Pope Leo XIV urges Catholic politicians to follow the Gospel in public life
Pope Leo XIV on Thursday encouraged Catholic politicians to live coherently as Christians and follow the Gospel, even when performing their public duties in a secular polity.
During an Aug. 28 meeting with a delegation of political
representatives and civic leaders from the Diocese of Créteil, France,
accompanied by Bishop Dominique Blanchet, the Holy Father stated that “a more
just, more human, more fraternal world” can only be “a world more imbued with
the Gospel.”
Thus, he added, “in the face of the various deviations present
in our Western societies, we can do nothing better, as Christians, than to turn
to Christ and ask for his help in carrying out our responsibilities.”
For this reason, the pope highlighted the importance of
political and social leaders being committed to acting in coherence with their
faith, because “beyond mere personal enrichment, it carries great importance
and usefulness for the men and women they serve.”
In this
regard, he underlined that such determination “is all the more praiseworthy
considering that, in France, due to a sometimes-misunderstood secularism, it is
not easy for an elected representative to act and decide consistently with
their faith.”
‘Christianity cannot be reduced to a mere
private devotion’
Because
the Christian message embraces every dimension of the human person, Leo XIV
stressed that “Christianity cannot be reduced to a mere private devotion, since
it entails a way of living in society infused with love for God and neighbor,
who in Christ is no longer an enemy but a brother.”
To face social challenges, the Holy Father said Catholic
politicians must rely “on the virtue of charity that dwells within them since
baptism,” a gift of God that, as he cited from the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church,
constitutes a “force capable of inspiring new paths to address today’s problems
and to renew profoundly from within structures, social organizations, and legal
norms,” bringing charity from the personal realm into the social and political
one because “it makes us love the common good and leads us to effectively seek
the good of all.”
Pope Leo XIV also noted that the Christian politician “is better
prepared to face the challenges of today’s world, provided, of course, that he
lives and bears witness to his faith in him, to his personal relationship with
Christ.”
In this sense, he warned against the temptation to promote
values “however evangelical they may be, but ‘emptied’ of Christ, their
author,” since they will be “incapable of changing the world.”
Responding to Blanchet’s request for advice to Catholic
politicians, Leo XIV replied: “The first and only one I will give you is to
unite yourselves more and more to Jesus, to live and bear witness to
him.”
Source: Catholic News Agency
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