An Easter Message That Matters

Published: April 4, 2026

By Jim Lichtman
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Pope Leo IV – Thursday’s Mass and message

On Thursday, three days before Easter Sunday, Pope Leo XIV delivered a message that went straight to the point.

“Leadership is not measured by authority, but by the willingness to kneel.”

That’s humility. Not the kind we admire in passing. The kind that asks something of us.

Today, when leadership is measured by loudness and control, Leo offered a different standard. Not standing taller but lowering oneself. Not commanding attention but giving it.

He described the act as a “gratuitous and humble” gesture that reveals “the true omnipotence of God.” Not force. Not dominance. Something quieter and harder.

“God has given us an example—not of how to dominate, but of how to liberate.”

No qualifiers. No hedging. Leadership is not the assertion of power. It is the release of it.

Then he takes the next step.

“Let us… kneel down as brothers and sisters alongside the oppressed.”

Not for them, Leo affirms, alongside them.

That line removes distance. It removes hierarchy. It leaves no place to stand apart. And it carries a warning.

“He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.”

That is not political. It is a boundary. It separates what we claim from what we do. It rejects the use of faith as cover. It forces the question: what are we aligning ourselves with when we claim moral ground?

Even his recognition of priests follows the same line. Not above the burden, within it. Leadership is not exemption. It is participation.

That is the thread throughout.

Humility is not weakness. It is discipline. It is the decision to place others within reach of our attention, and our responsibility.

Three days before Easter, the message did not look ahead to the Resurrection. It stayed where it needs to be, now more than ever.

“We do not lead by standing above others, but by kneeling beside them.”

That is the choice before us.

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