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Pope Leo XIV expected to visit France in late September, bishops announce

A view of the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris on April 5, 2026, in Paris. | Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

While the Holy See has yet to make an official announcement, the French Bishops’ Conference announced in a May 6 communiqué that Pope Leo XIV is expected to visit France in late September.

PARIS — The Catholic Church in France is preparing to welcome Pope Leo XIV for an apostolic visit expected to take place at the end of September, the French Bishops’ Conference announced in a May 6 communiqué. 

While the Holy See has yet to make an official announcement, the news came as no surprise, as rumors of a papal trip to France had been circulating since March. 

“Since his election, a year ago, Pope Leo XIV has been asked by several bishops to come to France,” the communiqué said. The formal invitation was extended by Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline, president of the French Bishops’ Conference, acting in coordination with the apostolic nuncio, Archbishop Celestino Migliore. It received an important boost when French President Emmanuel Macron voiced his own support for the trip during his Vatican visit April 10.

Commenting on the announcement, Aveline, who has held several working sessions with the pope on the matter, said that “Leo XIV has expressed, on various occasions, the great esteem he holds for our country and its spiritual history.” 

The cardinal continued: “His coming would be an opportunity to share with the pope what our Church in France is living and to let ourselves be encouraged by his word.” He added that the two had already begun mapping out a tentative itinerary.

According to the itinerary currently under consideration, the Holy Father would visit both the French capital — where he is also expected to visit Notre-Dame Cathedral — and Lourdes, a landmark site of Marian apparitions in the Pyrenees Mountains. 

According to reporting by press agency I.Média quoted by Famille chrétienne, the name of Scy-Chazelles, a small town in the Moselle department (northeast of France) that is home to the residence and tomb of Robert Schuman — known as the “Father of Europe” and whose cause of canonization is underway — has also been regularly mentioned as a possible stop. The Diocese of Metz, however, has said it has no confirmed information to that effect. 

If the visit goes ahead as planned, Leo XIV would be the first pope to make an official state visit to France in nearly two decades. The last came in September 2008, when Benedict XVI traveled to Paris and Lourdes. Pope Francis visited France three times during his pontificate — in Strasbourg in 2014 to address the European Parliament, in Marseille in 2023 for the Mediterranean Meetings, and in Corsica for a symposium on “popular religiosity in the Mediterranean” in December 2024 — though none of these trips constituted an official state visit. John Paul II, for his part, made no fewer than seven trips to France across the course of his pontificate.

The choice of date, according to observers, can be explained by the Holy See’s desire to distance itself sufficiently from the electoral calendar in the interest of neutrality, as the presidential elections are scheduled for the first half of 2027.

The announcement comes at a time of unexpected renewal for Catholicism in France, a country known as the “eldest daughter of the Church” but long associated with aggressive “laicité” (“secularism”) and de-Christianization. 

In recent years, the Church has seen a steady increase in the number of adult catechumens, with 13,000 of them receiving baptism at Easter this year. In response, the bishops of the Île-de-France region convened a dedicated pastoral council focused on how to welcome these newcomers appropriately — accompanying them not only through the sacraments of initiation but also toward a lasting and deeply rooted life of faith. 

Pending the official announcement from the Holy See, the bishops of France have asked all the faithful to hold the preparation of this event in prayer.

This article was originally published by EWTN News English.

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