Home Pope Leo XIVPope’s Epiphany Angelus: ‘May industry of war be replaced by craft of peace’

Pope’s Epiphany Angelus: ‘May industry of war be replaced by craft of peace’

by Vatican News
Ángelus

Pope Leo XIV prays the Angelus on the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord, reflecting on the Magi adoring the Christ Child, and invites us to be ‘weavers of hope’ where ‘in the place of inequality, there may be fairness,’ and where ‘the industry of war be replaced by the craft of peace.’

“In the gifts of the Magi, we see what each one of us can share, what we can no longer keep for ourselves but are to give to others, so that the presence of Jesus can grow in our midst.”

Pope Leo XIV expressed this in his Angelus address today, Jan. 6, 2026, for the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord. After the Mass for the Solemnity this morning in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Leo gave his Angelus address at noon and recited the midday prayer with the faithful in St. Peter’s Square.

The Three Kings’ journey, departure, and precious gift giving to Baby Jesus, Pope Leo told faithful, is a powerful reminder that we are to give all ourselves and all that we have to Jesus, “our inestimable treasure.” 

What kneeling before Infant of Bethlehem also means for us

“Kneeling like the Magi before the Infant of Bethlehem means, also for us,” Pope Leo expressed, “to profess having found that true humanity in which the glory of God shines forth.” 

“In Jesus,” he reminded, “the true life appears, the living man, the one who does not exist for himself but is open and in communion, who teaches us to say, ‘on earth as it is in heaven.’” (Mt 6:10). 

In this context, the Pope underscored, “the divine life is within our reach” and “it is made manifest so that we might be included in its dynamic freedom, which loosens the bonds of fear and enables us to encounter peace. “

Stressing that this represents both a possibility and an invitation, “for communion cannot be constrained,” the Pope asks: “What else could we desire more than this?”

The risk-taking and gift giving of the Magi

Reflecting on St. Matthew’s Gospel account, and what we see in our nativity scenes, the Pope recalled how the Magi present to the Baby Jesus several precious gifts, namely gold, frankincense and myrrh.

“They may not seem to be useful for a baby, but they express a desire that gives us much to reflect on as we reach the end of the Jubilee year,” namely that, “The greatest gift is to give everything.”

From a different perspective, but to illustrate the same point, Pope Leo remembered “that poor widow, noticed by Jesus, who put into the Temple treasury her last two pennies, all that she had.”

Our inestimable treasure

The Pope recognized that we do not know anything about the possessions of the Magi, who came from the East, “but their departure, their risk-taking and their gifts themselves suggest that everything, truly everything that we are and possess needs to be offered to Jesus, who is our inestimable treasure.” 

The Pope then turned to the Jubilee of Hope which concluded today with the closing of the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica.

“For its part,” he said, “the Jubilee has reminded us of the justice founded on gratuitousness, of the original jubilee prescriptions, which included a call for the integration of peaceful living, a redistribution of the land and its resources, and a restoration of “what one has” and “what one is” to the designs of God, which are greater than ours.”

Hope must be grounded in reality

With this in mind, Pope Leo stressed, “the hope that we proclaim must be grounded in reality, for Jesus came down from heaven in order to create a new story here below.” 

He expressed therefore that in our recalling the Magi’s gifts, that we likewise can consider what we can personally share with others, to help magnify Christ’s presence, so that His Kingdom may grow, His words come to fulfilment in us, and strangers and enemies become brothers and sisters.  

“In the place of inequality, may there be fairness, and may the industry of war be replaced by the craft of peace,” Pope Leo said.  

“As weavers of hope,” he concluded, “let us journey together towards the future by another road.”

Pope Leo XIV closes the Holy Door, concluding Jubilee Year of Hope on the Lord’s Epiphany

On Tuesday, marking the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord, Pope Leo XIV presided over Holy Mass in St Peter’s Basilica for some 5,800 faithful.

At the start of the Mass, the Pope closed the Holy Door of St Peter’s Basilica, the last of the Holy Doors opened for the Jubilee Year. The gesture marked the end of months in which “a stream of innumerable men and women, pilgrims of hope,” crossed the threshold of the Basilica, journeying toward what the Pope described as “the new Jerusalem, the city whose doors are always open.”


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