VATICAN CITY — Pope Leo XIV said Thursday he intended to bring the world's Catholic cardinals together annually, indicating a new governing style for the church that cardinals welcomed as a chance to get to know themselves and the pope better and be of greater service to the church.
At the end of his first consistory, as such meetings are called, Leo asked cardinals to return to Rome for a second session at the end of June and from then onward on an annual basis for three to four days each year, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said.
Cardinals said the proposed date for the second session would be June 27-28, before a big June 29 feast day.
Pope Francis had largely eschewed consistories and the College of Cardinals as a whole to help him govern. Instead, Francis had a hand-picked group of nine cardinals who met every few months at the Vatican to advise him.
Before the May conclave that elected Leo, some of the 245 cardinals had complained about Francis' go-it-alone governing style and called for the new pope to convene regular consistories so the cardinals could gather as a group and advise the pope on pressing issues facing the church.
Leo made clear he had heard their complaints and was responding to them. He convened his first consistory the day after he closed out the 2025 Holy Year, which in some ways signaled the start of his pontificate after he wrapped up Francis' Jubilee obligations.
''I think the pope wants to be collegial, and he wants to draw on the experience and the knowledge of different cardinals coming from all the different parts of the world," Cardinal Stephen Brislin, archbishop of Johannesburg, South Africa, told a press conference after the meeting.
"Because obviously the Catholic Church is a universal body, and the richness that comes from the experiences of people in other parts of the world really helps, I think, the successor of Peter in order to give leadership to the church,'' he said.