Papa Léon XIV held an audience on Monday with the Board of the Vatican Observatory Foundation, reinforcing the Catholic Church's commitment to seek God in His Creation through thorough and honest scientific inquiry.
During his address, the Pope recalled the actions of Pope Leo XIII, who re-established the Vatican Observatory in 1891 amid a time when the relationship between science and religion was fraught with tension. He quoted the 19th-century Pope's assertion that the re-founding was intended to illustrate that the Church and its leaders do not oppose genuine and robust science—whether secular or theological—but rather embrace and promote it wholeheartedly.
However, Pope Leo XIV expressed concern that contemporary challenges to both faith and science now come in more subtle forms, particularly from those who deny the existence of objective truth. He remarked, "Too many in our world refuse to acknowledge what both science and the Church plainly teach: that we bear a solemn responsibility for the stewardship of our planet and for the welfare of those who dwell upon it, especially the most vulnerable, whose lives are imperilled by the reckless exploitation of both people and the natural world."
