segunda-feira, 27 de abril de 2026

The stirring of "progressive Christianity" you're seeing today is largely credited to the influence of Pope Leo XIV, who has taken a strong stance on social justice issues, particularly in opposition to certain military and political actions.

 


Pope Leo has stirred awake a progressive Christianity. It can rise again

The stirring of "progressive Christianity" you're seeing today is largely credited to the influence of Pope Leo XIV, who has taken a strong stance on social justice issues, particularly in opposition to certain military and political actions.

 

This modern movement draws deep inspiration from the legacy of Pope Leo XIII (1878–1903), who is widely regarded as the "Social Pope". His landmark 1891 encyclical, Rerum Novarum ("On the Conditions of Labor"), established the foundation for modern Catholic Social Teaching by advocating for:

 

Workers' Rights: He strongly supported the right to form trade unions and receive a living wage, arguing that human dignity is paramount in the workplace.

The "Third Way": Leo XIII rejected both unregulated, "laissez-faire" capitalism and state-led socialism, proposing instead a system rooted in mutual respect between labor and capital.

The Preferential Option for the Poor: While the exact phrase came later, Leo XIII emphasized that the government must provide special protection for the poor and vulnerable.

 

Contemporary observers, such as those writing for The Guardian, suggest that this "long given over for dead" progressive tradition is rising again as faith leaders use these historic principles to address modern conflicts and economic inequality.

Pope Leo has stirred awake a progressive Christianity. It can rise again



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Christianity

Pope Leo has stirred awake a progressive Christianity. It can rise again

 

With his stand against Trump, the pope has shown the far right doesn’t have a monopoly on Christianity. If people of good faith push hard, the future could be redefined

 

Bill McKibben

Sun 26 Apr 2026 14.00 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/apr/26/pope-leo-trump-hegseth-christianity

 

In the same way that America’s shambolic war on Iran has turned Donald Trump into the most effective EV salesman the world has ever seen, so his attempts to defend said war have produced another unlikely outcome: the rise of a genuine and global theological debate. Led by Pope Leo but extending across Christian denominations, it’s producing the sudden recognition that a kind of progressive Christianity long given over for dead seems to be stirring. Christ is risen, as it were – and if people of good faith push hard, the future could be redefined in powerful ways.

 

This story has developed so rapidly, with so many steps, that it’s hard to remember them all. When America launched its cruel attack, there was widespread reporting that some officers were exhorting to treat it as a prelude to the second coming. That provoked no pushback from the secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, a representative of a tattooed Christianity (not that it matters, but have these people not read Leviticus?); indeed, with each press conference Hegseth edged closer to a revival meeting, invoking God’s blessing on his bombing and pillaging. “We are hitting them while they’re down, which is the way it should be,” he said.

 

Liberal Protestant leaders in America have pushed back in their ways, but their ways often go unnoticed. Virtually no reporter ever seeks out the head of the Methodists or the Lutherans or any of the other sects that once dominated American religious life. Real Christianity is always journalistically represented by evangelicalism – everyone knows its stars, the Franklin Grahams and the Paula Whites, the layers-on-of-hands in the Oval Office. Hegseth’s denominational leader, Doug Wilson, has gotten far more airtime than the heads of the much larger Protestant traditions, because they don’t do insane things like demanding women give up the vote. Partly as a result, a generation of Americans has grown up convinced that Christianity is a freak show, and another generation – those inside the evangelical tent – have grown old unchallenged in their thinking that scripture somehow demands the various cruelties we’ve seen play out in the “culture wars”.

 

But it doesn’t. In fact, for most of American history Christianity has been read in the opposite way, as a liberating force. Yes, slaveholders cherrypicked passages to assure themselves that human bondage was biblical, but for enslaved people, and an ever-larger abolitionist movement, the story of Exodus profoundly undercut that idea. Social movements of all kinds rode in on the back of the gospel: temperance, mostly supported as a defense of women against drunkards, was a religious crusade; to promote it, the Methodists built the building that is still the structure nearest the nation’s Capitol, the better to lean on the political class. That same building was used as the planning headquarters for Dr Martin Luther King’s March on Washington, an apex moment of a civil rights movement previously unimaginable outside the Black church. In those days roughly half of Americans belonged to these mainline Protestant churches. They were the consensus in America.

