Pope Leo XIV on the Liturgy: A Call for Fidelity, Humility, and Authentic Renewal in Today’s General Audience
On Wednesday, May 27, 2026, in St. Peter’s Square, Pope Leo XIV delivered a significant catechesis during his weekly General Audience as part of his ongoing series on the documents of the Second Vatican Council. Focusing on the second part of his reflection on the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium (SC), the Pope addressed the delicate balance between tradition and legitimate development in the liturgy. His words carried a clear pastoral urgency: the need for priests and all those involved in preparing liturgical celebrations to respect the Church’s established texts and norms, avoiding arbitrary changes that cause confusion among the faithful.
This address stands out not merely as academic commentary on a conciliar document but as a pointed signal from the Holy Father about his deep concern for the state of Catholic worship today. In an era marked by persistent liturgical abuses—from creative additions and omissions to outright innovations that obscure the sacred character of the Mass—Pope Leo XIV is calling the Church back to fidelity, rooted in the principle lex orandi, lex credendi. His message underscores the profound theological stakes involved: how we pray shapes what we believe, and deviations in worship risk distorting the faith itself.
The Context of the Audience
Pope Leo XIV has made the documents of Vatican II a central theme of his Wednesday audiences, encouraging Catholics to engage them directly rather than through secondary interpretations. In today’s catechesis, titled “The reform of the liturgy: tradition and development,” he built on Pius XII’s Mediator Dei, portraying the Church as a “living organism” that grows while safeguarding doctrinal integrity. He quoted Sacrosanctum Concilium extensively, emphasizing that the Council sought “sound tradition” alongside “legitimate progress” (SC 23).
The Pope highlighted the distinction between the liturgy’s “immutable elements, divinely instituted” and those “subject to change” that may need adaptation if they have become outdated or out of harmony with the liturgy’s nature (SC 21). Reforms, he stressed, must grow “organically” from existing forms, following careful theological, historical, and pastoral study. Crucially, he invoked SC 22 to discourage anyone—especially priests—from adding, removing, or altering liturgical elements on their own initiative.
In a direct exhortation that forms the emotional core of the address, Pope Leo XIV stated:
> “I therefore urge all those called to prepare the celebration of the divine mysteries, in particular priests who exercise the ministry of liturgical presidency, to always uphold that respect for the texts and regulations of the liturgy which springs from an inner attitude of openness and trust in God, manifesting humility before His greatness and sincere fidelity to ecclesial communion.”
This is no vague piety. It is a clear call to combat the casual improvisation and ideological experimentation that have plagued post-conciliar liturgy in many places.
What “Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi” Means and Why It Matters
Central to understanding Pope Leo XIV’s concerns is the ancient principle lex orandi, lex credendi—“the law of prayer is the law of belief.” Often expanded to lex orandi, lex credendi, lex vivendi (the law of prayer, the law of belief, the law of living), this axiom, rooted in the writings of Prosper of Aquitaine (a 5th-century disciple of St. Augustine), teaches that the Church’s worship is not secondary to doctrine but its living expression and guardian.
In the liturgy, the Church does not merely say what she believes; she enacts it. The rites, prayers, gestures, silences, and symbols form the faithful in the Paschal Mystery of Christ. As Pope Leo XIV noted in an earlier audience on the same constitution (May 20), “The rituality of the Church expresses her faith—in accordance with the familiar saying lex orandi, lex credendi—and at the same time shapes ecclesial identity.” The proclaimed Word, the sacraments, and the entire structure of worship make the Church visible as the Body of Christ.
When the lex orandi is distorted—through sloppy celebrations, ideological insertions (e.g., political slogans, inappropriate music, or altered texts), or neglect of rubrics—the lex credendi suffers. The faithful absorb a diminished or altered sense of the faith. Belief in the Real Presence, the sacrificial nature of the Mass, the transcendence of God, and the objectivity of grace can erode when the liturgy feels more like a community gathering or performance than an encounter with the divine. Pope Leo XIV’s emphasis signals his awareness that ongoing abuses undermine the Council’s own goals of deeper participation and evangelization.
This principle explains why liturgical fidelity is not rigid traditionalism but humble obedience to the Church’s living Tradition. Arbitrary changes sever worship from its apostolic roots, turning the liturgy into a vehicle for personal expression rather than divine encounter.
Vatican II on the Liturgy and the Prohibition of Abuses
Sacrosanctum Concilium, promulgated by Pope Paul VI on December 4, 1963, is the foundational document for the post-conciliar liturgical reform. Far from endorsing a free-for-all, it lays down clear guardrails.
