Pope Leo XIV addresses participants in the "Cathedra of Hospitality" (@Vatican Media)
Pope Leo XIV: Learn hospitality from St. Joseph and Holy
Family
Pope Leo XIV calls on communities to look to the Holy Family
of Nazareth to rediscover their calling to welcome others and learn to walk the
path of service, as he addressed participants in the "Cathedra of
Hospitality."
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
“I encourage you to be educators in hospitality,” Pope Leo
XIV said on Thursday in the Vatican when addressing participants in the
“Cathedra of Hospitality,” a cultural and educational event now in its fourth
edition, held in Sacrofano, a town north of Rome.
Organized by movements and Third Sector organizations in
collaboration with Rome’s Pontifical Lateran University, the event provides
spaces for dialogue and reflection on current issues. This year, the theme was
“Youth and the Church: Hospitality that fosters belonging.”
In his remarks, the Holy Father offered reflections on the
theme addressed by the “Cathedra." The Pope acknowledged that the days of
reflection were animated by the awareness that the Christian vocation is
oriented toward generating communion among people.
With this in mind, the Pope observed that communion arises
from the ability to welcome others by offering listening, hospitality, and
assistance.
The grace of an encounter
Pope Leo XIV said that at the heart of every authentic
welcome, there is a relationship born from the grace of an encounter. He
explained that it is precisely within this dynamic of encounter that the
decision to dedicate the fourth edition of the “Cathedra” to young people is
situated.
“In a time marked by profound cultural and social
transformations,” the Pope said, “young people, who are naturally the future of
society and of the Church, already constitute its living and generative
present.”
The Holy Father noted that their questions and concerns
invite us to renew the style of our relationships.
“Welcoming young people means, first of all,” Pope Leo said,
“listening to their voices, meeting their gaze, and recognizing that, in their
lives and in their languages, the Spirit continues to act and to suggest
renewed paths of presence and care.”
Presence and care
The Pope said he wished to dwell on two words, namely
"presence" and "care," which help illuminate the Christian
meaning of hospitality.
“Each of us, from the first moment of life," he pointed
out, "grows within a social reality,” citing the family, the parish, the
school, the university, and the workplace. Each of these, he noted, represent
models of society where different psychological, juridical, moral, pedagogical,
and cultural dimensions intersect, and "are spaces of identity
formation whose primary task is defined precisely by presence."
“To be present in the lives of others,” Pope Leo XIV
emphasized, “means sharing time, experiences, and meaning, offering stable
points of reference in which others can recognize themselves and grow.”
“Looking to the Holy Family of Nazareth,” the Pope said,
“every welcoming community can rediscover its own calling and learn to orient
itself along the path of service.”
The experience of the Holy Family
Pope Leo suggested that the Gospel episode in which Mary and
Joseph cannot find Jesus, and, in anguish, find Him again after three days in
the Temple, teaches that the presence of the other is not automatic but the
result of a constant search.
“It has happened to each of us,” the Pope observed, “to lose
someone or something to which we were deeply attached. In that moment we
realize how precious that presence was.”
The same happens in the life of faith, he said. "We
often take for granted the presence of Jesus in our existence until suddenly it
seems that He is no longer where we left Him."
Called to seek Jesus
“We feel a sense of loss,” the Pope said. “In reality, it is
not He who has been lost, but we who have moved away.”
When this happens, Pope Leo explained, we are called to seek
Him with trust and with the courage to travel unexplored paths, looking at the
world with new eyes filled with hope.
“In this way,” he said, “we will stop looking for a God made
to our own measure and instead encounter Him where He dwells.”
Seeking Jesus, Pope Leo XIV added, therefore means passing
from the security of our convictions to the responsibility of encounter,
learning to see and welcome the presence of God who is always “beyond.”
St. Joseph’s powerful example
“This is precisely what Saint Joseph did in safeguarding the
family entrusted to him by the Lord,” Pope Leo said.
In Joseph, the Pope explained, we recognize that welcoming,
in addition to presence, is also care.
“To care,” Pope Leo said, “means to stand beside the other
with attention, to respect their choices, and to take responsibility for them.”
This attitude, he noted, belongs first of all to God, whom
the Bible shows as the guardian of His people. He explained that the human
family, too, is called to preserve what has been entrusted to it.
“Thus Joseph,” the Pope observed, “shows us that presence
and care are inseparable dimensions: one does not safeguard without being
present, and one is not truly present without assuming responsibility for the
other.”
Moving toward holiness
With this sentiment, Pope Leo XIV suggested that presence
and care can represent two lamps along the path toward a form of hospitality
capable of opening paths to holiness.
Thanking those present for their silent and discreet
commitment, the Pope encouraged them to be educators in hospitality and to
continue together "to create environments capable of promoting goodness
and fraternity in the Christian community and in society."
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2026-03/pope-leo-xiv-cattedra-di-accoglienza-discourse.html

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