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By: OSV News
Around 200 people from the Diocese of Rome joined the pontiff for a day of Mass, lunch, and fellowship at Castel Gandolfo
ROME (OSV News), Under the Italian sun of Lake Albano and the shade of Castel Gandolfo’s Borgo Laudato si’ trees, Pope Leo XIV enjoyed lunch with people experiencing social vulnerability.
Around 200 people from the Diocese of Rome took part in the event on July 11. “Lunch with the Pope” was “a day of welcome and fraternity” within the Pontifical Gardens of Castel Gandolfo, the Vatican’s Laudato Si’ Center for Higher Education said in a statement.
Before the guests, including nearly 40 children, enjoyed the guided tour through the gardens, the day begun with Mass celebrated by Cardinal Fabio Baggio, general director of the Laudato Si’ Center for Higher Education, and concelebrated by Archbishop Luis Marín de San Martín, prefect of the Dicastery for the Service of Charity.
Pope calls for a Church that welcomes all
“I came without a prepared speech, but I did come with hunger, hunger for justice, hunger for genuine charity, hunger for a Church that truly knows how to open its doors, to welcome and receive everyone; where there is love for all and no one is an enemy, where all of us know how to live reconciliation, forgiveness and peace,” Pope Leo said, welcoming those present, as reported by Vatican News.
Pope Leo recalled that one of the pope’s titles is the “Pontiff, a builder of bridges.”
“And today we too want to build a bridge with all of you, with your families, and with the society in which we want to live, a society marked by justice, where the causes of poverty can be eliminated and where the causes of the injustices that still exist in our world can be overcome,” Pope Leo said.
“This,” he said, “is the Church we want to be,” Vatican News reported.
An annual tradition born in Albano
Only a few months after taking upon the See of Peter, Pope Leo first met with people experiencing vulnerability from the Diocese of Albano. That meeting on Aug. 17, 2025, gave birth to an annual tradition of encounters with the underprivileged.
“Each year, a diocese will be invited to involve people living in situations of poverty, refugees, migrants, and others experiencing social vulnerability,” to let them experience “the beauty of creation” and create an “opportunity to meet the Holy Father,” Laudato Si’ Center said.
Cardinal Baggio said in the July 7 press release that “Borgo Laudato si’ was created to show that the care of creation and the care of the human person are one and the same mission.”
“After Lampedusa, this day represents a new step in Pope Leo XIV’s journey towards the social peripheries of our time,” the cardinal said, referencing Pope Leo’s visit the prior weekend to an Italian island that serves as both a place of the hope of a new life and of the tragedy of those that never made it through the sea to Europe.
“At Borgo Laudato si’, the Holy Father meets people experiencing vulnerability, reaffirming that the Church is called to inhabit the places where human dignity calls for listening, closeness, and hope,” Cardinal Baggio said.
‘No one is on the margins of God’s heart’
The encounter embodies the Church’s service to the poor, Archbishop Marín, papal almoner, emphasized.
“The Holy Father’s choice confirms that charity consists of closeness, encounter, and sharing. When the Church places the most vulnerable people at the center, it makes the Gospel visible and bears witness that no one is on the margins of God’s heart,” he said in the July 7 statement.
Pope Leo expressed his gratitude to those who organized the July 11 gathering, which included dozens of organizations that daily assist people experiencing vulnerability.
“Whenever we come together, whenever we share this spirit of encounter around the same table, the one table where Jesus is also present among us,” Pope Leo said, as reported by Vatican News.
“We are truly building a different world, a world of hope, a world that is a light in the midst of our own,” he added.
A call to justice, peace and reconciliation
The pontiff urged that in a world fractured by “violence, hatred, and discrimination,” communities need to “work together and strive always to be this kind of Church: a Church of justice, peace, and love,” praying that in families of those who gathered in the picturesque setting of Castel Gandolfo, people “find peace, forgiveness, and reconciliation.”
Cardinal Baldassare Reina, vicar general for the Diocese of Rome, said in the July 7 statement that the organizers “wanted the protagonists of this day to be people who are accompanied every day by parishes, Caritas, and the many ecclesial and social organizations of the Diocese of Rome,” adding that “the encounter with the Holy Father restores centrality to those who too often remain on the margins and calls the entire Christian community to the responsibility of welcome.”
Borgo Laudato si’ extended “their heartfelt thanks” to Ristorante L’Isola della Pizza in Rome, which “generously offered the lunch,” and to Bar Al Duomo in Albano Laziale, “which provided the welcome breakfast, contributing through their generosity to the success of the day.”

Facts Only

* Around 200 people from the Diocese of Rome joined Pope Leo for Mass, lunch, and fellowship at Castel Gandolfo on July 11.
* The event was held in the Pontifical Gardens of Castel Gandolfo.
* Pope Leo addressed attendees by calling for a Church that welcomes everyone, emphasizing justice, charity, and reconciliation.
* The tradition involves inviting dioceses to involve people experiencing poverty, refugees, migrants, and other social vulnerability groups.
* Cardinal Baggio stated Borgo Laudato si’ was created to show that caring for creation and human persons are one and the same mission.
* The encounter is framed as an opportunity to meet those experiencing vulnerability and reaffirm that the Church must listen and offer hope.
* Pope Leo expressed gratitude for the gathering, stating they were building a world of hope.
* Organizers thanked Ristorante L’Isola della Pizza and Bar Al Duomo for providing meals.

Executive Summary

Pope Leo XIV hosted an event on July 11 involving around 200 people from the Diocese of Rome at Castel Gandolfo, featuring Mass, lunch, and fellowship with people experiencing social vulnerability. The event was framed as a day of welcome and fraternity within the Pontifical Gardens. The gathering included a guided tour of the gardens and was celebrated by Cardinal Fabio Baggio and Archbishop Luis Marín de San Martín. Pope Leo expressed a desire for a Church that welcomes everyone, emphasizing the need for justice, genuine charity, and reconciliation. This tradition stems from an annual practice where a diocese is invited to involve people experiencing poverty, refugees, and migrants in experiences of creation. The event reaffirmed the mission that caring for creation and human persons are unified.

Full Take

The narrative centers on reframing institutional charity as embodied encounter. The recurring theme is that genuine religious service requires moving beyond symbolic acts to direct engagement with marginalized realities, suggesting that structures of power must physically accommodate vulnerability rather than overlook it. The invocation of Pope Leo’s role as a "builder of bridges" and the call for justice implies a tension between aspirational moral theology and material structural realities. The mechanism used—annual invitation—creates an annual expectation that institutionalized charity is inherently relational, not transactional. This pattern suggests an attempt to legitimize pastoral outreach by anchoring it in visible, shared experience rather than purely administrative decree. The implicit assumption is that visibility of suffering compels a moral response; the risk lies in allowing this framework to become another layer of performative welcome without addressing systemic, material inequalities. What systems are being implicitly challenged when the focus shifts from merely providing aid to demanding an inhabitation of places where dignity calls for listening? What accountability exists for the structures that remain "on the margins" despite such visible spiritual affirmations?
Pope Leo Shares Meal With Vulnerable Guests at Castel Gandolfo — Arc Codex