Pope Leo XIV just gave his first Easter Mass, and the message was all about “peace.” No surprise there. But let’s be honest—this sounded a lot more like a page from the liberal, globalist playbook than a real solution. He stood on the balcony at St. Peter’s and told the world to put down their weapons and “talk it out,” but carefully avoided calling out any problems by name. We all know evil exists, so why tiptoe around it? Skipping the details doesn’t stop violence or help persecuted Christians. It just gives bad actors a free pass.
Here’s the problem: the left loves to act like “dialogue” solves everything. That’s rich, coming from people who shout down dissent at every turn. Whether in Jerusalem, Gaza, or even Tehran, Christians are still under attack today. The media and liberal elites want to pretend all sides are equal, but we know that’s nonsense. There’s no real peace when one side is burning churches and the other is busy hiding behind “conversation.”
Pope Leo had the perfect chance to actually name names—call out terrorist sympathizers, corrupt regimes, and the woke West for letting chaos grow. Instead, he chose safe words and empty rhetoric. That’s not leadership. That’s classic globalist “unity” talk, ignoring the suffering of real people because it’s inconvenient. Meanwhile, Christians in places like Gaza and Tehran are barely holding on to their faith while the world looks away.
Let’s face it, the left and its allies in high places love to airbrush reality. Ignore the brutal facts. Behind every “prayer for peace” is a refusal to confront evil head on. Real peace doesn’t come from sitting down with thugs who hate you. It comes from strength, not surrender—and from leaders with the courage to call things what they are.
When religious leaders forget who the real enemy is and parrot the same tired lines as failed politicians, it’s not just disappointing—it’s dangerous. The world needs clarity and backbone, not vague speeches. If our so-called shepherds keep hiding the truth, who’s left to defend what’s right?
Source: Washington Times
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