Pope Leo, closing Catholic Holy Year, urges kindness to foreigners

Pope Leo XIV leads the Mass for the Epiphany of the Lord in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Monday.

Pope Leo XIV leads the Mass for the Epiphany of the Lord in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Monday. (Yara Nardi, Reuters )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Pope Leo closed the Holy Year by sealing St. Peter's Holy Door.
  • He urged kindness to foreigners, echoing his focus on immigrant care.
  • The 2025 jubilee saw 33.5 million pilgrims and was closed by Leo.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Leo closed the Catholic Church's Holy Year on Tuesday by ​sealing shut the special "Holy Door" in St. Peter's Basilica and urging Christians worldwide to help those in need and treat foreigners with kindness.

Leo, who has ⁠made care for immigrants a central theme of his early papacy, said at a Vatican ceremony that the record ‌33.5 million pilgrims who visited Rome during the Holy Year should have learned ⁠not to treat humans as mere "products."

"Around us, a distorted economy tries to profit from ‌everything," said the pope. "After ‍this year, will we be better able to recognize a pilgrim in ⁠the visitor, a seeker in the stranger, a ⁠neighbor in the foreigner?"

Holy years, or jubilees, typically occur every 25 years and are considered a time of peace, forgiveness and pardon. Pilgrims to Rome can enter special "Holy Doors" at four Rome basilicas and can attend papal audiences throughout the year.

On Tuesday, Leo, dressed in gold-trimmed robes, pulled shut the special bronze door at St. Peter's, officially ending the ‍year.

The next jubilee is not expected before 2033, when the church may have a special one to mark 2,000 years since the death of Jesus.

Vatican and Italian officials said on Monday that pilgrims to Rome for the 2025 jubilee came from 185 countries, with Italy, the United States, Spain, Brazil and Poland leading the pack.

The 2025 jubilee was marked by a historical rarity not seen for 300 ‌years. It was opened by one pope, Francis, and closed by his successor, Leo.

Francis died in April after 12 ‌years leading the 1.4-billion-member church. The last jubilee held under two popes was in the year 1700, when Clement XI closed a holy year opened by Innocent XII.

Leo, who has pledged to keep Francis' signature policies such as welcoming gay Catholics and discussing women's ordination, echoed ⁠the late pope's frequent criticisms ​of the global economic system on Tuesday.

Leo, the ⁠first U.S. pope, lamented ‌that the markets "turn human yearnings of seeking, traveling and beginning again into a mere business."

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Joshua McElwee

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