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Pope Leo XIV greets officials of the Roman Curia and cardinals as he leaves after his annual pre-Christmas meeting with officials of the Roman Curia and the College of Cardinals in the Hall of Blessing above the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican Dec. 22, 2025. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Curia must reflect ‘new humanity,’ founded on love, solidarity, pope says

December 22, 2025
By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: News, Vatican, Vocations, World News

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The cardinals, bishops, priests, religious and laypeople who work in the Roman Curia are called to be a “sign of a new humanity,” founded on mutual love and solidarity, not selfishness and individualism, Pope Leo XIV said.

“We are not mere gardeners tending our own plot, but disciples and witnesses of the Kingdom of God, called in Christ to be leaven of universal fraternity among different peoples, religions and cultures,” he told cardinals and top Curia officials Dec. 22 during a traditional pre-Christmas meeting with them.

“This happens if we ourselves live as brothers and sisters and allow the light of communion to shine in the world,” the pope said. “Let us remember this also in our curial service: the work of each is important for the whole, and the witness of a Christian life, expressed in communion, is the first and greatest service we can offer.”

Pope Leo XIV receives a drawing after his after his annual pre-Christmas meeting with Vatican employees and their families in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican Dec. 22, 2025. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

The traditional Christmas greeting took place in the Vatican’s Hall of Blessing, which was decorated with red poinsettias and Christmas trees adorned with sparkling lights and silver and gold ornaments.

While previous popes used the pre-Christmas meeting to review the past year, Pope Leo continued Pope Francis’ practice of using it as an opportunity to reflect on what can help or hinder the Curia’s mission of sharing the Gospel. Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, offered a brief summary of the past eight months of Pope Leo’s ministry in his opening remarks.

Speaking in Italian, Pope Leo said he wanted to take a moment to remember Pope Francis, who passed away April 21 after 12 years as head of the universal church.

“His prophetic voice, pastoral style and rich magisterium have marked the church’s journey in recent years, encouraging us above all to place God’s mercy at the center, to give renewed impetus to evangelization, and to be a joyful church, welcoming to all and attentive to the poorest,” the U.S.-born pope said.

Pope Leo then focused his talk on two fundamental themes of Pope Francis’ 2013 apostolic exhortation “Evangelii Gaudium” (“The Joy of the Gospel”): mission and communion.

He told the Curia officials that the church’s very nature is to be “outward-looking, turned toward the world, missionary,” in order to bring the good news of God’s love to all people.

“The church exists to invite and gather all people to the festive banquet that the Lord prepares for us,” he said, so “every person can discover their identity as a beloved child, a brother or sister to their neighbor, and a new creation in Christ.”

“Transformed by this discovery, they become witnesses to truth, justice and peace,” he said.

For that reason, he said, “we need an ever more missionary Roman Curia, in which institutions, offices and tasks are conceived in light of today’s major ecclesial, pastoral and social challenges, and not merely to ensure ordinary administration,” to better serve local churches and their pastors.

Pope Leo XIV reads his speech to officials of the Roman Curia and the College of Cardinals during his annual pre-Christmas meeting with them in the Hall of Blessing above the atrium of St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Dec. 22, 2025. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

When it comes to communion, he said, Christmas is an important reminder that “Jesus came to reveal the true face of God as Father, so that we might all become his children and therefore brothers and sisters to one another.”

God’s love, revealed by Jesus, enables all members of the Catholic Church “to be a sign of a new humanity — no longer founded on selfishness and individualism, but on mutual love and solidarity,” Pope Leo said.

The task of fostering greater communion both within the church and in the world “is urgent,” he said.

Communion in the church is always a challenge, he said, because of “forces of division” that may sometimes be at play. “We can fall into the temptation of swinging between two opposite extremes: uniformity that fails to value differences, or the exacerbation of differences and viewpoints instead of seeking communion.”

“Thus, in interpersonal relationships, in internal office dynamics, or in addressing questions of faith, liturgy, morality and more besides, there is a risk of falling into rigidity or ideology, with their consequent conflicts,” Pope Leo said.

Members of the church are called to “conversion,” and to remember, “though many and diverse,” they are members of the one body of Christ as “brothers and sisters in him,” he said.

“This communion is built not so much through words and documents as through concrete gestures and attitudes that ought to appear in our daily lives, including in our work,” he said.

Pope Leo warned against “bitterness” that may build up in those who, after many years of service in the Curia, “observe with disappointment that certain dynamics — linked to the exercise of power, the desire to prevail, or the pursuit of personal interests — are slow to change.”

He encouraged officials to seek “genuine fraternal friendship” and to pray for personal conversion and the “grace to find trustworthy friends, where masks fall away, no one is used or sidelined, genuine support is offered, and each person’s worth and competence are respected, preventing resentment and dissatisfaction.”

When members of the Curia and the wider church live this way, he said, it also becomes a sign to “a world wounded by discord, violence and conflict, where we also witness a growth in aggression and anger, often exploited by both the digital sphere and politics.”

“The Lord’s birth brings the gift of peace and invites us to become its prophetic sign in a human and cultural context that is too fragmented,” he said.

After meeting with the Curia leaders, the pope went to the Vatican audience hall where he greeted hundreds of employees of the Vatican and the Diocese of Rome and their families. He spent almost 30 minutes walking along the barriers, greeting and speaking with those in attendance, and blessing babies and children.

In his speech, he encouraged employees and their families to learn from Jesus “the style of simplicity and humility, and let us all work together to ensure that this is increasingly the style of the church in all its expressions.”

“Sometimes we are so caught up in our activities that we do not think about the Lord or the church,” he said. “But the very fact of working with dedication, trying to do our best, and also — for you lay people — with love for your family, for your children, gives glory to the Lord.”

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

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