Pope: Let us build a humbler, more welcoming Church

By Kielce Gussie, 28 October 2025
Pope Leo XIV during Mass for the Jubilee of the Synodal Teams and Participatory Bodies in St Peter's Basilica. Image: Vatican Media

 

Speaking to members of Synodal Teams and Participatory Bodies, Pope Leo urges everyone to humble themselves like the tax collector in the Gospel parable and to find unity amid tensions within the Church.

During the Mass for the Jubilee of the Synodal Teams and Participatory Bodies in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Leo XIV invited all the participants to reflect on the “mystery of the Church.” He reminded them that she is not simply a religious institution with hierarchies and structures. Rather, the Church is “the visible sign of the union between God and humanity”, where God brings everyone together as one family united in love.

Through contemplating what ecclesial communion—created and preserved by the Holy Spirit—means, the Pope explained we can begin to understand what synodal teams and participatory bodies are.

“They express what occurs within the Church, where relationships do not respond to the logic of power but to that of love”, he underlined, stressing that the most important thing in the Christian community is the spiritual life.

Love is the supreme rule

Above all else, Pope Leo urged all the participants to remember that love is the highest rule in the Church. “No one is called to dominate; all are called to serve,” he explained, “No one is excluded; we are all called to participate.”

Therefore, we are all called to seek the whole truth together. This invitation to “togetherness” reiterates the call to communion within the Church. Recalling the words of his predecessor, Pope Francis, in his last Lenten message, the Holy Father reflected on idea of “walking together”. The Argentine pontiff stressed that “Christians are called to walk at the side of others, and never as lone travelers.”

Together but alone

The call to walk together, Pope Leo highlighted, is what the Pharisee and the tax collector from the Gospel parable were missing. While they are in the same place, they are divided and they do not communicate. “Both take the same path, but they do not walk together. Both pray to the Father, but without being brothers and without having anything in common.”

The Pope explained this separation stems above all from the Pharisee’s attitude as his prayer, “though seemingly addressed to God, is only a mirror in which he looks at, justifies and praises himself.” He feels superior to the tax collector and looks down on him. Thus, he focuses on himself rather than on his relationship with God and others.

This, Pope Leo warned, can happen in the Christian community. When egos prevail over the community, leading to an individualism that renders true and brotherly relationships impossible. It can also happen when someone thinks they are better than others.

But, he continued, instead of placing our focus on the Pharisee, we should look to the tax collector. His humility reminds us that within the Church, we all need God and each other. We need to listen and love each other and enjoy walking together because Christ belongs to the humble.

Unity amidst tension

Pope Leo highlighted how synodal teams and participatory bodies are an image of the Church living in communion with one another. Listening to the Holy Spirit with a sense of dialogue, fraternity, and parrhesia (speaking the truth openly and courageously), we can respond to the call to walk together seeking God.

The Pope explained that by clothing ourselves with the sentiments of Christ, we expand the ecclesial space so that it becomes collegial and welcoming. With this approach, we can live confidently in the midst of tensions in the Church—unity and diversity, tradition and novelty, authority and participation.

“It is not a question of resolving them [the tensions] by reducing one to the other, but of allowing them to be purified by the Spirit, so that they may be harmonized and oriented toward a common discernment,” the Holy Father argued. Members of synodal teams and participatory bodies have an understanding that ecclesial discernment takes interior freedom, humility, prayer, and trust. It is never just one person’s opinion.

Pope Leo called on all those present to dream of and dare to build a humbler Church, who “bends down to wash the feet of humanity; a Church that does not judge as the Pharisee does the tax collector, but becomes a welcoming place for all”.

Read Pope Leo’s full homily below:

JUBILEE OF THE SYNODAL TEAMS AND PARTICIPATORY BODIES

HOLY MASS

HOMILY BY HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

St. Peter’s Basilica
30
th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 26 October 2025

Brothers and Sisters,

As we celebrate the Jubilee of the Synodal Teams and Participatory Bodies, we are invited to contemplate and rediscover the mystery of the Church. She is not merely a religious institution, nor is she simply identified with hierarchies and structures. The Second Vatican Council reminds us that the Church is the visible sign of the union between God and humanity, where God intends to bring us all together into one family of brothers and sisters and make us his people: a people made up of beloved children, all united in the one embrace of his love.

Contemplating the mystery of ecclesial communion, generated and preserved by the Holy Spirit, we can also understand the meaning of synodal teams and participatory bodies. They express what occurs within the Church, where relationships do not respond to the logic of power but to that of love. The former – to recall a constant warning from Pope Francis – is a “worldly” logic.  Conversely, in the Christian community, primacy belongs to the spiritual life, which reveals to us that we are all children of God, brothers and sisters, called to serve one another.

