Pope Leo XIV announces follow-up consistory in June, pledges annual meetings of the cardinals
#1
Another Conciliar novelty...


Pope Leo XIV announces follow-up consistory in June, pledges annual meetings of the cardinals
The decision signals an ongoing emphasis on the synodal model of Church governance, first launched under Pope Francis.

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Pope Leo XIV leaving the event at the Waterfront Mass on December 2, 2025, in Beirut, Lebanon
Photo by Adri Salido/Getty Images

Jan 9, 2026
VATICAN CITY (LifeSiteNews) — Pope Leo XIV has announced that an extraordinary consistory of cardinals will be held annually in remarks delivered at the conclusion of the two-day consistory held this month.

On January 8, Pope Leo XIV met with 170 cardinals, both electors and non-electors, and formally announced that consistories will be convened annually, with the next scheduled for June 27-28, in order to strengthen consultation within the College of Cardinals and continue the synodal path requested during the pre-conclave general congregations.

READ: Pope Leo calls Second Vatican Council the ‘guiding star’ of the Church’s path

“The fact that the Holy Father has said that there will be another consistory in June, and that he wishes to continue this next year as well, is an indication that he found it very important, and that it has been in assistance to him in his role of the Successor of St. Peter,” said Cardinal Stephen Brislin during the Vatican press briefing at the conclusion of the consistory.

Pope Leo XIV made the announcement explaining that the two days of meetings were intended as a “prefiguration of our future path” and that future consistories would last three to four days. The Pope also confirmed the post-synodal “Ecclesial Assembly,” scheduled for October 2028.

The meetings brought together cardinals from around the world and were structured around linguistic working groups. There were 20 groups in total: 11 composed of non-elector cardinals and nine of elector cardinals, including diocesan ordinaries and apostolic nuncios currently in service. The methodology was designed, according to the Pope, to encourage an exchange of knowledge among participants with diverse backgrounds and pastoral experiences.

During the sessions, themes discussed included synodality, understood “not as a technical process” but as a shared journey, its implications for the exercise of authority in the Church, priestly formation, the work of nuncios, and the life of the Roman Curia, particularly with regard to greater internationalization.

LifeSiteNews previously reported comments by Luigi Casalini of the Italian blog Messainlatino, who questioned the internal process of the meeting, asking who had determined the program, selected the speakers, and decided to reduce the number of discussion topics from four to two, a decision announced by the Pope himself.

According to Vatican News reports released soon after, those questions have now been addressed, with the Holy See clarifying that the choice of topics followed a vote by the cardinals themselves, taken for reasons of time management, in which an overwhelming majority selected the themes of the Church’s mission in the modern world, considered in light of Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortation Evangelii gaudium, and the theme of synodality.

Cardinal Juan José Omella Rueda Aparicio emphasized that the Pope’s decision to convene the consistory eight months after the conclave demonstrated his desire to listen. “This strengthens us in the mission of the Church,” he said. Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David, Archbishop of Kalookan, highlighted the format of the meetings, noting that “everyone was able to speak” and that Pope Leo “listened more than he spoke,” taking notes attentively throughout the discussions.

Several cardinals underlined that the overall atmosphere was marked by what they described as “unity that is not uniformity.”

READ: Pro-LGBT Cdl. Radcliffe urges ‘openness to novelty’ in address to extraordinary consistory

Alongside these official accounts, Messainlatino reported off-the-record comments attributed to unnamed cardinals present at the consistory. According to the blog, some cardinals described the second day as more substantial than the first, while others said that familiar expressions such as “a Church that goes out” and “field hospital” were again used during the discussions, as well as the assertion that “a Church that is not synodal cannot be a true Church.”

The same source claimed that the cardinals were divided into two groups during the sessions, with older cardinals seated at the back. It also reported dissatisfaction among some participants regarding the current doctrinal, theological, and liturgical diversity within the enlarged College of Cardinals, though these remarks were not made publicly. “Some cardinals reported terrible things,” the source says, without going into detail.

