US Pilgrims at Jubilee of Catechists Have Private Audience With Pope

| 09/28/2025

By: Our Sunday Visitor

Archbishop Charles C. Thompson of Indianapolis leads a group that includes two Americans formally installed in the ministry of catechists

Pope Leo XIV gives a cross to David Spesia, executive director of the U.S. bishops' Secretariat of Evangelization and Catechesis, as he installs him in the ministry of catechist at the Jubilee of Catechists Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on September 28, 2025.
Pope Leo XIV gives a cross to David Spesia, executive director of the U.S. bishops' Secretariat of Evangelization and Catechesis, as he installs him in the ministry of catechist at the Jubilee of Catechists Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on September 28, 2025. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Among the estimated 20,000 pilgrims in Rome for the Jubilee of Catechists, a group of three dozen from the United States had their own private audience with Pope Leo XIV.

The pilgrims — an archbishop, volunteer parish catechists, diocesan employees, religious sisters, and two staff members from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops — met with the Pope September 27 before his Jubilee audience.

The Pope told them that all Catholics, by virtue of their baptism, are called to be teachers of the faith, said Marilyn Santos, associate director of the USCCB Secretariat of Evangelization and Catechesis.

The next morning, during Pope Leo’s Jubilee Mass, he formally installed in the ministry of catechist Santos and David Spesia, executive director of the secretariat. The first reading at the Mass was proclaimed by another member of the pilgrimage: Richard Gallagher, a volunteer catechist at the Basilica of St. Edward in Palm Beach, Florida.

Archbishop Charles C. Thompson of Indianapolis, chair of the bishops’ Committee for Evangelization and Catechesis, led the pilgrimage.

“We are just being pilgrims of hope,” the archbishop told Catholic News Service. The pilgrimage was an opportunity to “deepen our own our faith, our own sense of God’s grace and presence in our lives, and our own calling — rooted in all of our baptisms, whether bishop or religious, consecrated, single, married, what have you — to live out our call to holiness and mission and be witnesses of the faith.”

Formal recognition of catechist ministry

The formal institution of some people in the ministry of catechist, a possibility opened by Pope Francis in 2021, shows “how important, how essential catechists are to the church,” the archbishop said. “And I think it coincides beautifully with the synodality focus on co-responsibility, that we are all co-responsible for passing on the faith.”

The U.S. bishops are working on a national directory on the three instituted ministries Pope Francis formalized: catechist, lector, and acolyte. The directory aims to provide a theological understanding of the ministries, the formation needed, age requirements, the duration of the ministry, and their role in a parish and diocese.

Spesia said that in the United States parish catechists are “the ‘little engine that could’ that drives the church and hands on the faith,” and recognizing that with a special Jubilee celebration “is just a beautiful thing.”

Asked about being chosen to be instituted a catechist by Pope Leo, Santos said, “I’m thrilled. I’m a little shocked. I’m honored.”

Parish catechists “are priceless because they are the boots on the ground, so to speak,” she said. Those instituted in the ministry of catechist answer to their diocesan bishop and are called to be an example and resource for others.

Supporting parents as primary faith teachers

Patrick Donovan, director of the Institute for Catholic Formation in the Diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut, also was part of the pilgrimage.

He told CNS he hoped no one would see the formal institution of catechists as somehow saying that only some Catholics are called to share and teach others the faith.

“I think oftentimes we mistakenly talk about catechesis as a chore, catechesis as a project, as a program. It begins and it ends,” he said. But it is an ongoing process of growing in the faith and in one’s ability to share it with others.

“For me, the perspective is all about what we can do to help mom and dad be the best witnesses of the faith,” Donovan said, giving parents “the language to articulate the faith” and share it with their children each day.

“We have to do less of the hostage situation with young people,” forced to attend religious education classes, he said, “and more of giving the language to articulate the faith to mom and dad and grandparents.”

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