Trump more in 2024 than in 2020. In the most recent election, 64% voted for him, which increased from 59%. In 2024, only about a third of this group (34%) supported Harris.

In all three elections, Trump received more votes from people who reported that they attend a religious service “monthly or more often” than voters who said they attend “a few times a year or less.” For each election, the Democratic candidate received more votes from those who attend less frequently than those who attend more often. 

More Hispanic voters went for Trump 

Another notable find from the report was Trump’s steady progress with Hispanic voters over the course of the 2016, 2020, and 2024 elections. 

In 2016, 28% of validated Hispanic voters reported they voted for Trump, 36% did in 2020, and 48% did in 2024. While the Hispanic vote for the Republican candidate increased each election, the Hispanic vote for the Democratic candidate decreased each year.

The research found that from 2020 to 2024, Trump made gains among citizens who were born outside the U.S. In 2020, 59% of naturalized citizens who voted cast their ballot for Biden, and in 2024 51% voted for Harris. 

While the Democratic Party received fewer votes from this group, Trump received more in 2024. In 2020, 38% of naturalized citizens voted for Trump, but in 2024 47% did. 

Overall, research found that 85% of Trump’s 2020 voters cast their ballot for him again in 2024. Of the other voters, 3% switched and supported Harris, 1% switched and supported another candidate, and 11% declined to vote again in the 2024 election.

Pope Leo XIV urges law enforcement to target drug traffickers, not addicts

Pope Leo XIV speaks to an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025 / Credit: Vatican Media

Vatican City, Jun 26, 2025 / 09:23 am (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV on Thursday called on governments and law enforcement agencies to focus their efforts on dismantling criminal organizations that profit from drug trafficking rather than punishing addicts. 

Speaking to anti-drug campaigners in a courtyard of the Apostolic Palace on the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking on June 26, the pope issued a sharp rebuke of drug policy that targets the poor while powerful traffickers go unpunished.

Anti-drug advocates listen to Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Anti-drug advocates listen to Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“There are enormous concentrations of interest and ramified criminal organizations that states have the duty to dismantle,” Pope Leo XIV said. “It is easier to fight their victims. Too often, in the name of security, war has been waged and is waged against the poor, filling the prisons with those who are only the last link in a chain of death. Those who hold the chain in their hands, on the other hand, manage to have influence and impunity.” 

The pope’s remarks came as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime released its 2025 World Drug Report, which revealed sharp increases in cocaine production worldwide as well as the deadly toll of synthetic opioids like fentanyl.

According to the report, fentanyl was responsible for an estimated 48,422 deaths in the United States in 2024. Although overdose deaths in the U.S. have started to decline, fentanyl continues to dominate the North American opioid crisis. Global fentanyl seizures reached 19.5 tons in 2023 with 99% occurring in North America.

“Today, brothers and sisters, we are engaged in a struggle that cannot be abandoned as long as, around us, someone is still imprisoned in the various forms of addiction,” Pope Leo XIV said. 

Pope Leo XIV speaks with an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV speaks with an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“Our fight is against those who make drugs and any other addiction — think of alcohol or gambling — their immense business.” 

The U.N. report also flagged record levels of methamphetamine seizures and highlighted how the synthetic drug market, dominated by amphetamine-type stimulants, is expanding globally. Cocaine, meanwhile, has become the world’s fastest-growing illicit drug market, with production rising by nearly 34% in 2023, primarily due to increased coca bush cultivation in Colombia. 

Violence tied to cocaine trafficking has also surged, particularly in the Americas. In Ecuador, the homicide rate soared from 7.8 per 100,000 people in 2020 to 45.7 in 2023. The report noted that similar patterns of violence, once confined to Latin America, are now spreading to Western Europe and other regions as criminal groups fight for control of lucrative new markets. 

Pope Leo XIV is shown anti-drug material by an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV is shown anti-drug material by an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“Drugs and addictions are an invisible prison that you, in different ways, have known and fought, but we are all called to freedom,” the pope said. “Meeting you, I think of the abyss of my heart and of every human heart. It is a psalm, that is, the Bible, that calls the mystery that dwells within us an ‘abyss’ (see Psalm 63:7).” 

“St. Augustine confessed that only in Christ did the restlessness of his heart find peace,” he added. “We seek peace and joy, we thirst for them. And many deceptions can disappoint us and even imprison us in this search.” 