 

That mainline Protestantism started to decline in the wake of the 1960s, mostly because it asked more of its adherents than many of them were willing to give. As the commitment of young preachers to justice kept deepening, many of their parishioners found that a comfortable civic obligation had become an uncomfortable challenge. Many stopped going to church altogether, and others drifted to the evangelical megachurches that offered themselves up as, among other things, entertainment – all pop music and drama. But Methodism and the rest never disappeared; indeed one recent survey found mainline Protestantism is roughly comparable in size with evangelicalism.

 

The pope ... has taken on Maga’s regressive form of Christianity more memorably and powerfully than any religious leader in recent history

 

Even before the war, there were signs that these churches – while not exactly coming back, certainly not to the dominant role they once played – were reasserting themselves in remarkable ways. The first person to really stand up to Donald Trump in the days after his inauguration, as he launched his blitzkrieg of rightwing change, was Episcopal bishop Mariann Budde, who at the official prayer service marking his ascension, told him: “In the name of our God, I ask you to have mercy on the people in our country who are scared now,” specifically naming immigrant and gay communities. (Trump, of course, called her a “so-called bishop” and said the service at her cathedral had been “very boring”.) There were a great many different forces behind the magnificent display of non-violent resistance in Minneapolis this winter, but one of them was the Lutheran church, dominant in the region and with a long tradition of immigration advocacy. (Full disclosure, I’m on the advisory board of Global Refuge, known until last year as Lutheran Immigrant and Refugee Service). Renee Good, shot in January as she drove away from a protest, was a serious Presbyterian, who’ had taken mission trips as a child; at a vigil marking her death, the Episcopal bishop of New Hampshire called on his clergy to “get their affairs in order to make sure they have their wills written” so that they could, if necessary, stand between “the powers of this world and the most vulnerable”. After Good’s death, hundreds of clergy from across the country descended on Minneapolis as an act of witness; about 100 were arrested in a protest at the airport, appealing for an end to the flights disappearing immigrants from their families and communities.

 

And then there were the Catholics. Approximately 60 million Americans are at least nominal followers of the Roman church – but the secular world tends to pay the church fairly scant attention, at least between sex scandals and papal conclaves, the white smoke being a cracking good story. In America, to the extent that journalists covered the Church as a political force, it was for what had become its single-issue focus on abortion. Many officials in the church hierarchy made common cause with the evangelicals over the last few decades, becoming a key part of the religious right.

 

But their congregants never voted in a bloc the same way as the evangelicals – they drifted right over time, but Obama won clear majorities of their ballots. There always remained a core of post-Vatican II liberals in the church, soldiering away at the tasks of caring for the poor and the sick; politicians from Ted Kennedy to Mario Cuomo to Nancy Pelosi managed to stay in more or less good standing with the church. (Remember Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot by ICE after Renee Good? He grew up in the church, attended a Catholic grammar school, and won the Light of Christ medal from his Catholic Boy Scout troop.) Pope Francis began to re-energize this core, appointing new cardinals and bishops who were more attuned to these issues (and to the environment, which Francis took on as his new addition to the liturgy). Those leaders began to speak out during the last year, especially as ICE targeted the Hispanic population that is a large section of Christendom. The bishop of San Bernardino in California publicly exempted Catholics in his diocese from their obligation to attend mass if they feared arrest.

 

torn fragments weaving a United States flag with Jesus as depicted in Leonardo da Vinci's 'The Last Supper'

 

Which brings us to the pope, the American pope, who has taken on Maga’s regressive form of Christianity more memorably and powerfully than any religious leader in recent history. Leo grew up in this country in precisely that period when the church was transitioning, post-Vatican II, to a more liberal tone. He left America before the church fathers turned rightward with their grim obsession with a woman’s right to choose. He was overseas while that was going on, mostly in Peru, ministering to the poor. In some ways, his seems like a 1960s or 70s Christianity, preserved by circumstance. And he speaks midwestern American English, easy for everyone to understand, hard for anyone to undercut.

