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“Why are you crying?”: Pope Leo XIV turns the Risen Christ’s question into a cry against the destruction of the planet

In his General Audience, the Pontiff links the Resurrection of Christ with the care of our common home, drawing inspiration from Mary Magdalene and the encyclical Laudato si’

“Why are you crying?”: Pope Leo XIV turns the Risen Christ’s question into a cry against the destruction of the planet

Before more than 40,000 faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Square under an autumnal sky, Pope Leo XIV delivered a vibrant and prophetic catechesis on Wednesday, connecting Easter hope with the global ecological crisis. Within the framework of his Jubilee Cycle, “Jesus Christ, Our Hope,” the Successor of Peter transformed Mary Magdalene’s encounter with the Risen Lord into a powerful call to action: “Protecting creation demands a profound ecological conversion, because Paradise is not lost… it has been found!”

The gardener who makes all things new

Drawing on the Gospel of John, Leo XIV recalled the scene of Easter dawn: Mary Magdalene, in tears, mistakes the risen Jesus for the gardener in the garden where he had been buried. “She wasn’t entirely wrong!” exclaimed the Pope with a smile that drew applause. For Christ, placed in the earth like a seed, sprouts to bear abundant fruit and restores the Garden of Eden lost through original sin.

“Why are you crying? Who are you looking for?” Jesus asks Mary Magdalene… and, through her, each of us today. These words, the Pope explained, challenge us in the face of “the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.” Only by hearing our name spoken by the “New Man”—the Risen One who says, “I make all things new” (Rev 21:5)—do we discover our mission: to cultivate and protect creation.

Laudato si’ is more alive than ever

In a direct nod to Francis’s legacy, Leo XIV quoted extensively from the encyclical Laudato si’: “If humanity is not the steward of the garden, it becomes its destroyer.” And he warned forcefully: ecological culture “cannot be reduced to urgent and partial responses to environmental degradation, resource depletion, or pollution.” What is needed, he insisted, is “a different perspective, a different way of thinking, a different policy, an educational program, a different lifestyle, and a different spirituality that generate resistance to destruction.”

“The death and resurrection of Jesus are the foundation of a spirituality of integral ecology,” he affirmed. Without that Paschal root, “the words of faith become disconnected from reality, and the words of science remain outside the heart.”

Converting again and again: from the valley of tears to the New Jerusalem

Mary Magdalene’s gesture of turning toward Jesus became, in the Pope’s words, the perfect icon of ecological conversion: “Only through conversion after conversion can we move from this valley of tears to the New Jerusalem.” A path that begins in the heart, but that “changes history, commits us publicly, and activates a solidarity that protects people and creatures from the greed of the wolves, in the name of the Lamb-Shepherd.”

Leo XIV did not miss the opportunity to greet the millions of young people and people of goodwill who have already heard “the cry of the poor and of the earth.” “So many are seeking a new harmony with creation!” he exclaimed.

A final prayer that echoed in the Plaza

Concluding his catechesis, the Pope offered a hopeful plea: “May the Spirit grant us the ability to hear the voice of the voiceless. Then we will see what our eyes cannot yet see: that garden, that Paradise which we can only reach by welcoming and fulfilling our own task.”

At the end of the Audience, after the usual tour in the popemobile and the blessings to children and the sick, the Pope recalled the Pro Orantibus Day and eagerly anticipated the World Day dedicated to children scheduled for September 2026.

With this catechesis, Leo XIV has once again placed integral ecology at the heart of the Christian message, demonstrating that the Resurrection is not merely a past event: it is the seed that can make our wounded planet flourish again today. A message that will undoubtedly resonate far beyond the Vatican walls.

Full text:

LEO XIV

GENERAL AUDIENCE

St Peter’s Square
Wednesday, 19 November 2025

 

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Catechesis Cycle – Jubilee 2025: Jesus Christ Our Hope. IV. The Resurrection of Christ and the Challenges of today’s world. 5. Easter spirituality and integral ecology

 

Dear brothers and sisters, good morning and welcome!

We are reflecting, in this Jubilee Year dedicated to hope, on the relationship between the Resurrection of Christ and the challenges of the contemporary world, that is, our challenges. At times, Jesus, the Living One, wants to ask us too: “Why do you weep? Who do you seek?”. Indeed, challenges cannot be faced alone and tears are a gift of life when they purify our eyes and liberate our gaze.

