Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Inbox Inspiration: November 19, 2025: Pope Leo's Exhortation 1-2

 November 19, 2025

 

Pope Leo’s Exhortation – 1

 

Dear Friends,

On October 4, Pope Leo XIV issued his first major statement or teaching. This is an Apostolic Exhortation and is entitled Dilexi Te (the Latin for I Have Loved You). An Apostolic Exhortation is a form of papal document which encourages a particular virtue or important way of living Jesus’ calling at a certain time.

“‘I have loved you’ (Rev 3:9). The Lord speaks these words to a Christian community that, unlike some others, had no influence or resources, and was treated instead with violence and contempt.” These are the opening words of Pope Leo’s exhortation. He is seeing God speaking to those who are poor or oppressed. And interestingly, the Latin word “Te” in the title is the singular form for our English word “you.” The idea is that God has loved each of us personally, as special and unique persons.  

In his Introduction, the Holy Father also states that his predecessor Pope Francis had begun working on this Apostolic Exhortation Dilexi Te. Leo continues: I am happy to make this document my own — adding some reflections — and to issue it at the beginning of my own pontificate, since I share the desire of my beloved predecessor that all Christians come to appreciate the close connection between Christ’s love and his summons to care for the poor. I too consider it essential to insist on this path to holiness.” These sentences give us the context for understanding all that follows in the Exhortation.      

 

After the brief Introduction, Dilexi Te is divided into 5 chapters and is 35 pages in length. This series of columns will try to highlight only some of the significant statements that will give us a sense of what the Pope is teaching. 

 

In Chapter One, A Few Essential Words, Leo gets right to the heart of his message and of our calling from Christ: 

“Love for the Lord, then, is one with love for the poor. The same Jesus who tells us, ‘The poor you will always have with you’ (Mt 26:11), also promises the disciples: ‘I am with you always’ (Mt 28:20). We likewise think of his saying: ‘Just as you did it to one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did it to me’ (Mt 25:40). This is not a matter of mere human kindness but a revelation: contact with those who are lowly and powerless is a fundamental way of encountering the Lord of history.”

 

To be continued next week!   

Fr. Michael Schleupner


November 26, 2025

 

Pope Leo’s Exhortation – 2

 

Dear Friends,

Today’s Inbox continues reflections on some of the highlights in Pope Leo’s Apostolic Exhortation Dilexi Te. 

In Chapter One, A Few Essential Words, the Holy Father uses the term “preferential option for the poor.” This expression was first officially used at a conference of all the Latin American bishops in 1979 in Pueblo, Mexico. Since then, it has been used by each Pope and is now regularly used in Church documents and teaching. It conveys that the care of the poor is both an essential and a priority in our ministry, indeed, in our faith.

Pope Leo says: “I am convinced that the preferential choice for the poor is a source of extraordinary renewal both for the Church and for society, if we can only set ourselves free of our self-centeredness and open our ears to their cry.” He sees us as entering into the very heart of God when we care for the poor in our midst. 

 

The Holy Father has the insight that there are many forms of poverty. 

“In fact, there are many forms of poverty: the poverty of those who lack material means of subsistence, the poverty of those who are socially marginalized and lack the means to give voice to their dignity and abilities, moral and spiritual poverty, cultural poverty, the poverty of those who find themselves in a condition of personal or social weakness or fragility, the poverty of those who have no rights, no space, no freedom.”

 

Pope Leo is clear with how he understands socio-economic conditions today and then calls us to examine our perspectives. 

“Nor can it be said that most of the poor are such because they do not ‘deserve’ otherwise, as maintained by that specious view of meritocracy that sees only the successful as ‘deserving.’” 

“Christians too, on a number of occasions, have succumbed to attitudes shaped by secular ideologies or political and economic approaches that lead to gross generalizations and mistaken conclusions. The fact that some dismiss or ridicule charitable works, as if they were an obsession on the part of a few and not the burning heart of the Church’s mission, convinces me of the need to go back and re-read the Gospel, lest we risk replacing it with the wisdom of this world.”

 

To read the first of this series in the Inbox Inspirations of November 19use the link below. To be continued next week! 

Fr. Michael Schleupner

 

 

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