 

The beef between Leo and Trump started to come into focus as the immigration debate heated up: among other things, he was roused by reports that ICE was denying communion to immigrants in detention. America’s new war on the marginalized was, he said, “extremely disrespectful”. But his unease clearly grew with the onset of the war – and in particular with Trump and Hegseth’s insistence that it was a holy war, fought in the name of Jesus, and blessed by God. On Easter weekend, when the president declared his intention to wipe out an entire civilization unless he got his way, the pope had had enough. He said the president’s words were “unacceptable”, a stern message that actually lands far stronger than the profanity that has become the lingua franca of the political class in recent years.

 

Trump recognized the power of the attack, and it enraged him, especially when three cardinals from around the country continued the call-out on 60 Minutes. The president responded in two by now infamous ways: his long screed declaring that the pope was a loser, and his tweet showing himself as a robed Jesus beaming healing light on an apparently deceased Jeffrey Epstein lookalike. That this was blasphemous escaped not even the president’s usual acolytes, some of whom, reaching for the parts of the Bible they remembered, pondered the idea that he might be the antichrist.

 

But that’s not what seemed to really fire up the pope (who lives surrounded by the greatest religious art ever made and probably had a chuckle at the AI depiction Trump offered up). What stung him, instead, was the insistence of Hegseth that God was blessing the fight. Leo, in measured terms, announced that God “does not hear the prayers of those who wage war”. Trump’s hapless sidekick, JD Vance, then warned the vicar of Christ that he should be “careful” in his use of theology, because there was a “thousand-year tradition of just war theory”. Surely God had been on the side of the Americans who liberated France, Vance exclaimed, reaching back for the last unambiguously righteous exercise of US power.

 

Indeed, there is a millennium-old just war tradition, and it descends from Augustine of Hippo, St Augustine. Leo, as it happens, is an Augustinian, and spent 16 years in various forms of seminary education, studying among other things this precise canon – and he actually had been in Hippo, in modern-day Algeria, as this exchange was building. The pontiff had in fact been careful – precise – in his choice of words. God does not, he said, hear the prayers of those who “wage” war – Augustine’s theory, as it has developed over the years, makes it clear that the only sanctified warfare is practiced by those who were attacked first. As Daniel Flores, the American bishop in charge of explaining these matters to the faithful, patiently told reporters, citing catechism: “A constant tenet of that thousand-year tradition is a nation can only legitimately take up the sword ‘in self-defense, once all peace efforts have failed’. That is, to be a just war it must be a defense against another who actively wages war, which is what the Holy Father actually said: ‘He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.’” (To return to Vance’s example, the Axis were the aggressors in the second world war.)

 

The theology that underlays the whole white rightwing megachurch evangelical movement is unforgivably shallow

 

There are so many interesting things here. One is the contrast between that ancient scholastic tradition on the one hand and the careless pretend theology that has been the mark of the modern American megachurch – a contrast as striking as that between Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel and Trump’s AI Dr Jesus. Another is the reminder that a few words can trump a screed – by Thursday the pope had had enough, and from Africa launched the closest thing he’ll ever make to a Truth Social post: “Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.”

 

And in response, Trump and Hegseth had … nothing. Because the theology that underlays the whole white rightwing megachurch evangelical movement is unforgivably shallow. There are plenty of fine evangelical theologians – in addition to a small left evangelicalism (I write a regular column for its flagship magazine Sojourners), there are serious conservatives, too. You can read them in magazines such as Christianity Today, founded by Billy Graham, or find them at Graham’s alma mater, Wheaton College. But the part that reaches the public from its big name pastors is a mishmash of isolated passages from Revelation and lurid injunctions against carnal sin, things that are very much not the preoccupations of the Gospel. Jesus, many are shocked to hear, never expressed the slightest hint of an opinion on gay or transgender people. Far from backing rightwing economic policies, he held that the rich should give away all that they had to the poor; in place of ICE’s cruelties he called again and again to welcome the stranger.

