New Pope Leo XIV, celebrating first Mass, wants Church to be beacon of light

Pope Leo XIV conducts Mass in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican, May 9, 2025. Vatican Media/Simone Risoluti Handout via REUTERS
Pope Leo XIV celebrated his first Mass on Friday in the
Sistine Chapel, where he was elected less than 24 hours earlier,
warning of the dangers caused by a lack of faith and hoping the Catholic Church
could be a beacon lighting the world's "dark nights".
Leo, the former Cardinal Robert Prevost and the
first U.S. pope, looked calm as he delivered the Mass in the famous, frescoed
chapel with the same cardinals who chose him to be the 267th pontiff
and the successor to Pope Francis.
Dressed in relatively simple white and gold vestments, Leo,
who was born in Chicago but spent two decades as a missionary
in Peru, said a few words in English before continuing his homily in fluent
Italian.
In the homily, Leo, 69, painted a picture of the Church he
would like to see, saying he would seek to serve as the "faithful
administrator" for the Church as a whole.
The new pope, who leads 1.4 billion Catholics around the
world, acknowledged that the Christian faith is sometimes "considered
absurd" and the preserve of "the weak and unintelligent".
"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," he said.
An inauguration Mass for Leo will be held in St. Peter's
Square on Sunday May 18, the Vatican said.
World and religious leaders are invited to the inauguration,
which marks the formal launch of a papacy. Pope Francis' inauguration in 2013
attracted a crowd estimated at 200,000 people.
The new pope will also leave senior Vatican officials in
their roles for the time being, giving him time to decide before making
definitive appointments, the Vatican said.
All Vatican senior officials, appointed for five-year terms,
serve at the pleasure of the pope. A new pontiff usually rolls over existing
mandates at least initially before deciding whether to change key positions.
The pope was elected at the end of a two-day conclave that
was wrapped up on Thursday evening when white smoke billowed from the chimney
on the Sistine Chapel.
Given the nature of the conclaves, when cardinals are shut
away from the world and sworn to secrecy, little or nothing is likely to emerge
- at least for now - about how Leo obtained the required two-thirds majority of
the vote so swiftly.
The successor to Pope Francis, who died last month at the
age of 88, inherits a number of major challenges, ranging from a budget
shortfall to divisions over whether the Church should be more welcoming towards
the LGBT community and divorcees, and should let women play a greater role in
its affairs.
He will also have a packed agenda, with the Vatican
celebrating a Holy Year that brings millions of additional tourists
to Rome.
Before Leo's election, U.S. cardinals had largely been
written off as papal contenders because of a widespread assumption that the
global Church could not be run by a superpower pope.
However, he also holds Peruvian citizenship, meaning that he
has deep knowledge of both the West and less developed nations.
U.S. President Donald Trump was quick to congratulate Leo.
However, the new pope has a history of criticizing Trump and Vice
President JD Vance's policies, according to posts on the X account of Robert
Prevost.
Leo worked for decades in the north of Peru, first as a
missionary and later as Bishop of Chiclayo from 2015 to 2023. Catholics took
to the streets of the small city in northwestern Peru, and church bells
rang out to celebrate the election of a man who they embrace as one of their
own.
One of the clues to what kind of a Church leader Leo will be
was in his choice of name. The last pope with this name was Leo XIII, who led
the Church from 1878-1903. He was known for his devoted focus to social justice
issues.
Prevost became a cardinal only in 2023. He has given few
media interviews and is known to have a shy personality.
Francis brought him to Rome two years ago to head the
Vatican office in charge of choosing which priests should serve as Catholic
bishops, meaning he has had a hand in selecting many of the world's bishops.
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