SC 22 states explicitly:
> “Regulation of the sacred liturgy depends solely on the authority of the Church, that is, on the Apostolic See and, as laws may determine, on the bishop. Therefore, no other person, even if he be a priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority.”
This is reiterated in the General Instruction of the Roman Missal and reinforced in documents like Redemptionis Sacramentum (2004), which condemns abuses that distort the authentic meaning of the liturgy.
The Council desired “fully conscious, and active participation” by the faithful (SC 14), but this was never meant to justify turning the sanctuary into a stage or replacing prescribed texts with personal creativity. SC 21 distinguishes immutable elements from adaptable ones, insisting changes must serve the liturgy’s inner nature and occur organically. SC 23 mandates that new forms “grow organically from forms already existing.”
Pope Leo XIV echoed this precisely, warning against confusion among the faithful caused by unilateral alterations. His words highlight a persistent problem: decades after the Council, many parishes still witness “do-it-yourself” liturgies—Eucharistic Prayers rewritten, gestures invented, music that drowns out sacredness, or practices that blur the distinction between priest and laity in ways contrary to the rite.
Common abuses include:
- Improvising or omitting parts of the Eucharistic Prayer.
- Replacing sacred music with secular or performance-oriented songs.
- Altering gestures, processions, or vestments without authorization.
- Introducing non-liturgical elements (dances, political statements) that obscure the focus on Christ.
- Neglecting silence, reverence, or proper orientation toward the Eucharistic Lord.
These do not foster the “full, conscious, and active participation” envisioned by the Council; they often distract from it, reducing the Mass to entertainment or therapy session.
The Importance of Pope Leo XIV’s Words
Pope Leo XIV’s intervention is timely and significant for several reasons. As the first American pope, he brings a perspective shaped by the diverse liturgical landscape of the U.S. Church, where both vibrant orthodoxy and experimental excesses coexist. His repeated emphasis on Vatican II’s actual texts—rather than a mythical “spirit of the Council”—aligns him with the hermeneutic of continuity championed by St. John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI.
By directly addressing priests’ responsibility and invoking humility before God’s greatness, the Pope signals concern over a “wound” in the Church’s worship life. This echoes his earlier reflections on unity and the need to heal divisions, including those surrounding different forms of the Roman Rite. Liturgical chaos erodes trust, fuels polarization, and weakens evangelization. When young people or converts encounter irreverence, they rightly question whether the Church takes her own claims seriously.
His words reaffirm that true renewal flows from fidelity, not rupture. The liturgy is the “source and summit” of the Church’s life (SC 10). If it is compromised, the entire mission suffers. Pope Leo XIV is not stifling creativity but grounding it in obedience—an obedience born of love for Christ and His Bride, the Church.
In a world hungry for transcendence amid secular noise, a restored sense of the sacred in Catholic worship could be profoundly counter-cultural. The Pope’s call invites priests to see their role not as innovators but as stewards of a mystery greater than themselves.
Broader Implications for the Church Today
This audience fits into Pope Leo XIV’s larger pontificate, marked by emphasis on human dignity, continuity with Tradition, and addressing modern challenges like AI through the lens of faith. His concern for the liturgy parallels his calls for unity and against abuses in other areas.
For laity, the message is empowering: demand reverent celebrations. Support priests who celebrate faithfully. Catechize families on the meaning of the rites. For seminaries and formation programs, it underscores the need to instill deep love for the Church’s liturgical heritage.
Critics on various sides may interpret this differently—some seeing it as insufficiently bold, others as restrictive. Yet the Pope’s approach is classically Catholic: truth in charity, reform through return to sources.
As the Church continues her synodal journey and prepares for future consistories, Pope Leo XIV’s focus on the liturgy reminds us that authentic progress always looks to the Cross and the empty tomb, celebrated worthily in the sacraments.
The full impact of today’s audience will unfold in coming months and years through episcopal implementation, priestly formation, and the lived piety of the faithful. But one thing is clear: Pope Leo XIV is attentive to the prayer of the Church, and he wants that prayer to be pure, beautiful, and faithful—so that belief may be firm, and life may be transformed.
May this reflection encourage all Catholics to approach the sacred liturgy with renewed awe and fidelity.
References
- Full text of Pope Leo XIV’s General Audience, May 27, 2026 (OSV News).
- Diane Montagna, “Pope Leo XIV to Priests: Be Faithful to the Rubrics of the Mass” (Substack, May 27, 2026).
- Sacrosanctum Concilium, Vatican II Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (Vatican.va).
- Vatican News and EWTN coverage of the audience.
- Prosper of Aquitaine and traditional explanations of lex orandi, lex credendi (USCCB resources).
- Redemptionis Sacramentum (Congregation for Divine Worship, 2004).
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