 

The depth of white evangelical theology is demonstrated by the fact that 70% of its adherents still support Trump, even after the carnival of racism, cruelty and blasphemy they’ve witnessed in the second term. The movement’s “spiritual formation” has been tested and found wanting.

 

So when Hegseth went to pull out the big guns, he didn’t have much to work with. Even less, in fact, than he thought. He offered a now famous long and hyperbolic public prayer describing the one American success of the entire war, which was the rescue of an airman whose plane had been blown from the sky, and which I will quote here:

 

Pray with me please. The path of the downed aviator is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who in the name of comradery and duty shepherd the lost through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother’s keeper and the finder of lost children.

 

And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to capture and destroy my brother. And you will know my call sign is Sandy One, when I lay my vengeance upon thee. Amen.

 

Hegseth likely thought he was glossing Ezekiel 2:17, but he was actually quoting very nearly verbatim from the lines Samuel Jackson gave in Pulp Fiction just before murdering a man. Hegseth’s confusion was funny, and also not funny, given that its point was to invoke “great vengeance and furious anger” on an Iranian regime and people that had been the victims of attacks that had killed many thousands. And even less funny when you consider the “great vengeance and furious anger” now being wreaked on poor people across the planet who find themselves without the fertilizer they need to plant their crops.

 

If you actually read Ezekiel 25:17, which both Hegseth and Quentin Tarantino relied on, you’ll recall that vengeance is generally reserved for God: “And I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I am the Lord, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them.” Trump, meme aside, is not in fact the Lord.

 

Neither, actually, is Pope Leo, though he has the benefit of knowing it. He is the custodian of an institution that he’s trying to repair, one that ran itself on to the shoals of sexual and financial scandal. I’m not a Catholic (I’m a Methodist) but it is inspiring to watch him at work on that reconstruction project, finding bishops who share his sense of the world.

 

Leo’s willingness to stand up to the end product of that rightward decline, the shallowest public figure in human history, may inspire the resurgent liberals from the Protestant tradition. If he can stand up to the president, they can perhaps find more voice to reclaim their heritage from the evangelicals who have walked away with the cross and the Bible in recent decades.

 

I hope that this fight ... between the pope and the president continues, because it’s providing a theological education to the public at large

 

Something’s happening: I was speaking in the home cathedral of Boston’s Episcopal diocese over the weekend, and when I talked about Leo’s witness, people I knew to be good Protestants were in tears. As the war began, the United Methodist bishops asked people to “pray for peace”, a fairly anodyne stand; by its sixth week, the president of its council of bishops was getting stronger. “We reject any language or action that endangers civilians or threatens to destroy entire civilizations, and we raise a prophetic call to our leaders, urging them to persistently choose the path of peace,” said Tracy Malone from that midwest red redoubt of Indiana. Parishioners arriving for a Good Friday service at a Colorado Methodist church found 168 tiny pairs of shoes arranged in a heart on the front stairs, one for each of the girls killed in the hideous attack on a school in Minab in the early hours of the conflict.

 

I hope that this fight – between the clergy and ICE, between the pope and the president – continues, because it’s providing a theological education to the public at large. For a very long time, people outside faith communities have regarded Christianity as some combination of silly and irrelevant. It’s completely fine that they don’t convert – any poll will show that rule by atheists would make America a more humane place than it is at present. But it’s good for everyone to be reminded that the Christian tradition is powerful, radical and subversive.


The polemics surrounding a "King who put Muslims before Christians at Easter" refer to intense criticism directed at King Charles III of the United Kingdom in April 2026.

 


The polemics surrounding a "King who put Muslims before Christians at Easter" refer to intense criticism directed at King Charles III of the United Kingdom in April 2026. Critics accused him of sidelining Christianity—and his role as "Defender of the Faith"—by failing to deliver an Easter message, while having recently delivered messages for Ramadan and Eid.

 

Core Issues in the Controversy:

Silence at Easter 2026: Buckingham Palace confirmed King Charles would not issue a formal Easter message in 2026, breaking with the trend of his previous Easter-tide communications.

