zoomText
  • A
  • A
  • A
pdf
PDF generation in progress.....
AR  - DE  - EN  - ES  - FR  - IT  - PL  - PT

POPE LEO XIV

ANGELUS

St Peter's Square
Sunday, 14 June 2026

[Multimedia]

___________________________________

Dear brothers and sisters, Happy Sunday!

Today’s Gospel (Mt 9:36–10:8) brings us a great gift, for it draws all who hear it into Jesus’ gaze: it is a story that bears witness to the attentiveness of this gaze, as well as telling us what the Lord sees. We read, in fact, that Christ “When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless” (v. 36). Having become our brother, the Son of God looks at the people, he looks at humanity: he sees the oppression that burdens and the violence that causes strength to fade. He sees the wounds of war and the emptiness of consumerism. He sees faces reduced to masks, families torn apart by evil, and young people misled by false ideals. Jesus sees and loves. He loves and suffers for and with us: his compassion expresses not only fraternal closeness, but his desire to redeem.

For he knows our hearts and cares for us. Looking upon so many people like “sheep without a shepherd” (v. 36), Christ devotes himself to all as the Good Shepherd and, as Lord of the harvest, sends workers into the field of the world (cf. v. 38). What is their task? They must offer God’s comfort to those who suffer by bringing charity where there is misery, hope where there is affliction, faith where there is distrust.

The Gospel lists the names of the first twelve “workers:” they are disciples made apostles, that is, missionaries and preachers. Among them, the first we find is Simon, called Peter. But we also find Judas Iscariot, named last, to remind us that one can follow Jesus and betray him. Even so, the Gospel remains for all a living and true word. The Good News that spans the centuries is the same, always young, fresh, and liberating: “The Kingdom of Heaven has come near!” (Mt 10:7). Yes, it is near because in Jesus Christ, God draws near to every man and woman, to every people and nation. When this Gospel is proclaimed and lived out, evil crumbles like a disease that passes away (cf. v. 8), like a night giving way to dawn, like death conquered by the risen One.

This is how Jesus’ gaze transforms reality. Filled with love, his initiative gives birth to a new people, the Church, called to continue the mission of the apostles: “You received without payment; give without payment” (v. 8). Yes, Jesus’ gift is entirely gratis, for its value exceeds all measure: it is impossible to merit or “buy” it. This grace is the beautiful name of God’s mercy, which seeks us out wherever we are, to draw us to himself. “Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest” (Mt 9:38)!

Dear friends, the task of evangelization springs from God’s gift, which in Christ becomes forgiveness for the world, service to the least and the poor, and a commitment to justice. Let us invoke the help of the Virgin Mary, full of grace, so that we may respond with joy and courage to the mission to which Jesus calls us.

________________

After the Angelus prayer

Dear brothers and sisters,

First of all, I express my gratitude to the Lord for the Apostolic Journey he has allowed me to undertake in Spain. I also thank the Spanish people who have welcomed me with great enthusiasm and devotion. I am especially grateful to His Majesty the King; I affectionately thank the Bishops, all the communities I visited and the entire Church in Spain. Que Dios bendiga siempre a España!

I would also like to recall some of the newly beatified: the diocesan priests Václav Drbola and Jan Bula, from Moravia; and Jan Šwierc and eight companions, Polish Salesian priests. All were beatified as martyrs, as victims of the persecution by totalitarian regimes because of their fidelity to Christ. Yesterday in Mato Grosso, Brazil, Nazareno Lanciotti, a Roman missionary priest, was also beatified; he too was a martyr, for he defended the poorest in the name of the Gospel. May the example and intercession of these courageous witnesses sustain the mission of priests and of the entire Church.

I assure the people of the Philippines, struck a few days ago by a powerful earthquake, of my closeness. I pray for the deceased and their families, for the wounded and for all those suffering because of this disaster.

And now I extend my greetings to all of you, Romans and pilgrims from various countries!

I greet the members of the International Commission for Dialogue between the Disciples of Christ and the Catholic Church. May your reflections help us to grow in communion.

I greet the pilgrims from the United States of America, in particular the faithful from New Jersey and the Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart in Miami, Florida. I greet the confirmands from Bergamo, the “Casa di Maria” Community — whom Pope Francis called “the children of the Immaculate”— and the parish groups from Santa Maria delle Grazie and Santa Francesca Cabrini in Rome.

I wish all of you a happy Sunday!