Pope at Audience: Sincere sorrow can open door to conversion and joy
During his weekly General Audience, Pope Leo XIV urges the
faithful to recall that we are God's beloved children embraced by His forgiving
love, explaining that sincerely seeking conversion helps us journey toward
salvation despite our fragility. In his remarks to Polish pilgrims, the Holy
Father says, "Implore God for peace for all nations experiencing the
tragedy of war."
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
Sorrow, if welcomed with sincerity, can be an opportunity
for conversion and joy, for God never stops loving us: Pope Leo XIV offered
this comforting reminder during his weekly General Audience on Wednesday
morning—his last public event in the Vatican before departing for a few days at
Castel Gandolfo later in the afternoon.
Due to the intense Roman heat, the audience took place
inside the Vatican’s Paul VI Hall. Regardless, the Holy Father still stopped
over to greet faithful who were not able to fit into the Hall and were instead
in other locations nearby to stay out of the extreme temperatures.
Pope Leo XIV at
Wednesday General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Not to condemn, but to make reflect and express love
Continuing his series of catecheses on the Jubilee theme of
Christ our Hope, the Holy Father focused this week on Jesus’ passion, death,
and resurrection by reflecting on the moment at the Last Supper when Jesus
reveals that one of his disciples will betray Him.
In particular, the Pope explored the passage in which,
during the Passover supper, Jesus says: “Amen, I say to you, one of you will
betray me, one who is eating with me.”
“Strong words,” the Pope said. “Jesus does not utter them to
condemn, but to show how love, when it is true, cannot do without the truth.”
And yet, Pope Leo observed, the way Jesus speaks about what
is about to happen is surprising. He does not raise His voice, nor point His
finger, nor utter the name of Judas.
Rather, he recalled, the Lord speaks in such a way that each
person can reflect personally. The Pope said, “This is exactly what happens:
‘They began to be distressed and to say to Him, one by one, ‘Surely it is not
I?’”
Pope Leo XIV at
General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Journey of salvation begins with opportunity for
conversion
This question—“Surely it is not I?”—Pope Leo said, is
perhaps one of the most sincere we can ask ourselves.
“It is not,” he explained, “the question of the innocent,
but of the disciple who discovers himself to be fragile—not the cry of the
guilty, but the whisper of one who, while wanting to love, is aware of being
capable of doing harm.”
Yet this realization, Pope Leo suggested, should not make us
melancholy, for “it is in this awareness that the journey of
salvation begins.” “Jesus does not denounce in order to humiliate. He tells the
truth because He wants to save.”
Pope Leo XIV at
General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Place for conversion
In order to be saved, the Pope added, one must be able to
feel: “to feel that one is involved, to feel that one is beloved despite
everything, to feel that evil is real but that it does not have the last word.”
Only those who have known the truth of deep love, he
reminded, can also accept the wound of betrayal.
“The disciples’ reaction is not anger, but sadness. They are
not indignant; they are sorrowful. It is a pain that arises from the real
possibility of being involved.”
“Precisely this sorrow, if welcomed with sincerity,” the
Pope said, “becomes a place for conversion.”
Pope Leo XIV greeting
faithful following General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Painful opportunity for rebirth
The Gospel, he explained, does not teach us to deny evil,
but to recognize it as a painful opportunity for rebirth.
“Jesus then adds a phrase that troubles us and makes us
think: ‘But woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed. It would
be better for that man if he had never been born (Mk 14:21).'”
“They are harsh words, certainly,” the Pope said, “but they
must be understood well: it is not a curse, but rather a cry of pain. In Greek,
that ‘woe’ sounds like a lamentation, an ‘alas,’ an exclamation of sincere and
deep compassion. . . . We are used to judging. Instead, God accepts suffering.”
Let's not exclude ourselves from salvation
When the Lord sees evil, Pope Leo explained, He does not
avenge it but grieves.
“And that ‘better if he had never been born,’"
Pope Leo XIV explained, “is not a condemnation imposed a priori,
but a truth that any of us can recognize: if we deny the love that has
generated us—if, by betraying, we become unfaithful to ourselves—then we truly
lose the meaning of our coming into the world, and we exclude ourselves from
salvation.”
Pope Leo XIV at
General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Light begins to shine in the darkness
And yet, even at the darkest point, the Holy Father
observed, the light is not extinguished, but "on the contrary, it begins
to shine."
This is because, Pope Leo said, “if we recognize our limit,
if we let ourselves be touched by the pain of Christ, then we can finally be
born again,” since “faith does not spare us from the possibility of sin, but it
always offers us a way out of it: that of mercy.”
Jesus is not scandalized by our fragility, the Pope said,
for “He knows well” that no friendship is immune from the risk of betrayal.
“But,” Pope Leo reiterated, “He continues to trust, to sit
at the table with His followers, and does not give up breaking bread, even for
those who will betray Him.”
This, the Holy Father underscored, “is the silent power of
God: He never abandons the table of love, even when He knows He will be left
alone.”
Pope Leo XIV at
General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Pursuing salvation
The Holy Father then issued an invitation to the faithful.
“Dear brothers and sisters, we too can ask ourselves today,
with sincerity: ‘Surely it is not I?’” the Pope said—clarifying
that this should be understood not in the sense of feeling accused, but in
opening a space for truth in our hearts.
This, the Pope said, is where salvation begins—with the
awareness that we may be the ones who break our trust in God, but that we can
also be the ones who gather it, protect it, and renew it.
Even if we betray God, we can be converted by His love
for His children
Pope Leo stressed that this gives us great hope.
“Ultimately, this is hope,” he said, “knowing that even if
we fail, God will never fail us. Even if we betray Him, He never stops loving
us. And if we allow ourselves to be touched by this love—humble, wounded, but
always faithful—then we can truly be reborn.”
This, the Pope concluded, enables us to “live no longer as
traitors, but as children who are always loved.”
Pope Leo calls for prayers for peace
Later in the Audience, during his remarks to Polish
pilgrims, Pope Leo XIV urged them to "implore God for peace for all
nations experiencing the tragedy of war" through the intercession of St.
Maximilian Kolbe, whose Feast Day is observed on Thursday.
Pope Leo XIV's General
Audience (@Vatican Media)
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-08/pope-leo-xiv-at-general-audience-13-august-2025.html







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