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Perspective

Pope Leo Meets With 1,000 Itinerant Catechists from the Neocatechumenal Way

  • Writer: Denver Catholic Staff
    Denver Catholic Staff
  • 3 minutes ago
  • 3 min read
Clergy member blesses a baby held by a woman. Man stands beside them. Ornate room with gold accents. Warm, serene atmosphere.
(Photo: © Vatican Media)

Last month, Pope Leo XIV received more than 1,000 itinerant catechists in an audience in the Hall of Blessings, responsible for the Neocatechumenal Way in 138 nations on five continents.


The papal audience came at the end of a gathering held at the “Servant of Yahweh” Center in Porto San Giorgio under the guidance of the team responsible for the Neocatechumenal Way worldwide, and included Kiko Argüello, founder of the Neocatecumenal Way, as well as Father Mario Pezzi and María Ascensión Romero, part of the international team.


The international gathering has taken place each year since the beginning of the Neocatechumenal Way, and allowed participants to share their experiences in evangelization in more than 6,200 parishes in 1,408 dioceses worldwide. In this way, they shared the fruits of the Neocatechumenal Way's mission to promote Christian initiation, a tool to help bishops and priests in different countries in their work of proclaiming the Gospel in today’s world.


Also present at the gathering and audience with the Holy Father were the 115 rectors of the Diocesan Missionary Seminaries that the Neocatechumenal Way has helped to open in many dioceses, including in the Archdiocese of Denver, together with another hundred formators.


"In living together, it has been possible to see, through different experiences on different continents, the difficult situation in which the Church is called to carry out its mission today," the Neocatechumenal Way shared in a press release. "In this global context, it has become clear that the Neocatechumenal Way is called to contribute to peace and harmony among people, bringing the hope of the Christian proclamation, the kerygma, and forming Christian communities capable of giving the signs of faith to this generation: love and unity."


The pope’s arrival and departure were accompanied by loud and joyful applause and songs by Argüello, which the entire assembly sang along to enthusiastically.


Argüello presented the Holy Father with a copy of the icon of the Good Shepherd, which he painted in 1982, and, since the pope has a visit to Spain scheduled in the coming months, a publication on the Madrid Cathedral, Nuestra Señora de la Almudena, where Argüello painted the mystery crown and the stained glass windows of the apse in 2004.


Pope Leo addressed those present with these words:

I would like to express my gratitude to the families who, responding to the inner prompting of the Spirit, leave behind the security of ordinary life and set out on mission, even to distant and difficult territories, with the sole desire to proclaim the Gospel and bear witness to God’s love. Itinerant teams made up of families, catechists, and priests participate in the evangelizing mission of the whole Church and… contribute to “awakening” the faith of non-Christians who have never heard of Jesus Christ. Living the experience of the Neocatechumenal Way and carrying out the mission also requires, on your part, interior vigilance and a wise critical capacity, in order to discern certain risks that always threaten spiritual and ecclesial life. Charisms are always placed at the service of the Kingdom of God and of the one Church of Christ, in which no gift of God is more important than any other. The good you do is great, because its purpose is to enable people to know Christ. Continue forward in joy and humility, without discouragement, as builders and witnesses of communion. Dear friends, I thank you for your commitment, for your joyful witness, and for the service you render to the Church and to the world. I encourage you to continue with enthusiasm, and I bless you, invoking upon you the intercession of the Virgin Mary, that she may accompany and protect you. Thank you!

Read more on Vatican News.


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