The theme of this year’s international day — “Break the cycle. #StopOrganizedCrime” — calls for long-term solutions to break the cycle of organized drug crime, including investment in education, prevention, and social services. Pope Leo XIV echoed those goals, emphasizing the need to uplift the dignity of each person and build communities of hope. 

“Dear young people, you are not spectators of the renewal that our Earth needs so much … The Church needs you. Humanity needs you,” Leo said. “Together, over every degrading dependence, we will make the infinite dignity imprinted in each one of us prevail.”

“Unfortunately, this dignity sometimes shines only when it is almost completely lost. Then a jolt comes and it becomes clear that getting up is a matter of life or death,” he added. “Well, today all of society needs that jolt, it needs your testimony and the great work you are doing. We all have, in fact, the vocation to be freer and to be human, the vocation to peace.”

“Let us move forward together, then, multiplying the places of healing, of encounter, and of education: pastoral paths and social policies that begin on the street and never give anyone up for lost.”

Pope Leo XIV urges law enforcement to target drug traffickers, not addicts

Pope Leo XIV speaks to an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025 / Credit: Vatican Media

Vatican City, Jun 26, 2025 / 09:23 am (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV on Thursday called on governments and law enforcement agencies to focus their efforts on dismantling criminal organizations that profit from drug trafficking rather than punishing addicts. 

Speaking to anti-drug campaigners in a courtyard of the Apostolic Palace on the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking on June 26, the pope issued a sharp rebuke of drug policy that targets the poor while powerful traffickers go unpunished.

Anti-drug advocates listen to Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Anti-drug advocates listen to Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“There are enormous concentrations of interest and ramified criminal organizations that states have the duty to dismantle,” Pope Leo XIV said. “It is easier to fight their victims. Too often, in the name of security, war has been waged and is waged against the poor, filling the prisons with those who are only the last link in a chain of death. Those who hold the chain in their hands, on the other hand, manage to have influence and impunity.” 

The pope’s remarks came as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime released its 2025 World Drug Report, which revealed sharp increases in cocaine production worldwide as well as the deadly toll of synthetic opioids like fentanyl.

According to the report, fentanyl was responsible for an estimated 48,422 deaths in the United States in 2024. Although overdose deaths in the U.S. have started to decline, fentanyl continues to dominate the North American opioid crisis. Global fentanyl seizures reached 19.5 tons in 2023 with 99% occurring in North America.

“Today, brothers and sisters, we are engaged in a struggle that cannot be abandoned as long as, around us, someone is still imprisoned in the various forms of addiction,” Pope Leo XIV said. 

Pope Leo XIV speaks with an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV speaks with an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“Our fight is against those who make drugs and any other addiction — think of alcohol or gambling — their immense business.” 

The U.N. report also flagged record levels of methamphetamine seizures and highlighted how the synthetic drug market, dominated by amphetamine-type stimulants, is expanding globally. Cocaine, meanwhile, has become the world’s fastest-growing illicit drug market, with production rising by nearly 34% in 2023, primarily due to increased coca bush cultivation in Colombia. 

Violence tied to cocaine trafficking has also surged, particularly in the Americas. In Ecuador, the homicide rate soared from 7.8 per 100,000 people in 2020 to 45.7 in 2023. The report noted that similar patterns of violence, once confined to Latin America, are now spreading to Western Europe and other regions as criminal groups fight for control of lucrative new markets. 

Pope Leo XIV is shown anti-drug material by an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV is shown anti-drug material by an anti-drug advocate at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City, Thursday, June 26, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“Drugs and addictions are an invisible prison that you, in different ways, have known and fought, but we are all called to freedom,” the pope said. “Meeting you, I think of the abyss of my heart and of every human heart. It is a psalm, that is, the Bible, that calls the mystery that dwells within us an ‘abyss’ (see Psalm 63:7).” 

“St. Augustine confessed that only in Christ did the restlessness of his heart find peace,” he added. “We seek peace and joy, we thirst for them. And many deceptions can disappoint us and even imprison us in this search.” 

The theme of this year’s international day — “Break the cycle. #StopOrganizedCrime” — calls for long-term solutions to break the cycle of organized drug crime, including investment in education, prevention, and social services. Pope Leo XIV echoed those goals, emphasizing the need to uplift the dignity of each person and build communities of hope. 

“Dear young people, you are not spectators of the renewal that our Earth needs so much … The Church needs you. Humanity needs you,” Leo said. “Together, over every degrading dependence, we will make the infinite dignity imprinted in each one of us prevail.”

