Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
When Bernie Sanders met Pope Francis
When Bernie Sanders met Pope Francis
Dec 6, 2025 6:30 PM

ABC Breaking News | Latest News Videos

Well, it finally happened. The pope felt the Bern.

Against expectations, Pope Francis and Senator Bernie Sanders, the Democrat candidate for U.S. president, met privately today in the Vatican hotel where thepontiffresides and where Sanders was staying as a guest.

Bernie Sanders was in Romefor the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences meeting to discuss his economic, environmental and moral concerns (as summed up in Sanders’own words during the press scrum that followed).

The Pontifical Academy’s meeting was dedicated tothe25th anniversary of John Paul II’sCentisimus Annus, arguably the most pro-market encyclical in the history of Catholic social teaching published in 1991 on the 100th anniversary of Leo XIII’s 1891 encyclicalRerum Novarum which alsopraised private property rights, the value of personal liberty, and likewise denounced Marxism on grounds of mistaken anthropology.

Sanders put his own socialist spin on Centesimus Annus while in Rome.

News reports say the meeting between Sanders and Francis only lasted for 5 minutes. According to a Reuters report published on Religion News Service:

Pope Francis met U.S. presidential candidate Bernie Sandersin the Vatican on Saturday morning (April 16) and the two discussed the need for morality in the world economy before the pontiff left for a visit to the Greek island of Lesbos.Columbia University Professor Jeffrey Sachs told Reuters that the meeting took place in the Vatican guesthouse where the pope lives and where Sanders had spent the night after addressing a Vatican conference on social justice.The Vatican had said that a meeting between the two was not planned, and Sanders said he did not expect to meet the pope during his trip.

What was the reaction from the avowed socialist Bernie Sanders, who exited the brief meeting “glowing” according an ABC television? Sanders, who shares Francis’ concern about economic inequality and opinion on climate change, told ABC:

He is a beautiful man.I am not a Catholic, but there is a radiance es from him….I just conveyed to him my admiration for the extraordinary work he is doing raising some of the most important issues facing our planet and the billions of people on the planet and injecting the need for morality in the global economy.

The Acton Institute is hosting its own social doctrine conference next week in Rome, April 20th: “Freedom with Justice: Rerum Novarum and the New Things of Our Time“. It will celebrate the 125th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s landmark encyclical and will surely contrast some the opinions and content expressed by Sanders at the Vatican meeting. It can be followed on socia media via the hashtag #125onFreedom and will be available via livestream.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Outsourcing education
A couple years ago I wrote mentary that didn’t exactly defend outsourcing, but did recognize its benefits and argued that it could be done morally if done correctly. I won’t pretend that my writing is read widely enough to generate voluminous responses of any sort, but that piece did elicit a significant number of responses, many of them negative. Several correspondents, who had no personal connection to me, ostensibly knew a great deal about me, including my salary and the...
Jaroslav Pelikan 1923-2006
Jaroslav Pelikan, the great historian of the Christian Tradition, died May 13 at his home in Hamden, Conn. He was 82 years old and had been battling lung cancer. Pelikan wrote more than 30 books and over a dozen reference works covering the entire history of Christianity. Perhaps his best known work is the five-volume “The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine.” In 2003, he published “Credo: Historical and Theological Guide to Creeds and Confessions of Faith...
Immigration reform, French-style
“As we look at how the immigration debate is unfolding, there are reasons to be concerned about the rule of law,” Jennifer Roback Morse writes. “The mass demonstrations of the past weeks reveal a much more sinister development: the arrival of French-style street politics in America.” Read mentary here. ...
Toward “peaceful coexistence” in India
I blogged last week on the ongoing dispute between China and the Vatican. Another demographic giant with tremendous economic potential—and some religious freedom issues—is India. ZENIT reports on Pope Benedict’s address to the new Indian ambassador to the Holy See (May 18 daily dispatch). The pope took the opportunity to make a ment on the subject: The disturbing signs of religious intolerance which have troubled some regions of the nation, including the reprehensible attempt to legislate clearly discriminatory restrictions on...
Bono: give us a call
The Rock Star, sounding kind of Acton-ish: Bono acknowledges that four years ago when he toured Africa with then U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, bringing private sector with him would never have crossed his mind. It’s a signal of changes in Africa over the past decade, but in part it’s Bono’s own advocacy that has helped shift attitudes toward the African agenda. “I think it is bizarre that Africa got me interested merce,” chuckles the U2 lead singer in an...
Doubt and certainty about spiritual realities
This Live Science article, “How Children Learn About God and Science,” by Robert Roy Britt, summarizes a new survey of scientific studies about the way children learn. It seems that an interesting conclusion has surfaced from these studies: “Among things they can’t see, from germs to God, children seem to be more confident in the information they get about invisible scientific objects than about things in the spiritual realm.” There’s no conclusive explanation for why this is the case, but...
Hello, pot? This is the kettle…
David Klinghoffer, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, writes at NRO this week about the use of biblical texts in support of immigration liberalization by liberals, “Borders & the Bible: It’s not the gospel according to Hillary.” I find this essay problematic on a number of levels. Klinghoffer first reprimands Hillary Clinton, among others, for quoting the Bible: “While the Left typically resists applying Biblical insights to modern political problems, liberals have seemed to make an exception for the...
The wisdom of Woz
Steve Wozniak, famed inventor of Apple I, Apple II, and the original Apple software, has a new ing out. Here is a snippet from a Businessweek interview where he gives a nice, Actony take on creativity and education. Are there larger lessons that you have drawn about creativity and innovation? That schools close us off from creative development. They do it because education has to be provided to everyone, and that means that government has to provide it, and that’s...
Acton on the radio
Yesterday afternoon, Andrew Yuengert joined host Al Kresta on Kresta in the Afternoon on the Ave Maria Radio Network to discuss immigration reform and President Bush’s most recent proposal to secure the USA’s southern border. Yuengert is an Associate Professor of Economics at Pepperdine University and the author of Inhabiting the Land, an economic analysis of migration and part of Acton’s Christian Social Thought Series of monographs. To listen to the interview, click here (6.5 mb mp3 file). Inhabiting the...
‘The school’ – attack on Beslan
New York Times reporter C.J. Chivers has a lengthy — and chilling — narrative on the terrorist attack on Beslan, Russia, that began on September 1, 2004. Chechen separatists took over School Number One, filled with children and parents on the first day of the academic year, and wired the place with bombs. A rescue attempt by Russian security forces three days later turned into a pitched battle and when it was over, 331 people were dead — including 186...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved