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Pope Francis speaks at a conference on popular religiosity in the Mediterranean region at a convention center in Ajaccio, France, Dec. 15, 2024. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

Pope says there’s no religious justification for Russia’s war on Ukraine

December 16, 2024
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: News, Vatican, War in Ukraine, World News

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — In a letter to his nuncio in Russia, Pope Francis called out those who would claim Russia’s war on Ukraine had any spiritual justification.

Saying he wanted to speak on behalf of the war’s victims, Pope Francis said that “their cry rises to God, invoking peace instead of war, dialogue instead of the din of weapons, solidarity instead of partisan interests, because one cannot kill in the name of God.”

Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill of Moscow have both claimed God is on Russia’s side as they promoted the war as, in part, a fight against the “evil” West.

Pope Francis and Patriarch Kirill had had a 40-minute Zoom conversation a month after the war began in 2022. The pope later told a reporter, “I listened to him” read a list of reasons justifying the war, “and I told him, ‘I don’t know anything about this. Brother, we are not clerics of the state, we cannot use the language of politics, but of Jesus. We are shepherds of the same holy people of God. That is why we must seek the path of peace, to cease the blast of weapons.'”

“The patriarch cannot turn himself into Putin’s altar boy,” Pope Francis said in the May 2022 interview with the Italian newspaper, Corriere della Sera.

The pope had written in November to his nuncio in Ukraine, sending assurances of his sorrow and his prayers on the 1,000th day since Russia began its large-scale invasion in February 2022.

His letter to Archbishop Giovanni d’Aniello, the nuncio in Russia, was dated Dec. 12 and printed on the front page of the Vatican newspaper Dec. 14.

As people prepare for Christmas, “the day on which the son of God, prince of peace, appeared on the earth,” Pope Francis said he wanted to share with his nuncio in Russia “my prayer and my heartfelt appeal that peace would reign among people and would be reborn in the hearts of all men and women, who are loved by the Lord.”

The continued fighting, the pope said, “urgently challenges us, reminding us of the duty to reflect together on how to alleviate the suffering of those affected and rebuild peace.”

Pope Francis also said that he hoped people’s prayers and the humanitarian efforts to alleviate people’s suffering would “pave the way for renewed diplomatic efforts, which are necessary to halt the progression of the conflict and to achieve the long-awaited peace.”

Read More War in Ukraine

As America marks 250 years, Ukrainian Catholic bishops offer a lesson in what freedom costs

Catholic, Orthodox leaders condemn Russian attack on Kyiv cathedral

Ukrainian nun on front lines meets Pope Leo, pleads for help to ‘end the war’

Catholic aid organizations remain ‘united in hope’ for Ukraine as war rages on

Catholic leaders appeal to end Russia’s religious persecution in Ukraine

‘The power with which Christ rose is entirely nonviolent,’ pope says in Easter peace message

Copyright © 2024 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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Cindy Wooden

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