“Unfortunately, this dignity sometimes shines only when it is almost completely lost. Then a jolt comes and it becomes clear that getting up is a matter of life or death,” he added. “Well, today all of society needs that jolt, it needs your testimony and the great work you are doing. We all have, in fact, the vocation to be freer and to be human, the vocation to peace.”

“Let us move forward together, then, multiplying the places of healing, of encounter, and of education: pastoral paths and social policies that begin on the street and never give anyone up for lost.”

Castel Gandolfo prepares to welcome Pope Leo XIV: ‘The heart of the city returns’

An aerial view of the papal palace of Castel Gandolfo near Rome. The apostolic palace is a complex of buildings served for centuries as a summer residence for the pope and overlooks Lake Albano. / Credit: Stefano Tammaro/Shutterstock

Rome Newsroom, Jun 26, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

Castel Gandolfo is preparing to welcome Pope Leo XIV on July 6. The imposing papal villa in this town on the shores of Lake Albano, a fortified 17th-century palace, was converted into a museum for tourists in 2016 by the decision of Pope Francis.

Although only a few rooms are open to the public, they feature showcases exhibiting liturgical vestments belonging to previous popes as well as their portraits.

The Argentine pontiff didn’t pack his bags to go there in the summer like his predecessors but instead stayed in room 201 on the second floor of St. Martha’s House at the Vatican, where he usually resided.

“He [Francis] did a lot for the city, opening the doors of the papal residence and the gardens... But now, Leo XIV will return to the city its daily connection with the pope: the Angelus, the visits, the contact with the people. We want to experience all of that again,” Mayor Alberto de Angelis told ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

A place of rest, prayer, and study for popes

Castel Gandolfo has been for centuries a place of rest, prayer, and study for popes. Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI spent their summers there, prayed the Sunday Angelus, and mingled with the townspeople.

The return of Leo XIV marks the beginning of a new era, which seeks to recover that dimension of closeness and pastoral presence: “We don’t want to look to the past with nostalgia but to the future. And the pope’s return gives us hope. The heart of the city returns,” De Angelis said.

Although many remember Castel Gandolfo’s apostolic palace as the traditional summer residence of the popes, Leo XIV will be staying in another structure within the Vatican complex.

“The pope will not be staying in the museum. He will be staying in a third structure. This will allow for a balance between being open for tourism and residential use,” the mayor explained in reference to Villa Barberini, a historic building that is also part of the pontifical complex, which will allow the museums to remain open to the public.

The mayor couldn’t hide his great joy at Leo XIV’s decision to revive the tradition of residing there during the summer months.

“Since 1628, the popes have lived in Castel Gandolfo. Some more, some less, but their presence has been constant. This is a city accustomed to the daily life of the pope,” he explained.

Castel Gandolfo Mayor Alberto de Angelis (center) will receive Pope Leo XIV on July 6, 2025. Credit: Castel Gandolfo City Council
Castel Gandolfo Mayor Alberto de Angelis (center) will receive Pope Leo XIV on July 6, 2025. Credit: Castel Gandolfo City Council

A city preparing to welcome the pope

The last time Castel Gandolfo hosted a pope for a period of time was during the pontificate of Benedict XVI, who also chose it as a temporary residence after his resignation in 2013. Consequently, the people of Castel Gandolfo, especially the younger ones, are very excited.

“Many have grown up during this decade of papal absence and don’t have a clear idea of ​​what it means to have the pope physically among us,” the mayor noted. But that is starting to change: “There is work underway; we have increased the presence of law enforcement and reorganized certain spaces; there is a certain excitement in the atmosphere.”

And it’s not just a logistical issue. “We’re looking forward to the return of the Swiss Guards, who haven’t been in Castel Gandolfo for 12 years,” he said. “That has a fundamental symbolic and identity value. In all the historic photographs of the town, Castel Gandolfo is shown with the Swiss Guards. The presence of the pope is part of our DNA,” De Angelis added.

A warm welcome and plans in motion

July 6 will be special. As confirmed by the mayor, in the morning the pope will pray the Angelus in St. Peter’s Square and in the afternoon he will travel to Castel Gandolfo where municipal authorities have planned an official welcoming ceremony.

“We want him to feel at home,” the mayor said: “We are consulting with the people around him to find out what he likes. We want to surprise him. We can’t afford to make a fool of ourselves. We want to get to know him, not by what others say but to discover it ourselves. To talk with him, to greet him... And, hopefully, to ask him to be with us throughout the year.”

