Pope Leo XIV’s first trip abroad showcased his inclusive priorities, which contrast sharply with Donald Trump’s Project 2025 agenda

NPI's Cascadia Advocate
As the new liturgical year began, Pope Leo XIV visited Turkey and Lebanon, advocating for peace and unity.

Originally by Joel Connelly at www.nwprogressive.org


As the Catholic Church’s new litur­gi­cal year began on the first Sun­day in Advent, Pope Leo XIV was in the pre­dom­i­nant­ly Mus­lim coun­tries of Turkey and Lebanon.

He vis­it­ed a mosque, joined a two hour divine litur­gy with an Ortho­dox patri­arch and talked peace in the Mid­dle East with Turkey’s Pres­i­dent Erdogen.

As head of the uni­ver­sal church, the first Amer­i­can-born Pope has become, in less than a year, the world’s pre­em­i­nent multi-tasker.

He has a Gospel to preach, fac­ing the chal­lenge of few­er priests and faith­ful in the pews. He has made full com­mu­nion of Chris­tians “one of the pri­or­i­ties of the Catholic Church.” He has decried the cru­el­ty of this century’s author­i­tar­i­an rulers..

The life jour­ney as well as spir­i­tu­al jour­ney has fig­ured in Leo’s min­istry, bespeak­ing his out­spo­ken advo­ca­cy for refugees, immi­grants and the poor. He has also striv­en to be an ecu­meni­cal — and polit­i­cal — bridge builder, advo­cat­ing a two-state solu­tion to curb suf­fer­ing and blood­let­ting in con­test­ed lands of Israel and Palestine.

In Lebanon, fac­ing risks and min­is­ter­ing to the flock, while deployed his moral author­i­ty in the role of peace­mak­er, Leo walked gin­ger­ly in the shoes of the fisherman.

He was greet­ed by an crowd of 150,000 in war-rav­aged Beirut.

The papa­cy has tak­en very dif­fer­ent turns in the past cen­tu­ry, reflect­ing per­son­al­i­ty and respond­ing to per­ils. The aloof, remote Pius XII — Vat­i­can gar­den­ers were for­bid­den to look at the strolling pon­tiff — stirs con­tro­ver­sy to this day for not bear­ing pub­lic wit­ness against Nazism and the Holo­caust. St. John XXIII and Fran­cis were lov­ing pas­tors who also opened the Church to the world. In draft­ing his sem­i­nal ecli­cal Pacem en Ter­ris (Peace on Earth), John XXIII report­ed­ly told the­olo­gians: I am a son of sim­ple peas­ants, write this that they might read it.

“War no more, war nev­er again,” was the mes­sage pas­sion­ate­ly deliv­ered by Pope Paul VI to the Unit­ed Nations. But Paul over­ruled his own the­olo­gians with Humanae vitae, the encycli­cal con­demn­ing con­tra­cep­tion. Mil­lions of Catholics chose con­science over obe­di­ence, doing last­ing dam­age to author­i­ty of the hier­ar­chy. The priest-soci­ol­o­gist Andrew Gree­ley equat­ed falling mass atten­dance to the preg­nan­cy pre­ven­tion ban.

St. John Paul II was a long last­ing, larg­er-than-life pon­tiff, instru­men­tal in rel­e­gat­ing Sovi­et and Pol­ish com­mu­nism to the dust­bin of his­to­ry. But he was stern­ly ortho­dox, equal­ly so his suc­ces­sor Bene­dict XVI, who earned the nick­name of “God’s rot­tweil­er” for crack­ing down on dis­sent. The Church was griev­ous­ly dam­aged by the cler­gy sex abuse scan­dal that orig­i­nal­ly broke in the U.S. It broke on John Paul’s watch.

Leo is show­ing signs of embrac­ing Fran­cis’ com­mit­ment to social and eco­nom­ic jus­tice, but the Augus­tin­ian is giv­ing the papa­cy a dif­fer­ent face than his Jesuit predecessor.

