Pope Leo finds his voice on his first foreign trip

By , December 1, 2025

Pope Leo XIV has arrived in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, a week after Israeli air strikes hit the Lebanese capital.

For a man known for being measured and careful in what he does, it seems quite the statement to land in a country so affected by conflict in what is his first foreign trip.

The Pope has already spent three days in Turkey and, watching his diplomacy at close quarters, we are learning a little more about how he intends to carry out his duties as both spiritual leader and head of state of Vatican City.

Pope Leo’s interactions with journalists are gentle and softly spoken, and his words always appear thought-out and deliberate.

His predecessor, Pope Francis, often spoke at length to reporters, sometimes very passionately and from the heart.

Pope Leo during a past event. PHOTO/Screengrab by People Daily Digital
Pope Leo during a past event. PHOTO/Screengrab by People Daily Digital

But sometimes that meant his aides had the job of risk management, having to explain statements that appeared to be a departure from what the Pope had previously said or a diplomatic faux pas.

Pope Francis wrote in his autobiography that when his papacy began in 2013, he felt that he would only have two or three years in the role. He certainly acted like a man on a mission, quickly trying to put into motion his vision for the Church.

Six months into his papacy, Pope Leo still looks like a man who is taking in the gravity of the role and weighing up his options. There are times when he can appear slightly emotional about where he finds himself.

At the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit in Istanbul, as he stood at the altar before the congregation made up of the tiny Christian minority that had welcomed him so warmly and joined worship with him, the pope took a moment where he even appeared to be holding back tears.

Pope Leo XIV.PHOTO/@VaticanNews/X

In a way, it was reminiscent of that moment in May when he stepped onto the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica, having just agreed to take on the daunting task of leading well over a billion people in something so personal and sensitive as their faith.

As a statesman leading the Vatican, he can often appear to be in listening mode, but on this trip, Pope Leo has shown that he can still issue some strong statements.

Standing next to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, he decried powerful countries flexing their economic and military might, blaming that for heightened levels of conflict around the world and saying “the future of humanity is at stake”.

At an event marking 1,700 years since a hugely significant Christian council in what is now the Turkish city of Iznik, he said: “We must strongly reject the use of religion for justifying war, violence, or any form of fundamentalism or fanaticism.”

On the plane from Istanbul to Beirut, when addressing the decades-old conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, he said the only solution had to include a Palestinian state.

“We all know that at this time Israel still does not accept that solution,” he said, but quickly followed that up by saying the Vatican was still “friends with Israel” and was seeking to be a mediating voice.

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