To this end, the town is working intensively on security, mobility, and accessibility planning. “We are working with an engineering firm to develop a security plan for the entire historic center, including its surrounding streets. All of this must be done while respecting security measures without disrupting the city’s daily life,” he noted. However, the mayor can’t hide his hope that this stay — which for now will be limited to a few weeks in July and August — will be extended.

“We hope — and wish — that it won’t be just a summer visit. This is his second city after Rome, and, like Rome, we want to compete... we want him here more than in Rome, obviously,” he added.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

Castel Gandolfo prepares to welcome Pope Leo XIV: ‘The heart of the city returns’

An aerial view of the papal palace of Castel Gandolfo near Rome. The apostolic palace is a complex of buildings served for centuries as a summer residence for the pope and overlooks Lake Albano. / Credit: Stefano Tammaro/Shutterstock

Rome Newsroom, Jun 26, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

Castel Gandolfo is preparing to welcome Pope Leo XIV on July 6. The imposing papal villa in this town on the shores of Lake Albano, a fortified 17th-century palace, was converted into a museum for tourists in 2016 by the decision of Pope Francis.

Although only a few rooms are open to the public, they feature showcases exhibiting liturgical vestments belonging to previous popes as well as their portraits.

The Argentine pontiff didn’t pack his bags to go there in the summer like his predecessors but instead stayed in room 201 on the second floor of St. Martha’s House at the Vatican, where he usually resided.

“He [Francis] did a lot for the city, opening the doors of the papal residence and the gardens... But now, Leo XIV will return to the city its daily connection with the pope: the Angelus, the visits, the contact with the people. We want to experience all of that again,” Mayor Alberto de Angelis told ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

A place of rest, prayer, and study for popes

Castel Gandolfo has been for centuries a place of rest, prayer, and study for popes. Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI spent their summers there, prayed the Sunday Angelus, and mingled with the townspeople.

The return of Leo XIV marks the beginning of a new era, which seeks to recover that dimension of closeness and pastoral presence: “We don’t want to look to the past with nostalgia but to the future. And the pope’s return gives us hope. The heart of the city returns,” De Angelis said.

Although many remember Castel Gandolfo’s apostolic palace as the traditional summer residence of the popes, Leo XIV will be staying in another structure within the Vatican complex.

“The pope will not be staying in the museum. He will be staying in a third structure. This will allow for a balance between being open for tourism and residential use,” the mayor explained in reference to Villa Barberini, a historic building that is also part of the pontifical complex, which will allow the museums to remain open to the public.

The mayor couldn’t hide his great joy at Leo XIV’s decision to revive the tradition of residing there during the summer months.

“Since 1628, the popes have lived in Castel Gandolfo. Some more, some less, but their presence has been constant. This is a city accustomed to the daily life of the pope,” he explained.

Castel Gandolfo Mayor Alberto de Angelis (center) will receive Pope Leo XIV on July 6, 2025. Credit: Castel Gandolfo City Council
Castel Gandolfo Mayor Alberto de Angelis (center) will receive Pope Leo XIV on July 6, 2025. Credit: Castel Gandolfo City Council

A city preparing to welcome the pope

The last time Castel Gandolfo hosted a pope for a period of time was during the pontificate of Benedict XVI, who also chose it as a temporary residence after his resignation in 2013. Consequently, the people of Castel Gandolfo, especially the younger ones, are very excited.

“Many have grown up during this decade of papal absence and don’t have a clear idea of ​​what it means to have the pope physically among us,” the mayor noted. But that is starting to change: “There is work underway; we have increased the presence of law enforcement and reorganized certain spaces; there is a certain excitement in the atmosphere.”

And it’s not just a logistical issue. “We’re looking forward to the return of the Swiss Guards, who haven’t been in Castel Gandolfo for 12 years,” he said. “That has a fundamental symbolic and identity value. In all the historic photographs of the town, Castel Gandolfo is shown with the Swiss Guards. The presence of the pope is part of our DNA,” De Angelis added.

A warm welcome and plans in motion

July 6 will be special. As confirmed by the mayor, in the morning the pope will pray the Angelus in St. Peter’s Square and in the afternoon he will travel to Castel Gandolfo where municipal authorities have planned an official welcoming ceremony.