Ramadan/Eid Greetings: Critics highlighted that the King had issued prominent messages for Ramadan and Eid Mubarak, along with hosting an Iftar at Windsor Castle, just prior to Easter.

2025 Easter Message Criticism: In 2025, King Charles delivered a message for Easter that was criticized for focusing on interfaith relations, praising "Jewish ethics" and "Islamic human instincts" rather than focusing solely on the Christian Resurrection.

The "Defender of the Faith" Debate: As Supreme Governor of the Church of England, the King is traditionally expected to champion Christianity. Critics argued that prioritizing interfaith politeness over the central celebration of the Christian faith diluted his constitutional role.

Defenders' Perspective: Supporters of the King noted that Easter messages are not a formally fixed tradition for the monarch, and that Queen Elizabeth II only issued one during her 70-year reign.

 

The polemic has triggered a wider debate in Britain about the monarchy's role in a multicultural society versus its duty to maintain Britain's historical Christian identity.

Douglas Murray EXPOSED King Charles — The King Who Put Muslims Before Christians at Easter

 

King Charles visits Trump: what are the potential pitfalls for the monarch?

 


King Charles visits Trump: what are the potential pitfalls for the monarch?

 

The king faces possibly his most important ever speech and a thin-skinned president, in the shadow of the Sussexes and the Epstein scandal. What could go wrong?

 

Caroline Davies

Caroline Davies

Mon 27 Apr 2026 05.00 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/apr/27/king-charles-visits-trump-what-are-the-potential-pitfalls-for-the-monarch

 

On his high-stakes four-day state visit to the US, King Charles will have to walk a diplomatic tightrope as the guest of an erratic Donald Trump against the backdrop of Iran and security concerns after Saturday night’s shooting at the White House correspondents’ dinner.

 

Many challenges lie ahead as he takes up his UK government-decreed task to “reaffirm and renew” bilateral ties amid a worsening “special relationship” on the 250th anniversary of American independence.

 

Meanwhile, the ghost of Jeffrey Epstein and the shadow of the Sussexes are never far away.

 

1. Tricky visit with unprecedented degree of difficulty

The contemporary political historian Anthony Seldon said the 27-30 April visit was “obviously beyond tricky” and had a “degree of difficulty” vastly surpassing any official visit since the first one by a reigning monarch, when George VI met Franklin D Roosevelt to persuade him to enter the second world war. “Because you are dealing with somebody who is so unpredictable,” Seldon said.

 

He said relations with the US had gone through difficult periods before: Lyndon B Johnson and Harold Wilson, Richard Nixon and Edward Heath, Dwight Eisenhower and Anthony Eden – the latter leading to Eden’s ousting after the Suez crisis. “So it’s a tense moment. But there have been tense moments in the past. And it will be fascinating to see how the monarch plays it.”

 

Seldon said since Charles was “probably the one person in the world who Trump doesn’t want to offend”, the president would operate “within tramlines”, thus giving the king “more leeway”.

 

On the “most important visit of the king’s life”, Charles could “either be very cautious and safe, or he can remind the American people of the basis on which the United States was formed 250 years ago”, Seldon added. He said values shared with the UK were of a country that moved away from arbitrary power on the basis of separation of powers, with the bill of rights at its heart; individual rights, limited government, rule of law, enlightenment values. Not to mention a shared history stretching back centuries.

 

Prof Philip Murphy, the director of history and policy at the University of London, said the risk was more significant for Keir Starmer than for Charles, particularly after the Peter Mandelson and Olly Robbins controversy. “It’s another aspect of this desperate desire to court Trump and to take really significant risks,” he said.

 

“They’ve risked the prestige of their head of state, they’ve put his dignity in peril by putting him in contact with Trump, who is both hugely controversial and a very tricky person to deal with in public,” Murphy said.

 

2. King’s security taken ‘very seriously’

Charles’s visit will have “appropriate security in place in relation to the risk”, a minister said on Sunday after Donald and Melania Trump were evacuated from the White House correspondents’ dinner on Saturday evening when the event was interrupted by gunfire.

