‘Dilexi Te’: The Franciscan Framework of Pope Leo’s First Document

National Catholic Register, 8 October 2025

The challenge of using such a framework is that many audiences take Brother Sun and Mother Earth and leave aside Sister Death and the danger of mortal sin.

The first major document of a pontificate is highly anticipated as an indication of the new Pope’s agenda. Pope Leo XIV has chosen to place his first document, the apostolic exhortation Dilexi Te (I Have Loved You) into a Franciscan framework.

The Vatican press office, unusually, carried a news item that Dilexi Te had been signed on Saturday, the feast of St. Francis of Assisi, Oct. 4. The public presentation of the document will take place on Oct. 9; usually it is only then that it is revealed when the document was officially signed, customarily on a particular feast day. In announcing the signing already, the Holy Father wanted to pay homage to St. Francis. 

In that, he is also honoring his predecessor Pope Francis, who took his regnal name after the saint from Assisi. There is a deliberate display of continuity, which is typical in the early months of a new pontificate.

Two years ago, Pope Francis also signed on the feast of St. Francis an apostolic exhortation, Laudate Deum, a very specific scientific analysis and policy prescription regarding climate change. It was a follow-up to his 2015 encyclical on the environment, Laudato Si.

Pope Francis lifted up St. Francis as a model of “care for our common home,” resonating with widespread esteem for the saint from Assisi as an ecological patron. St. Francis, though, is not known as “the gardener” — a figure rich in biblical imagery — but as il Poverello, the “Poor Man.”

Dilexi Te is reported to be about care for and service to the poor, and thus Pope Leo XIV has chosen to emphasize that complementary aspect of St. Francis. The text is reported to have begun under Pope Francis, who frequently spoke of listening with care to the “cry of the earth” and the “cry of the poor.”

Incidentally, the Italian Parliament voted last week to reestablish the feast of St. Francis, who is the national patron of Italy, as a national holiday next year, marking the 800th anniversary of his death. The Franciscans worldwide have been preparing for that anniversary by marking the other 800th anniversaries of significant moments in the last years of their founder’s life. 

The anniversary of the first Christmas Nativity scene in 1223, a popular devotional invention of St. Francis, was observed in 2023. Last year, 2024, marked the 800th anniversary of Francis receiving the stigmata. This year, 2025, has been dedicated by the Franciscans to the Canticle of the Creatures, the poem Francis wrote, which was also sung as he lay dying. It is one of the earliest examples of extant Italian literature. In the poem, sometimes called the Canticle of the Sun, Francis gives praise to the Lord through all creation. 

Praise be You, Lord, with all your creatures,

Especially Brother Sun,

Who is the day and through whom 

You give us light.

And he is beautiful and radiant with great splendor

And bears a likeness of You, Most High One.

Francis continues to praise Sister Moon and Brother Wind, Sister Water and Brother Fire, finally praising “Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us.”

In certain circles, often left out is the stanza about death and judgment:

Praised be You, my Lord, 

through our Sister Bodily Death,
From whom no one living can escape.
Woe to those who die in mortal sin.
Blessed are those whom death will find in 

Your most holy will,
For the second death shall do them no harm.

Pope Francis took the title Laudato Si from the Canticle of the Creatures, with its repeated refrain: Praised be You, Lord.

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