Young people are beacons of hope, said Pope Leo XIV ahead of Jubilee of Young People

Bella Bailey

Multimedia Correspondent

The Jubilee of Young People is set to take place July 28–August 3 as part of the 2025 Jubilee Year: Pilgrims of Hope. Specific jubilee days within the jubilee year are meant to celebrate and recognize groups of people within the Church, highlighting them and their contributions.

The Jubilee of Young People, or youth, recognizes men and women ages 18-35 and invites them to continue on their journeys as Pilgrims of Hope.

In his 2023 message to youth for World Youth Day the late Holy Father Pope Francis said, “As young people, you are indeed the joyful hope of the Church and of a humanity always on the move.”

It is a continuation, then, of this joyful hope that will draw an estimated 1,000,000 young people to Rome, fulfilling their jubilee call to be pilgrims of hope.

“To the young people gathered here I would like to say that you are the promise of hope for so many of us,” said Pope Leo XIV in a video message during Mass at White Sox Stadium, Chicago, June 14, “…As you offer your own experience of joy and hope you find out, you can discover, that you too are indeed beacons of hope.”

The light from that beacon of hope is the radiant faith in Jesus Christ, said Pope Leo XIV, which grows brighter as people grow in unity and communion with others. Pilgrims traveling to Rome for the Jubilee of Young People will have the chance to unite and grow in that communion with others.

For those unable to travel to Rome there are many ways to engage with the local faith community and prayerfully participate in the Jubilee of Young People. Making a pilgrimage to a diocesan cathedral is recommended by the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops (USCCB) as a way to participate and become a pilgrim of hope during the jubilee.

The Diocese of Covington’s own Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption, Covington, has been designated by Bishop John Iffert as a sacred site where one could receive a jubilee indulgence, as well as St. John the Evangelist Church, Carrollton and St. Patrick Church, Maysville. A pilgrimage to any one of these sacred sites will allow those unable to attend the celebrations in Rome to have a pilgrimage experience for the Jubilee of Young People.

In addition to pilgrimages to local jubilee sites, the USCCB also recommends taking time for prayer and reflection. Specifically focusing on God’s providential graces and divine mercy, prayer is another way to celebrate the Jubilee of Young People from home.

In his video message Pope Leo XIV said, “When I see each and every one of you, when I see how people gather together to celebrate their faith, I discover how much hope there is in the world. In this Jubilee Year of Hope, Christ — who is our hope — calls all of us to come together that we might be that true living example of the light of hope in the world today.”