 

Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the prime minister, told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that further discussions about the king’s security would take place on Sunday. Asked if that meant there would be any escalation of what had already been planned, he said: “There’ll be appropriate security in place in relation to the risk.”

 

Jones told Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on Sky News: “As you would imagine, the government and the palace take the security of his majesty very seriously, and there were already extensive discussions taking place, which will continue over the coming days.”

 

A Buckingham Palace spokesperson confirmed that talks were ongoing, saying: “A number of discussions will be taking place throughout the day to discuss with US colleagues and our respective teams to what degree the events of Saturday evening may or may not impact on the operational planning for the visit.”

 

3. The king’s most important speech yet

Charles’s address to a joint meeting of Congress will be televised internationally and is possibly his most important to date. According to Buckingham Palace, he will “recognise the challenges that our countries face”. But Trump notoriously easily takes offence.

 

When Queen Elizabeth II addressed Congress in 1991, she said power that grew “from the barrel of a gun” never grew well “nor for very long”, and spoke of the importance of Nato; of how Europe could become more open, liberal and aligned with the US; and of the importance and value “of the rich ethnic and cultural diversity” of both countries.

 

“That would be taken as a direct attack on Trump now,” Murphy said. “What Charles will, I’m sure, do is try and appeal almost over the head of Trump to the American public.” He could stress common values: belief in freedom, belief in democracy, a long history of friendship. “It’s almost saying, without saying it, that Trump is here, but Trump will go and there are longer cultural and political affinities there. He can do it in a way that a political leader can’t. He can make it appear that the strength of the relationship is beyond politics.”

 

Seldon said there was no need for Charles to even mention Trump, so leaving it up to individuals to see whether the “current chief executive of the US is aligning himself with those values”.

 

“I think [the address] could be so oblique, and done very deftly, gently, and in a polite and respectful way. The right speech, respectfully delivered, could help. And it can certainly help remind American people about the deep, profound bonds – intellectual, humane bonds – that unite both countries.”

 

4. Will private remain private?

Undoubtedly with Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s outrageous humiliation in mind, Charles’s Oval Office bilateral has been organised to take place in private after a grip-and-grin photo call. The king, the head of state and of the armed forces, enters knowing Trump has publicly insulted his UK prime minister and mocked the UK military. And Charles is also king of Canada, a country subjected to severe provocation by Trump.

 

However the king broaches these, if indeed he does, he needs to tread carefully with a president who shoots from the hip and loves speaking to cameras and posting on Truth Social. Murphy said: “He’ll [Charles] be very careful about what he says, because it may very well be reported back. I don’t think Trump has a strong sense of what is private and what is not.”

 

5. The ghost of Epstein and shadow of the Sussexes

After Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office over his connection with Jeffrey Epstein, the US congresswoman Ro Khanna and Sky Roberts, the brother of the late Virginia Giuffre, urged Charles and especially Camilla to meet Epstein survivors.

 

No such meeting will take place, a palace source has said, on the grounds it could jeopardise police inquiries and potential legal action, “to the detriment of the survivors themselves in their pursuit of justice”.

 

If there are protests, the king and queen will be shielded from them. The itinerary offers few opportunities for the couple to come face to face with the public. A visit to a “block party” in Virginia is likely to be the only one.

 

Murphy said: “There will clearly be press comment. There may be some sort of public protests about it. If he walks around in crowds, people might call out.”

 

But many Americans may only have seen media coverage of Charles recently in the Epstein or Sussexes context. “So, one talks about the risks, but there’s also a benefit for him here. After a really rough time around Andrew, Harry and Meghan, he can show that he can actually play a valuable role, a role that transcends politics,” Murphy said.

 

And what about the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, in west coast Montecito almost 3,000 miles from Washington DC? It is understood there are no plans for a father and son reunion during the visit. The best the palace can hope for is no ill-timed soul-baring interviews by Harry, especially on the subject of his royal upbringing.

Do Americans feel let down by the United Kingdom? | Iran war

High stakes and soft power: Inside the King's USA state visit