The series of extraordinary consistories that will from now on be convened annually is connected to the ecclesial assembly that will be held in October 2028, originally called by Francis and now confirmed by Leo.

The ecclesial assembly will not be a new synod but the culmination of the implementation phase of the Synod on Synodality concluded in 2024.

As explained by Cardinal Mario Grech, Secretary General of the General Secretariat of the Synod, in a letter to bishops and Church leaders sent in March 2025, the assembly will serve to consolidate and evaluate the reception of the synod’s “Final Document,” which Pope Francis formally recognized as “part of the ordinary magisterium of the Successor of Peter.”
"So let us be confident, let us not be unprepared, let us not be outflanked, let us be wise, vigilant, fighting against those who are trying to tear the faith out of our souls and morality out of our hearts, so that we may remain Catholics, remain united to the Blessed Virgin Mary, remain united to the Roman Catholic Church, remain faithful children of the Church."- Abp. Lefebvre
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#2
Usually SSPX News gives us an indult-esque, watered-down version of current events but this article decently emphasizes the implementation of what appears to be infrastructure for the 'synodal church'.


Leo XIV’s Collegial Shift

January 11, 2026
Source: FSSPX News [Emphasis The Catacombs]

At the conclusion of his first extraordinary consistory, Pope Leo XIV announced the convocation of a new meeting of the College of Cardinals on June 27 and 28, and expressed his desire to establish an annual rhythm for these consistories. This radical change in method contrasts sharply with the previous pontificate.

"If not new in substance, at least new in manner": this is the essence of the meeting of cardinals held behind closed doors on January 7 and 8, 2026, at the Vatican. According to Vatican News, Pope Leo XIV would like the cardinals from around the world to meet again in Rome next June, and then annually for a longer duration.

While the convocation of an extraordinary consistory is not new, the real novelty lies in the perpetuation of these meetings. Until now, consistories were convened sporadically.

By establishing an annual frequency, Leo XIV is de facto transforming the College of Cardinals into a true permanent board of directors or, according to some analysts, into an active "senate," even if, at the current stage of understanding, the role of these meetings seems limited to a consultative dimension.


For some, this development aims to break the relative isolation of the top of the hierarchy. By regularly convening the cardinals, Leo XIV ensures that the realities of dioceses on all five continents are directly communicated to the Apostolic Palace. This method would allow for better responsiveness to local issues that often struggle to find a quick response from Rome.

Another benefit lies in the fact that the cardinals will get to know each other better in anticipation of a future conclave. Given the internationalization of the College of Cardinals and the growth in the number of electors, the princes of the Church were quite unanimous, during the last conclave, in saying that they knew each other very little, if at all.

One also senses the new Pope's desire to address the criticisms leveled before the conclave, during the general congregations, against the style of his predecessor, Pope Francis, who favored individual or small-group consultations rather than plenary consistories. Many cardinals regretted the lack of opportunities for collective debate.

Moreover, Pope Leo XIV himself was keen to cultivate a different image, that of a collaborative pontiff who listened more than he spoke and took notes during the interventions of the other cardinals, describing this consistory as a "prefiguration of our future path," while also paying tribute to the elderly and absent cardinals: "Your testimony is precious.... We are with you and we are close to you," he declared.

But this method could have its limitations: by establishing these annual consistories, Pope Leo XIV is outlining a pontificate rooted in the collegiality manifested during the Second Vatican Council, with the unintended consequences that can still be observed in many parts of the universal Church, such as in Germany.

Is there not a risk that this "parliamentarization" of the Church will slow down decision-making and dilute the authority of the successor of Peter? The question at least deserves to be asked.


In any case, this collegial shift, if it proves lasting, could well be one of the most significant first steps of the new pontificate.
"So let us be confident, let us not be unprepared, let us not be outflanked, let us be wise, vigilant, fighting against those who are trying to tear the faith out of our souls and morality out of our hearts, so that we may remain Catholics, remain united to the Blessed Virgin Mary, remain united to the Roman Catholic Church, remain faithful children of the Church."- Abp. Lefebvre
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