John the Evangelist draws to our attention a detail that we do not find in the other Gospels: weeping near the empty tomb, Mary Magdalene did not immediately recognize the risen Jesus, but thought he was the gardener. Indeed, already narrating the burial of Jesus, at sunset on Good Friday, the text was very precise: “Now in the place where he was crucified there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb where no one had ever been laid. So because of the Jewish day of Preparation, as the tomb was close at hand, they laid Jesus there” (Jn 19:40-41).

Thus, in the peace of the Sabbath and the beauty of a garden, the dramatic struggle between darkness and light that began with the betrayal, arrest, abandonment, condemnation, humiliation and killing of the Son, who “having loved his own who were in the world … loved them to the end” (Jn 13:1), comes to a close. Cultivating and keeping the garden is the original task (cf. Gen 2:15) that Jesus brought to fulfilment. His last words on the cross – “It is finished” (Jn 19:30) – invite each of us to rediscover the same task, our task. For this reason, “he bowed his head and gave up his spirit” (v. 30).

Dear brothers and sisters, Mary Magdalene was not entirely mistaken then, believing she had encountered the gardener! Indeed, she had to hear her own name again and understand her task from the new Man, the one who in another text of John says: “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev 21:5). Pope Francis, with the Encyclical Laudato si’, showed us the extreme need for a contemplative gaze: if he is not the custodian of the garden, the human being becomes its destroyer. Christian hope therefore responds to the challenges to which all humanity is exposed today by dwelling in the garden where the Crucified One was laid as a seed, to rise again and bear much fruit.

Paradise is not lost, but found again. In this way, the death and resurrection of Jesus are the foundation of a spirituality of integral ecology, outside of which the words of faith have no hold on reality and the words of science remain outside the heart. “Ecological culture cannot be reduced to a series of urgent and partial responses to the immediate problems of pollution, environmental decay and the depletion of natural resources. There needs to be a distinctive way of looking at things, a way of thinking, policies, an educational programme, a lifestyle and a spirituality which together generate resistance” (Laudato si’, 111).

For this reason, we speak of an ecological conversion, which Christians cannot separate from the reversal of course that Jesus asks of them. A sign of this is Mary’s turning around on that Easter morning: only by conversion after conversion do we pass through that vale of tears to the new Jerusalem. This passage, which begins in the heart and is spiritual, changes history, engages us publicly, and activates solidarity that now protects people and creatures from the longings of wolves, in the name and power of the Lamb-Shepherd.

In this way, the sons and daughters of the Church can now meet millions of young people and other men and women of good will who have heard the cry of the poor and the earth, letting it touch their hearts. There are also many people who desire, through a more direct relationship with creation, a new harmony that will lead them beyond so many divisions. On the other hand, still “the heavens are telling the glory of God; and the firmament proclaims his handiwork. Day to day pours forth speech, and night to night declares knowledge. There is no speech, nor are there words; their voice is not heard; yet their voice goes out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world” (Ps 18:1-4).

May the Spirit give us the ability to listen to the voice of those who have no voice. We will see, then, what the eyes do not yet see: that garden, or Paradise, which we will only reach by welcoming and fulfilling our own task.

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Special greetings

I am happy to welcome this morning the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors, especially those from England, Ireland, Senegal, Uganda, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and the United States of America. A special greeting to the students and faculty from Xavier University of Louisiana and the University of Dallas, Texas. With prayerful good wishes that the present Jubilee of Hope may be for you and your families a time of grace and spiritual renewal, I invoke upon all of you the joy and peace of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

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Summary of the Holy Father’s words

Dear brothers and sisters, in our continuing catechesis on the Jubilee theme of “Jesus Christ our Hope,” today we consider Christ’s Resurrection and its impact on the challenges of today’s world, especially in living out integral ecology. If we allow it, Christ’s salvific act can transform all our relationships: with God, with other people and with creation. Like Mary Magdalene on Easter morning, who turned around to look at Jesus, we too must allow the seed of Christian hope to bear fruit, convert our hearts and influence the ways we respond to the issues that we face. As followers of Jesus, we are called to promote lifestyles and policies that focus on the protection of human dignity and of all of creation. Let us ask for the grace to see our struggles through the gaze of the Resurrection and may we influence the world with hope and Easter joy.

Exaudi Staff

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