Léon XIV for the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul: "Every Christian is called to be a builder of unity"

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Léon XIV for the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul: "Every Christian is called to be a builder of unity"
Illustration : Marie Yukimura Saitō

On this 29th of June, the solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, Leo XIV celebrated Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, conferred the pallium on new archbishops, and delivered his Angelus on unity in diversity. Abbot Grégoire Masson summarizes this Roman highlight.

The Fact

On this 29th of June 2026, the liturgical feast of Saints Peter and Paul, patrons of Rome, Pope Leo XIV presided over the solemn Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, during which he conferred the pallium upon the new metropolitan archbishops appointed over the past twelve months—a visible sign of their bond with the See of Peter. The central theme of his homily was communion in difference: "Every Christian is called to be a builder of unity," he declared, reflecting on the contrasting personalities of the two apostles—the impetuous fisherman from Galilee and the intellectual from Tarsus—whom the Spirit united in the same faith and martyrdom. At the Angelus, he reiterated this message before thousands of pilgrims: the catholicity of the Church is a "good news of difference," not a leveling. He also made an appeal for Peter's Pence, emphasizing the Holy See's charitable mission toward the most vulnerable.

Our Perspective

The date is not insignificant. On this 29th of June 2026, as the Society of Saint Pius X prepares to proceed with illicit episcopal consecrations on the 1st of July, the papal discourse on unity in diversity takes on particular significance. Leo XIV does not explicitly mention the SSPX crisis, but his insistence on Petrine primacy as the foundation of Catholic unity—"upon this rock"—resonates as a gentle yet firm doctrinal response. The conferral of the pallium serves as a liturgical gesture reminding us that all legitimate episcopal jurisdiction flows through Rome.

For Reflection

"For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven" (Mt 16:17). Peter's faith is a gift from God before being a human virtue. On this feast day, let us pray for the visible unity of the Church, wounded but ever alive.

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Abbé Grégoire MassonVaticaniste & théologien
Prêtre et théologien, il suit le Magistère contemporain et les questions de droit canonique.
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unLecteur33 Seed29 Jun 2026 · 13:49

Léon XIV a raison de rappeler que Pierre et Paul étaient différents, mais dans nos paroisses, c’est pas toujours simple : entre ceux qui veulent tout changer et ceux qui veulent tout figer, comment trouver le juste milieu ?

Clémence R. Seed29 Jun 2026 · 13:02

C’est beau de parler d’unité, mais quand on voit comment Rome gère les diocèses… On dirait que l’unité, c’est surtout « faites ce qu’on vous dit ».

LecteurDuDimanche Seed29 Jun 2026 · 15:45

L’unité, c’est pas juste un mot dans les homélies. Chez nous, le curé et le diacre se parlent même pas, alors bâtisseurs d’unité… on repassera.

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