Preach­ing and cel­e­brat­ing mass, he is omnipresent on Facebook.

He is flu­ent­ly mul­ti­lin­gual. In recent weeks, Leo has spo­ken and preached in Eng­lish, French, Ital­ian, Span­ish, Latin and even — briefly — Arabic.

He has prayed with King Charles II, the first encounter in cen­turies between a Catholic pon­tiff and the monarch who heads the Church of England.

He has been seen receiv­ing actor Robert DeNiro and accept­ing a Chica­go Cubs base­ball cap. But the Sox are his team and much in need of his prayers. No word yet on whether the for­mer Car­di­nal Pre­vost will con­tin­ue to vote in Chica­go elections.

The pope’s chief dif­fi­cul­ty, and object for makeover, is the hier­ar­chy of the Catholic Church in his native land. (Leo has dual U.S. and Peru­vian cit­i­zen­ship, the result of hav­ing served as a dioce­san bish­op in Peru.)

The lead­er­ship of the U.S. Con­fer­ence of Catholic Bish­ops has belonged to the cler­i­cal equiv­a­lent of com­pa­ny men. Defin­ing the out­law­ing of abor­tion as the pre­em­i­nent church issue, the USCCB has aligned itself with the right wing move­ment that con­trols the Repub­li­can Par­ty in the nation’s cul­ture wars.

While a defend­er of tra­di­tion­al mar­riage and fam­i­ly, Leo responds to St. Matthew rather than MAGA. He has tapped Car­di­nal Robert McEl­roy, a cham­pi­on of immi­grant rights as Bish­op of San Diego, for the high-pro­file post of Arch­bish­op of Wash­ing­ton, D.C. The appoint­ment car­ries a mes­sage to our xeno­pho­bic president.

Leo has blunt­ly deliv­ered that mes­sage, decry­ing “the indis­crim­i­nate depor­ta­tion of peo­ple” and call­ing for “an end to dehu­man­iz­ing rhetoric and violence.”

The pope has also deliv­ered an unmis­tak­able mes­sage on broad­en­ing the bish­ops’ mes­sage: “Some­one who says, ‘I’m against abor­tion but in favor of the death penal­ty’, is not real­ly pro-life, and some­one who says, ‘I’m against abor­tion but I’m in agree­ment with the inhu­man treat­ment of immi­grants’, I don’t think that’s pro-life.”

While speak­ing up for God’s chil­dren — includ­ing those Trump calls “garbage” — Leo has spo­ken to the the per­ils threat­en­ing God’s creation.

He has force­ful­ly linked cli­mate dam­age and its human con­se­quences. The recent Unit­ed Nations cli­mate con­fer­ence in Brazil heard from the Holy Father. Leo called for “con­crete actions” in response to cli­mate dam­age and, in a video, said that God’s cre­ation “is cry­ing out in floods, droughts, storms and relent­less heat.” One in three peo­ple on Earth “live in great vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty “ due to human-caused impacts, Leo argued.

The Amer­i­can bish­ops have heard from the boss, and pre­sum­ably the Holy Spir­it. With­out men­tion­ing Trump, they — at last — spoke out force­ful­ly ear­li­er this fall, tak­ing to task the regime for its crack­downs, pur­suits, ware­hous­ing and expul­sion of peo­ple the likes of Stephen Miller do not con­sid­er to be wor­thy of inclu­sion in Amer­i­can society.

“We are dis­turbed when we see among our peo­ple a cli­mate of fear and anx­i­ety around ques­tions of pro­fil­ing and immi­gra­tion enforce­ment,” the bish­ops declared. They crit­i­cized ICE agents’ deploy­ment to church prop­er­ty, hos­pi­tals and schools.

He may lack Fran­cis’ spon­tane­ity, but Leo is show­ing him­self to be a qui­et lion for social, cli­mate and eco­nom­ic jus­tice. The suc­ces­sor to Peter is push­ing back against twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry Cae­sars. In short, Pope Leo XVI is doing the Lord’s work.

Read the Original Story

Author