The supreme rule in the Church is love. No one is called to dominate; all are called to serve. No one should impose his or her own ideas; we must all listen to one another. No one is excluded; we are all called to participate. No one possesses the whole truth; we must all humbly seek it and seek it together.

The very word “together” expresses the call to communion in the Church. Pope Francis reminded us of this in his final Message for Lent: “…to journey together. The Church is called to walk together, to be synodal. Christians are called to walk at the side of others, and never as lone travelers. The Holy Spirit impels us not to remain self-absorbed, but to leave ourselves behind and keep walking towards God and our brothers and sisters. Journeying together means consolidating the unity grounded in our common dignity as children of God” (Message for Lent, 25 February 2025).

Walking together: this is apparently what the two characters neglect to do in the parable we have just heard in the Gospel. Both the Pharisee and the tax collector go up to the Temple to pray. We could say that they “go up together” or, at least, they find themselves together in the sacred place. Yet they are divided; and there is no communication between them. Both take the same path, but they do not walk together. Both are in the Temple; but one takes the first place, and the other remains behind. Both pray to the Father, but without being brothers and without having anything in common.

This division depends above all on the Pharisee’s attitude. His prayer, though seemingly addressed to God, is only a mirror in which he looks at, justifies and praises himself. As Saint Augustine writes, he “went up to pray: he had no mind to pray to God, but to laud himself” (Discourse 115, 2). Feeling superior, he judges the other with contempt and looks down on him. The Pharisee is obsessed with his own ego and, in this way, ends up focused on himself without having a relationship with either God or others.

Brothers and sisters, this can also happen in the Christian community. It happens when the ego prevails over the collective, causing an individualism that prevents authentic and fraternal relationships. It also occurs when the claim to be better than others, as the Pharisee does with the tax collector, creates division and turns the community into a judgmental and exclusionary place; and when one leverages one’s role to exert power, rather than to serve.

We should, however, focus our attention on the tax collector. With the same humility that he showed, we too must recognize within the Church that we are all in need of God and of one another, which leads us to practice reciprocal love, listen to each other and enjoy walking together. It is based on the knowledge that Christ belongs to those who are humble, not to those who elevate themselves above the flock (cf. Saint Clement of Rome, Letter to the Corinthians, c. XVI).

The synodal teams and participatory bodies are an image of this Church that lives in communion. Please trust me when I tell you that by listening to the Spirit in dialogue, fraternity and parrhesia, you will help us to understand that, prior to any differences, we are called in the Church to walk together in the pursuit of God. By clothing ourselves with the sentiments of Christ, we expand the ecclesial space so that it becomes collegial and welcoming.

This will enable us to live with confidence and a new spirit amid the tensions that run through the life of the Church: between unity and diversity, tradition and novelty, authority and participation. We must allow the Spirit to transform them, so that they do not become ideological contrapositions and harmful polarizations. It is not a question of resolving them by reducing one to the other, but of allowing them to be purified by the Spirit, so that they may be harmonized and oriented toward a common discernment. As synodal teams and members of participatory bodies, you know that ecclesial discernment requires “interior freedom, humility, prayer, mutual trust, an openness to the new and a surrender to the will of God. It is never just a setting out of one’s own personal or group point of view or a summing up of differing individual opinions” (Final Document, 26 October 2024, 82). Being a synodal Church means recognizing that truth is not possessed, but sought together, allowing ourselves to be guided by a restless heart in love with Love.

Dear friends, we must dream of and build a more humble Church; a Church that does not stand upright like the Pharisee, triumphant and inflated with pride, but bends down to wash the feet of humanity; a Church that does not judge as the Pharisee does the tax collector, but becomes a welcoming place for all; a Church that does not close in on itself, but remains attentive to God so that it can similarly listen to everyone. Let us commit ourselves to building a Church that is entirely synodal, ministerial and attracted to Christ and therefore committed to serving the world.

Upon all of us, and the Church spread throughout the world, I invoke the intercession of the Virgin Mary with the words of the Servant of God Don Tonino Bello: “Holy Mary, woman of conviviality, nourish in our Churches the desire for communion … Help them to overcome internal divisions. Intervene when the demon of discord creeps into their midst. Extinguish the fires of factionalism.  Reconcile mutual disputes. Defuse their rivalries. Stop them when they decide to go their own way, neglecting convergence on common projects” (Maria, Donna dei Nostri Giorni, 99).

May the Lord grant us this grace: to be rooted in God’s love so that we may live in communion with one another and be, as a Church, witnesses of unity and love.

With thanks to Vatican News and Kielce Gussie, where this article originally appeared.

 

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