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Pope Leo XIV greets people in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the conclusion of his weekly general audience at the Vatican Aug. 20, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

Building God’s kingdom requires listening, dialogue, pope says

August 21, 2025
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Feature, News, Vatican, World News

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — At a time when many governments seem unable promote peace, justice and development for all, Christians must be prophetic, reaching out to others and daring to try something new, Pope Leo XIV said.

“Without the victims of history, without those who hunger and thirst for justice, without migrants and refugees, without the cry of all creation, we will not have new stones” necessary to build the kingdom of God, said the pope’s message to the Meeting at Rimini.

Tens of thousands of young adults from around the world gather each August in the Italian seaside city of Rimini for the meeting organized by the Communion and Liberation Movement.

Pope Francis gives his blessing at the end of his weekly general audience in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican Aug. 20, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

The 2025 Meeting, scheduled for Aug. 22-27, drew its theme from “The Rock” by T.S. Eliot: “In the vacant places we will build with new bricks.” Organizers said the theme is meant “to express the hope of a novelty within the drama of history, the desire to build together places in which to share the search and experience of what is true, good and just.”

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, wrote to Meeting participants on behalf of Pope Leo. The Vatican released the text of the message Aug. 21.

One of the featured exhibits at the Meeting will focus on the martyrs of Algeria: Bishop Pierre Claverie of Oran and 18 others, including the seven Trappist monks of Tibhirine, who were killed between 1993 and 1996 while Algeria was locked in a 10-year-long armed conflict between government forces and extremist Islamic rebel groups.

Cardinal Parolin said the pope was pleased with the choice because they are an example of “the church’s vocation to dwell in the desert in deep communion with all humanity, overcoming the walls of indifference that set religions and cultures against one another, in full imitation of the movement of the incarnation and giving of the Son of God.”

The martyrs’ “way of presence and simplicity, of knowledge and of ‘dialogue of life’ is the true path of mission,” the message said. “Not self-exhibition, in the contraposition of identities, but self-giving to the point of martyrdom of those who, day and night, in joy and amid tribulations, worship Jesus alone as Lord.”

“Where those responsible for state and international institutions seem unable to enforce the rule of law, mediation and dialogue,” the message said, “religious communities and civil society must dare to be prophetic. This means allowing ourselves to be driven into the desert and seeing now what can be born from the rubble and from so much, too much, innocent suffering.”

The Meeting’s focus on dialogue — among Catholics of differing opinions, with other Christians and with members of other religions — is the only way to “prepare the ‘new stones’ with which to build the future that God already has in store for everyone, but which only unfolds when we welcome one another,” the message said.

“Unarmed and disarming, the presence of Christians in contemporary societies must translate, with skill and imagination, the Gospel of the Kingdom into forms of development that provide alternatives to paths of growth without equity and sustainability,” it said.

“In order to serve the living God, we must abandon the idolatry of profit, which has severely compromised justice, freedom of encounter and exchange, the participation of all in the common good and ultimately peace,” it said. “A faith that is estranged from the desertification of the world or that indirectly contributes to tolerating it would no longer be following Jesus Christ.”

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Copyright © 2025 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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Cindy Wooden

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