Friday, April 24, 2026

> Asked about regime change in Iran, Pope Leo says, ‘I cannot be in favor of war.’

> Asked about regime change in Iran, Pope Leo says, ‘I cannot be in favor of war.’
Pope Leo XIV gestures as he arrives to celebrate the final Mass of his apostolic journey to Africa at Malabo Stadium in Equatorial Guinea April 23, 2026. Credit: OSV News photo/Guglielmo Mangiapane, Reuters

In an 18-minute press conference on the flight from Equatorial Guinea to Rome, Pope Leo XIV was asked two questions about Iran: the first, regarding his position on regime change there and on the confused state of its negotiation with the United States; the second, whether he would condemn Iran for the execution of opposition figures and the killing of thousands of protestors.

The Italian TV journalist, Ignazio Ingrao, recalled that in Cameroon, Pope Leo had described the world being turned upside down by a handful of “tyrants” who risk destroying the planet. He noted that the negotiations to end the war in Iran “are in chaos” and the conflict is having a heavy impact on the world’s economy. He asked if Leo wished for “a change in regime in Iran,” given its repression of protestors in recent months and the concern over its race for a nuclear bomb.

No, the war with Iran is nothing like the plot to kill Hitler.

 

People react at the site of a residential building in Tehran, Iran, March 27, 2026, that was damaged by a strike amid the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran (OSV News photo/Majid Asgaripour, West Asia News Agency via Reuters).

President Trump’s supporters have offered some implausible scenarios on the likely outcome of his war of choice with Iran, as well as some wild justifications for it. But the most bizarre justification I’ve come across appears in Francis X. Maier’s essay “On Doing the Right Thing,” published by The Catholic Thing. Trump’s determination to destroy Iran’s supposed nuclear threat and its theocratic tyranny is justified, Maier believes, for the same reason that Lutheran theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer was justified in participating in a plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler. In Maier’s view, when it comes to the Iranians, “the lies and violence won’t stop. They can’t, because they’re hardwired into the DNA of a regime moved by religiously diseased hate.” War is the only option. Maier quotes Bonhoeffer: “Doing nothing in the face of such evil is itself evil. And not to act is to act.” 

Asked about same-sex blessings, Leo says other issues will take priority

 

Pope Leo XIV answers questions from journalists during a news conference aboard the plane flying back to Rome after leaving Equatorial Guinea, April 23, 2026. (CNS/Lola Gomez)

Asked about same-sex blessings, Leo says other issues will take priority

Easter calls us to practice resurrection in a fractured world

Easter calls us to practice resurrection in a fractured world

ncr 

 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Pope Leo’s powerful lesson in vulnerable leadership

Posted inFaith and Reason

Pope Leo’s powerful lesson in vulnerable leadership

Pope Leo XIV prays during an evening prayer vigil for peace in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican April 11, 2026. Credit: CNS photo/Vatican Media

On Saturday evening, April 11, Pope Leo XIV led a vigil for peace at St. Peter’s Basilica. It was an act of vulnerable leadership that should not be missed as such, precisely because there are very few such leaders on the world stage today.

Since his appearance at Saturday evening’s vigil, Pope Leo has emerged as embodying vulnerability as he called for peace; so too did he embody it later as he dismissed the ridicule coming from a world leader and as he demanded greater recognition of those at risk. Pope Leo is a veritable exemplar of vulnerable leadership, and recognition of this is growing as he maintains his presence on the world stage.

Pope Leo calls on leaders to ‘bridge the gap’ between poor and rich in Equatorial Guinea

Posted inVatican Dispatch

Pope Leo calls on leaders to ‘bridge the gap’ between poor and rich in Equatorial Guinea

Pope Leo XIV blesses the faithful as he arrives to celebrate Mass at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Mongomo, Equatorial Guinea, April 22, 2026. Credit: OSV News photo/Guglielmo Mangiapane, Reuters

On the second day of his visit to Equatorial Guinea, a predominantly Catholic country of 1.8 million people in central Africa, Pope Leo XIV issued an unequivocal call to authorities “to serve the common good rather than private interests, bridging the gap between the privileged and the disadvantaged.”

He issued this request in his homily at Mass on April 22 at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Mongomo, the president’s hometown. Situated on the edge of the rainforest, the city boomed following the discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s. That discovery transformed the country’s economy almost overnight, with the result that oil now accounts for almost half of the country’s G.D.P. and around 90 percent of its exports, according to the African Development Bank.

Podcast: Black feminist professor Melanie Harris speaks of seeding peace

 

Podcast: Black feminist professor Melanie Harris speaks of seeding peace

Guest Voices  John Dear  ncr

Pope Leo's trip targets major obstacle to Catholicism's spread in Africa: Sorcery

 

Pope Leo XIV swings a censer over the altar as he celebrates Mass at Saurimo esplanade in northeastern Angola April 20, 2026. (OSV News/Reuters/Guglielmo Mangiapane)

Pope Leo's trip targets major obstacle to Catholicism's spread in Africa: Sorcery