“We want him to feel at home,” the mayor said: “We are consulting with the people around him to find out what he likes. We want to surprise him. We can’t afford to make a fool of ourselves. We want to get to know him, not by what others say but to discover it ourselves. To talk with him, to greet him... And, hopefully, to ask him to be with us throughout the year.”

To this end, the town is working intensively on security, mobility, and accessibility planning. “We are working with an engineering firm to develop a security plan for the entire historic center, including its surrounding streets. All of this must be done while respecting security measures without disrupting the city’s daily life,” he noted. However, the mayor can’t hide his hope that this stay — which for now will be limited to a few weeks in July and August — will be extended.

“We hope — and wish — that it won’t be just a summer visit. This is his second city after Rome, and, like Rome, we want to compete... we want him here more than in Rome, obviously,” he added.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

Pope: Our cities must not be freed of the marginalized, but of marginalization

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Too often, in the name of security, war is waged against the poor, Pope Leo XIV said.

The Holy Year instead indicates that safety is found in the culture of encounter, he said. The Jubilee "asks of us the restitution and redistribution of unjustly accumulated wealth, as the way to personal and civil reconciliation."

The pope made his comments during a meeting marking the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking June 26. Dozens of guests attended the gathering in the San Damaso Courtyard at the Vatican, including Italian government officials, individuals in recovery for substance abuse and those who assist them. 

june 26 25
Pope Leo XIV marks the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking with a meeting in the San Damaso Courtyard at the Vatican June 26, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

"Today, brothers and sisters, we are engaged in a battle that cannot be abandoned as long as, around us, anyone is still imprisoned in the various forms of addiction," Pope Leo said.

"Our fight is against those who make their immense business out of drugs and every other addiction -- think of alcohol or gambling," he said. "There are huge concentrations of interest and extensive criminal organizations that states have a duty to dismantle."

However, he said, "it is easier to fight against their victims." 

june 26 25
Pope Leo XIV greets people as he marks the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking with a meeting in the San Damaso Courtyard at the Vatican June 26, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

"Too often, in the name of security, war is waged against the poor, filling prisons with those who are merely the final link in a chain of death. Those who hold the chain in their hands instead manage to gain influence and impunity," he said. 

"Our cities must not be freed of the marginalized, but of marginalization; they must be cleared not of the desperate, but of desperation," he said.

"The fight against drug trafficking, educational commitment among the poor, the defense of Indigenous communities and migrants, and fidelity to the social doctrine of the church are in many places considered subversive," he said.

"The Jubilee indicates the culture of encounter as the way to safety," he said, and challenges must be tackled together.

"We conquer evil together. Joy is found together. Injustice is fought together. The God who created and knows each one of us -- and is more intimate to me than I am to myself -- made us to be together," he said. 

june 26 25
Pope Leo XIV marks the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking with a meeting in the San Damaso Courtyard at the Vatican June 26, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

"Of course, there are also bonds that hurt and human groups where freedom is lacking. But these, too, can only be overcome together, trusting those who do not profit from our suffering, those whom we can meet and who meet us with selfless attention," the pope said.

"Drugs and addiction are an invisible prison that you, in different ways, have known and fought, but we are all called to freedom," Pope Leo told his audience.

"St. Augustine confessed that only in Christ did the restlessness of his heart find peace. We seek peace and joy, we thirst for them. And many deceptions can delude and even imprison us in this quest," he said.

"The church needs you. Humanity needs you. Education and politics need you. Together, we will make the infinite dignity imprinted on each person prevail over every degrading addiction," the pope said.

"Let us go forward together, then, multiplying the places of healing, encounter and education: pastoral paths and social policies that start from the street and never give anyone up for lost," he said.

Jesus' call is a call to joy and friendship, pope tells priests

ROME (CNS) -- When a priest has experienced the joy of truly believing in Jesus Christ and embracing him as a friend, it shows, Pope Leo XIV told priests.

"The priest's happiness reflects his encounter with Christ, sustaining him in mission and service," he said during a meeting that was part of the Jubilee of Priests.

Hundreds of priests and people involved in priestly formation and vocations took part in a gathering at the Conciliazione Auditorium in Rome June 26, titled, "Happy Priests: 'I have called you friends,'" referring to Jesus' union with his disciples in the Gospel of St. John (15:15).

Cardinal Lazarus You Heung-sik, prefect of the Dicastery for the Clergy, welcomed the pope, saying, "We are here because we know that a happy priest is the best proclamation of the Gospel."  

