The new pope was greeted with a long standing ovation, leading him to begin with a lighthearted comment:
When the applause lasts longer than the address, I will have to make a longer address! So … be careful! Thank you! Thank you!
This is the second joke he has made about applause. On his May 12 meeting with Vatican media and those who were in Rome to cover the conclave, he quipped: "They say when they clap at the beginning it does not matter much, if you are still awake at the end and you still want to applaud … thank you very much!"
In speaking to the Curia and Vatican employees, Pope Leo faced a crowd that sometimes struggled under Pope Francis, particularly as the Argentine pope tried to cut costs and balance the Vatican budget, and as he restructured the Roman Curia in an attempt at overall Vatican reform.
Leo started off with a morale-booster, returning to a tradition that Francis had chosen to skip: a conclave bonus.
A Vatican source confirmed to I.MEDIA that in honor of his arrival on the throne of St. Peter, Leo XIV had offered all the employees a bonus of €500.
How we behave at work
“Popes pass, the Curia remains,” Leo XIV told the officials of the small state. His address was a call to unity and love, in a similar vein to what he has been encouraging the Church as a whole.
For the Curia and employees, though, he had a specific recommendation:
If, then, we must all cooperate in the great cause of unity and love, let us seek to do so first of all with our behavior in everyday situations, starting also from the work environment.
Each person can be a builder of unity with his attitudes towards colleagues, overcoming inevitable misunderstandings with patience, with humility, putting himself in the in the shoes of others, avoiding prejudices, and also with a good dose of humor, as Pope Francis taught us.
The Pontiff concluded the audience with a half-hour time of individual greetings, blessing children and people with disabilities, and chatting with religious figures and families.
Times of tension
The Association of Lay Employees of the Vatican (ADLV), impacted by Francis' aims to correct the budget, welcomed the choice of the name Leo XIV, seeing it as a sign of hope “for special attention to social issues and the importance of building bridges through dialogue.”
Although the 266th pope praised the “hidden saints” of the Curia offices, he also voiced warnings against Church bureaucracy and often spoke out against clericalism.
As well, Pope Francis recently announced (in November 2024) a plan to reform the Vatican Pension Fund, warning that the decisions would be difficult.
Here is a Vatican translation of the full address:
Thank you! When the applause lasts longer than the address, I will have to make a longer address! So… be careful! Thank you! Thank you!
In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, peace be with you.
Dear brothers and sisters!
I am glad to be able to greet all of you who form the working communities of the Roman Curia, the Governorate and the Vicariate of Rome.
I greet the Heads of the Dicasteries and the other Superiors, the Office Heads and all the officials, as well as the authorities of Vatican City, the managers and the employees. And I am very happy that many family members are also present, taking advantage of the Saturday.
This first meeting of ours is certainly not the moment to make keynote speeches, but rather it is an opportunity for me to thank you for the service you carry out, and this service that I have, so to speak, “inherited” from my predecessors. Thank you indeed. Yes, as you know, I arrived only two years ago, when our beloved Pope Francis appointed me as Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops. Then I left the diocese of Chiclayo, in Peru, and came to work here. What a change! And now, then… What can I say? Only what Simon Peter said to Jesus on Lake Tiberias: “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you” (Jn 21:17).
Popes pass, the Curia remains. This applies to every particular Church, for the episcopal Curias. And it also applies to the Curia of the Bishop of Rome. The Curia is the institution that preserves and transmits the historical memory of a Church, of the ministry of its bishops. This is very important. Memory is an essential element in a living organism. It is not only directed to the past, but nourishes the present and guides the future. Without memory, the path is lost, it loses its sense of direction.
Here, dear friends, is the first thought I would like to share with you: to work in the Roman Curia means to contribute to keeping the memory of the Apostolic See alive, in the vital sense I have just mentioned, so that the Pope’s ministry may be implemented in the best way. And, by analogy, this can also be said of the services of Vatican City State.
Then, there is another aspect I would like to recall, complementary to that of memory, that is the missionary dimension of the Church and of every institution linked to the Petrine ministry. This was insisted upon a great deal by Pope Francis who, consistently with the project laid out in the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii gaudium, reformed the Roman Curia from the perspective of evangelization, with the Apostolic Constitution Praedicate Evangelium. And he did this by following in the footsteps of his predecessors, especially Saint Paul VI and Saint John Paul II.
As I think you know, the experience of mission forms part of my life, and not only as a baptized person, as for all us Christians, but because as an Augustinian religious I was a missionary in Peru, and in the midst of the Peruvian people my pastoral vocation matured. I will never be able to thank the Lord enough for this gift! Then, the call to serve the Church here in the Roman Curia was a new mission, which I shared with you during these last two years. And still I continue it and will continue it, as long as God wills, in this service that has been entrusted to me.
Therefore, I repeat to you what I said in my first greeting, in the evening of 8 May: “Together, we must look for ways to be a missionary Church, a Church that builds bridges and encourages dialogue, a Church ever open to welcoming … with open arms, all those who are in need of our charity, our presence, our readiness to dialogue and our love”. These words were addressed to the Church of Rome. And now I repeat them, thinking of the mission of this Church towards all the Churches and the entire world, of serving communion, unity, in charity and in truth. The Lord gave this task to Peter and his successors, and you all collaborate in different ways in this great task. Each one of you gives your contribution, carrying out your daily work with commitment and also with faith, because faith and prayer are like salt for food; they impart flavour.
If, then, we must all cooperate in the great cause of unity and love, let us seek to do so first of all with our behaviour in everyday situations, starting also from the work environment. Each person can be a builder of unity with his attitudes towards colleagues, overcoming inevitable misunderstandings with patience, with humility, putting himself in the in the shoes of others, avoiding prejudices, and also with a good dose of humour, as Pope Francis taught us.
Dear brothers and sisters, thank you again from the bottom of my heart! We are in the month of May: let us invoke the Virgin Mary together, so that she may bless the Roman Curia and Vatican City, and also your families, especially children, the elderly and the sick and suffering.
Thank you!
So, let us say together: “Hail Mary…”
[Blessing]
Thank you once again, best wishes!