Pope Leo XIV at Final Mass says Carry on the mission of Jesus with Joy "...as you celebrate the Eucharist together, bear witness through your lives" FULL TEXT Homily


In the Malabo stadium, Pope Leo XIV celebrated his final Mass in Africa before 30,000 people before bidding farewell to Equatorial Guinea and returning to the Vatican. 

FULL TEXT - HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV
in Malabo Stadium on Thursday, 23 April 2026
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Dear brothers and sisters,

I would like to begin by warmly greeting the local Church of Malabo, along with its pastor. At the same time, I send heartfelt condolences to the entire Archdiocesan community, the brother priests and the family members of your recently deceased Vicar General, Father Fortunato Nsue Esono, whom we remember in this Eucharistic celebration.

I invite you to live this moment of sadness with a spirit of faith, and I trust that, without being swayed by speculation or rash conclusions, the circumstances surrounding his death will be fully clarified.

The readings we have just heard challenge us to ask whether we truly know how to interpret the passages of Scripture that were read today. This question is both serious and providential, because it prepares us to read together the book of history, that is, the pages of our own lives, which God continues to inspire with his wisdom.

When the deacon Philip approached a traveler who was returning from Jerusalem to Africa, he asked, “Do you understand what you are reading?” (Acts 8:30). The pilgrim, a eunuch of the Queen of Ethiopia, replied immediately with humble wisdom: “How can I, unless someone guides me?” (v. 31). His question is not only a search for truth, but also an expression of openness and desire. Let us reflect on this man: he is wealthy, like his land, yet he is a slave. The wealth he administers is not his own: all he has is his labor, which benefits others. He is intelligent and cultured, as shown in both his work and prayer, but he is not fully free. This painful reality is marked even on his body: he is, in fact, a eunuch. He cannot bring forth life; all his vitality is placed at the service of a power that controls and rules over him.

Yet, as he returns to his homeland of Africa, which for him has become a place of servitude, the proclamation of the Gospel sets him free. The Word of God that he holds in his hands bears unexpected fruit in his life. Through his encounter with Philip, a witness of the crucified and risen Christ, the eunuch is transformed from a mere reader — a spectator — of Scripture into a protagonist in the very story that captivates him, because it now concerns him personally. The sacred text speaks to him, stirring within him a longing for truth. This African man thus enters into Scripture, which welcomes every reader who seeks to understand God’s word. He steps into salvation history, which embraces every man and woman, especially the oppressed, the marginalized and the least among us. The written word then becomes a lived reality: through Baptism, he is no longer a stranger, but becomes a child of God, our brother in faith. Though a slave and childless, he is reborn into a new and free life in the name of the Lord Jesus. And we speak of his salvation to this day, precisely as we read these Scriptures!

Like him, we too have become Christians through Baptism, receiving the same light, that is, the same faith through which we read the Word of God: to reflect on the prophecies, to pray the psalms, to study the Law and to proclaim the Gospel through our lives. All the texts of Scripture, in fact, reveal their true meaning in faith, because they were written and handed down to us through faith. Reading them, therefore, is always both a personal and an ecclesial act; it is never something done in isolation or in a merely mechanical way.

Together we read Scripture as the shared heritage of the Church, guided by the Holy Spirit, who inspired its composition, and by Apostolic Tradition, which has preserved and transmitted it throughout the world. Like the eunuch, we too can come to understand the Word of God with the help of a guide who accompanies us on our journey of faith. Such was the case with the deacon Philip, who “began to speak, and starting with this scripture, proclaimed to him the good news about Jesus” (v. 35). The African pilgrim was reading a prophecy that was fulfilled for him, just as it is fulfilled for us today. The suffering servant spoken of by the prophet Isaiah (cf. Is 53:7–8) is Jesus, whose passion, death and resurrection, redeem us from sin and death. He is the Word made flesh, in whom every word of God finds fulfillment; he reveals its original intention, full meaning and ultimate purpose.

