Pope Leo XIV says Church must illuminate 'dark nights of this world'
Pope Leo XIV said Friday he was elected new head of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics so the Church can be a 'beacon' to reach areas suffering a 'lack of faith'.
Newly elected Pope Robert Francis Prevost arrives on the main central loggia balcony of the St Peter's Basilica for the first time, after the cardinals ended the conclave, in The Vatican, on 8 May 2025. Picture: Alberto PIZZOLI/AFP
VATICAN CITY, Holy See - Pope Leo XIV said Friday he was elected new head of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics so the Church can be a "beacon" to reach areas suffering a "lack of faith".
"God has called me by your election" to be a "faithful administrator" of the Church so that it can be "an ark of salvation sailing through the waters of history and a beacon that illumines the dark nights of this world", Leo said in his first homily at the Sistine Chapel.
"There are many settings in which the Christian faith is considered absurd, meant for the weak and unintelligent. Settings where other securities are preferred, like technology, money, success, power or pleasure", he said during a mass for cardinals, according to video broadcast by the Vatican.
"These are contexts where it is not easy to preach the Gospel and bear witness to its truth, where believers are mocked, opposed, despised or at best tolerated and pitied.
"Yet, precisely for this reason, they are the places where our missionary outreach is desperately needed," said the first US pontiff, a former missionary in Peru.
Leo's address to cardinals came less than 24 hours after his election as spiritual head of the 2,000-year-old institution, which counts 1.4 billion faithful around the globe.
"A lack of faith is often tragically accompanied by the loss of meaning in life, the neglect of mercy, appalling violations of human dignity, the crisis of the family and so many other wounds that afflict our society," Leo said.
He also warned against reducing Jesus to "a kind of charismatic leader or superman", in an apparent message to evangelical Christians.
"Today, too, there are many settings in which Jesus, although appreciated as a man, is reduced to a kind of charismatic leader or superman.
"This is true not only among non-believers but also among many baptised Christians, who thus end up living, at this level, in a state of practical atheism," he said.