Pope Leo laments a world 'in flames' at Ash Wednesday service


Pope Leo XIV puts ash on a faithful's head during the Ash Wednesday Mass at the Santa Sabina Basilica in Rome, Italy, February 18, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli

VATICAN CITY, ⁠Feb 18 (Reuters) - Pope Leo lamented a world "in flames" due to ⁠wars and the destruction of the environment during an Ash ‌Wednesday Mass, opening the season of Lent for the world's Christians.

Before sprinkling ashes on the heads of participants, a sign of mortality, the pope said the ashes ​could represent "the weight of a world that ⁠is ablaze, of entire cities ⁠destroyed by war".

He also told participants the ashes could signify "the ashes ⁠of ‌international law and justice among peoples, (and) the ashes of entire ecosystems".

"It is so easy to feel powerless in the ⁠face of a world that is in flames," said ​Leo, the first ‌U.S. pope.

Lent is a 40-day period of penance that leads ⁠to Easter, ​the most important Christian holiday, which celebrates the day on which believers say Jesus rose from the dead.

It represents the 40 days Jesus is ⁠said in the Bible to have spent ​fasting in the desert. During the season, Catholics are asked to fast, remember the needy and reflect on mortality.

Leo, elected leader of the 1.4-billion-member ⁠Church in May to replace the late Pope Francis, did not mention a specific conflict in his remarks.

The pope has forcefully decried the world's ongoing wars in his first year and denounced what ​he called a global "zeal for war" in a ⁠major foreign policy speech last month.

He spoke on Wednesday at a ​service held in the Basilica of Santa ‌Sabina on Rome's Aventine Hill, preceded by ​prayers in a nearby church and a procession of cardinals and bishops.

(Reporting by Joshua McElwee; Editing by Jon Boyle)

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