My most humble astute comments embedded in the text in (Red):
POPE LEO XIV
ANGELUS
Piazza della Libertà (Castel Gandolfo)
Sunday, 17 August 2025
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Dear brothers and sisters, happy Sunday!
Today’s Gospel presents us with a demanding text (cf. Lk 12:49-53), in which Jesus uses strong images and great frankness to teach his disciples that his mission, and even that of his followers, is not a “bed of roses”, but a “sign of contradiction” (cf. Lk 2:34).
In this way, the Lord anticipates what he will have to face in Jerusalem when he will be opposed, arrested, insulted, beaten, crucified; when his message of love and justice will be rejected; when the leaders of the people will react with viciousness at his preaching. Moreover, many of the communities to which the evangelist Luke was writing were also experiencing the same thing. As the Acts of the Apostles tells us, they were peaceful communities that, despite their own limitations, sought to live the best they could the Master’s message of love (cf. Acts 4:32-33). Yet they were suffering persecutions.
All of this reminds us that being or doing good does not always receive a positive response. On the contrary, because its beauty at times annoys those who do not welcome it, one can end up encountering harsh opposition, even insolence and oppression. Acting in truth has its cost, because there are those in the world who choose lies, and the devil, who takes advantage of the situation, often seeks to block the actions of good people. (I can’t help but think of the “dubia” cardinals in general and Cardinal Burke, in particular, seeking truth and clarity to the detriment of their ecclesial reputation and being marginalized or worse and the mocking and derision by those who became newly minted ultramontanists!)
Jesus, however, invites us with his help not to give in and conform ourselves to this mentality, but to continue to act for our good and the good of all, even those who make us suffer. He invites us not to respond to insolence with vengeance, but to remain faithful to the truth in love. The martyrs witnessed to this by shedding their blood for their faith. We, too, can imitate their example even in different circumstances and ways.
Let us think, for example, of the price that good parents must pay if they want to educate their children according to sound principles. Eventually they will have to say “no” and correct their children; this will cause them pain. The same is true for a teacher who desires to form students properly, or for a professional, religious, or politician, who desires to carry out their mission honestly. It is true for anyone who strives to exercise his or her responsibilities consistently according to the teachings of the Gospel. (Is Pope Leo preparing the members of the synod and those agitating for heterodox changes to the Church in order to make the Church comply with the world, rather than the world comply with the Truth (Jesus Christ), that His Holiness will be more than willing to say NO, AND NOT JUST NO, BUT NO! NO! NO! AND SAYING INSTEAD YES! AND NOT JUST YES, BUT YES, YES, YES TO THE UNCHANGING TRUTHS OF CHRIST AND THE PERENNIAL MAGISTERIUM OF THE CHURCH?)
In this regard, Saint Ignatius of Antioch, while travelling toward Rome to undergo martyrdom, wrote to the Christians of that city: “I do not want you to please men, but to please God” (Letter to the Romans 2:1). He added, “It is better for me to die in Jesus Christ than reign over the ends of the earth” (ibid., 6:1). (Is Pope Leo saying here that the Synod and His Holiness’ Magisterium will not be about pleasing men but to please God? Let us pray that this is the case and in fact, I’m betting my money on it!)
Brothers and sisters, let us together ask Mary, Queen of Martyrs, to help us be faithful and courageous witnesses of her Son in every circumstance, and to sustain our brothers and sisters who suffer for the faith today.
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After the Angelus
Dear brothers and sisters,
I am close to the peoples of Pakistan, India, and Nepal who have been struck by violent floods. I pray for the victims, for their families, and for all those who suffer because of this calamity.
Let us pray that efforts to bring wars to an end and to promote peace may bear fruit, and that in negotiations the common good of peoples may always be placed first.
In this summer season, I have received news of many different initiatives of cultural outreach and evangelization, often organized in holiday destinations. It is beautiful to see how zeal for the Gospel inspires the creativity and commitment of groups and associations of all ages. For example, I think of the youth mission that took place recently in Riccione. I thank the organizers and everyone who in various ways participated in such events.
I greet with affection all of you present here today in Castel Gandolfo.
In particular, I am pleased to welcome the AIDO group of Coccaglio, celebrating fifty years of commitment to life; the AVIS blood donors who came by bicycle from Gavardo (Brescia); the young people of Casarano; and the Franciscan Sisters of Saint Anthony.
I also bless the great pilgrimage to the Marian Shrine of Piekary in Poland.
I wish you all a blessed Sunday!
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