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Pope Leo XIV speaks during a meeting with priests at a Rome auditorium near the Vatican June 26, 2025. Seated next to him is Cardinal Lazarus You Heung-sik, prefect of the Dicastery for Clergy. (CNS photo/Pablo Esparza)

"In the heart of the Holy Year, we want to testify together that it is possible to be happy priests," the pope said to applause. Their joy is rooted in Christ calling them and making them his friends: "a grace we want to welcome with gratitude and responsibility."

Jesus' words, "I have called you friends," are the key to understanding priestly ministry, Pope Leo said.

"The priest is a friend of the Lord, called to live with him in a personal and trusting relationship, nourished by the Word, the celebration of the sacraments and daily prayer," he said.

"This friendship with Christ is the spiritual foundation of ordained ministry, the meaning of our celibacy and the energy of the ecclesial service to which we dedicate our lives," he said. "It sustains us in times of trial and enables us to renew each day the 'yes' uttered at the beginning of our vocation."

Pope Leo underlined the importance of Pope Francis' 2024 encyclical, "'Dilexit Nos' ('He Loved Us'): on the Human and Divine Love of the Heart of Jesus Christ" for the whole church and for their vocation.

It is from this "burning" heart that "our vocation takes its origin; it is from this source of grace that we want to allow ourselves to be transformed," he said. 

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An image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus can be seen at a meeting with Pope Leo XIV and priests at a Rome auditorium near the Vatican June 26, 2025. (CNS photo/Pablo Esparza)

"Many seem to have drifted away from faith, yet deep inside many people, especially young people, there is a thirst for the infinite and for salvation," he said.

"Therefore, we want to rediscover missionary momentum together," he said, in a mission that "boldly and lovingly proposes the Gospel of Jesus."

"Through our pastoral action, it is the Lord himself who cares for his flock, gathers those who are scattered, kneels before those who are wounded and supports those who are discouraged," the pope said. "Imitating the master's example, we grow in faith and thus become credible witnesses to the vocation we have received."

"When one believes, it shows," he said.

The pope thanked them "for who you are! For you remind everyone that it is good to be priests, and that every call from the Lord is first and foremost a call to his joy." 

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Pope Leo XIV waves during a meeting with priests at a Rome auditorium near the Vatican June 26, 2025. (CNS photo/Pablo Esparza)

"We are not perfect, but we are Christ's friends, brothers to one another and sons of his gentle Mother Mary, and that is enough for us," he said.

Speaking off-the-cuff before giving his final blessing, Pope Leo encouraged priests to know they are never alone, even if they are ministering in remote places.

Their spiritual life needs nurturing, so "when we need help, look for a good 'companion,' a spiritual director, a good confessor," he said.

"Try to live what Pope Francis so many times called 'closeness': closeness with the Lord, closeness with your bishop, or religious superior, and closeness among yourselves, too, because you really have to be friends, brothers," he said.

"Live this beautiful experience of walking together, knowing that we are called to be disciples of the Lord. We have a great mission, and together we can all do it. Let us always count on God's grace, closeness from me as well, and together we can really be this voice in the world," he said.

U.S. Bishops Urge Senate to Act with Courage and Creativity to Protect the Poor and Vulnerable

WASHINGTON – While commending the provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that promote the dignity of human life and support parental choice in education, Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), implored Congress to be consistent in protecting human life and dignity and make changes to the bill to protect those most in need. 

Archbishop Broglio’s intervention comes as the U.S. Senate considers the budget reconciliation bill:

“The bishops are grateful that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes provisions that promote the dignity of human life and support parental choice in education. These are commendable provisions that are important priorities for the bishops. Still, Congress must be consistent in protecting human life and dignity and make drastic changes to the bill to protect those most in need. As Pope Leo XIV recently stated, it is the responsibility of politicians to promote and protect the common good, including by working to overcome great wealth inequality. This bill does not answer this call. It takes from the poor to give to the wealthy. It provides tax breaks for some while undermining the social safety net for others through major cuts to nutrition assistance and Medicaid. It fails to protect families and children by promoting an enforcement-only approach to immigration and eroding access to legal protections. It harms God’s creation and future generations through cuts to clean energy incentives and environmental programs.

“I underscore what my brother bishops said in their recent letter to find a better way forward and urge Senators to think and act with courage and creativity to protect human dignity for all, to uphold the common good, and to change provisions that undermine these fundamental values.”

The USCCB’s letter on the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” proposed by the Senate may be found here.

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