As Christ himself said, “No one has seen the Father except the one who is from God” (Jn 6:46). In the Son, the Father himself reveals his glory: God makes himself seen, heard and touched. Through the actions of Jesus, the Redeemer, he brings to fulfilment what he has always done: giving life. He creates the world, saves it and loves it forever. Jesus reminded those who listened to him of a sign of this constant care: “Your ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness” (v. 49). He is referring to the experience of the Exodus: a journey of liberation from slavery that nonetheless turned into a grueling forty-year period of wandering. This delay occurred because the people did not believe in the Lord’s promise; they even longed for their life back in Egypt (cf. Ex 16:3). Indeed, under the Pharaoh’s rule, they had food from the land; God, however, led them into the desert, where bread could come only from his providence. Manna, then, is a sign, a blessing and a promise that Jesus comes to fulfill. This ancient symbol now gives way to the sacrament of the new and eternal Covenant: the Eucharist — bread consecrated by the one who came down from heaven to become our nourishment. If those who ate the manna died (cf. Jn 6:49), whoever eats this bread will live forever (cf. v. 51), because Christ is alive! He is the risen One, and he continues to give his life for us.

Through Jesus’ Passover, the definitive exodus, every people is set free from the slavery of evil. As we celebrate this saving mystery, the Lord calls us to make a decisive choice: “Whoever believes has eternal life” (v. 47). In Jesus, we are given an astonishing prospect: God gives himself for us. Do I trust that his love is stronger than my death? By deciding to believe in him, each of us chooses between inevitable despair and the hope that God offers. Our hunger for life and justice is then satisfied by Jesus’ words: “The bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh” (v. 51).

Thank you, Lord! We praise you and bless you, because you chose to become for us the Eucharist, the bread of eternal life, so that we might live forever. Dear friends, at this very moment, as we celebrate this sacrament of salvation, we can joyfully proclaim: Christ is everything for us! In him we find the fullness of life and meaning. “If you are oppressed by injustice, he is justice; if you are in need of help, he is strength; if you fear death, he is life; if you desire Heaven, he is the way; if you are in darkness, he is light” (Saint Ambrose, De Virginitate, 16:99). Our problems do not disappear in the Lord’s presence, but they are illuminated. Just as every cross finds redemption in Jesus, so too the story of our lives finds its meaning in the Gospel. Therefore, today each of us can say: “Blessed be God, because he has not rejected my prayer or removed his steadfast love from me” (Ps 66:20). He always loves us first. His word is the Good News for us, and we have nothing greater to proclaim to the world. All of us are called to this evangelization from the moment of our Baptism, the sacrament of fraternal unity, the cleansing water of forgiveness and the source of hope. Through our witness, the proclamation of salvation is made visible in action, service and forgiveness — in a word, it becomes the Church!

As Pope Francis taught, “the joy of the Gospel fills the hearts and lives of all who encounter Jesus” (Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, 1). At the same time, when we share this joy, we also become more aware of the danger of “the desolation and anguish born of a complacent yet covetous heart, the feverish pursuit of frivolous pleasures, and a blunted conscience. Whenever our interior life becomes caught up in its own interests and concerns, there is no longer room for others, no place for the poor. God’s voice is no longer heard, the quiet joy of his love is no longer felt” (ibid., 2). In the face of such closed attitudes, it is precisely the Lord’s love that sustains our efforts, especially in the service of justice and solidarity.

For this reason, I encourage all of you, as the living Church in Equatorial Guinea, to carry on the mission of Jesus’ first disciples with joy. As you read the Gospel together, proclaim it with passion, just as the deacon Philip did. And as you celebrate the Eucharist together, bear witness through your lives to the faith that saves, so that God’s word may become good leaven for all.

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Farewell Address of the Holy Father

Dear brothers and sisters,

The time has come for me to depart from Equatorial Guinea and also from Africa at the conclusion of the Apostolic Journey that God has permitted me to make over these past ten days.

I am grateful to the Archbishop, the other Bishops, Monsignor Juan, the clergy and all of you — the people of God journeying in this land. Christ is the light of Equatorial Guinea, and you are salt of the earth and light of the world.

My gratitude also goes to the Civil Authorities of the country and to all who have contributed in various ways to the success of my visit.

I leave Africa with an immeasurable treasure of faith, hope and charity: a great treasure consisting of stories, faces and testimonies, both joyful and sorrowful, which will greatly enrich my life and ministry as the Successor of Peter.

As in the early centuries of the Church, Africa today is called to make a decisive contribution to the holiness and the missionary character of the Christian people. May this be obtained through the intercession of the Virgin Mary, to whom I entrust you all, your families, your communities, your nation and all the people of Africa.



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