It began with a question so gentle it felt like a whisper in the soul: Dear young people, what do you seek? Pope Leo I XIV’s voice carried across three cities—Columbus, Denver, and Fort Worth—reaching thousands of young adults gathered for Seek 26. The question wasn’t a lecture or a command. It wasn’t even an answer. It was an invitation, small enough to bypass defenses yet heavy enough to linger long after the applause faded.
In Columbus, the question landed among joyful faces hiding quiet tension—the kind carried by people who have been “fine” for too long. In Denver, it reached those hoping the mountains could clear the fog of uncertainty. And in Fort Worth, it found exhausted volunteers and students running on pressure, unsure where they were headed. Beneath the surface, they all carried the same unspoken ache: What do I actually want?

The Pope’s message didn’t offer quick fixes or slogans. Instead, he anchored it in the Gospel of John, where Jesus turns to two disciples and asks, What do you seek? It’s a question that doesn’t allow for surface-level answers. It asks what your life is truly oriented around, what you’re pursuing when no one is watching.
Pope Leo spoke with a tenderness that made the question feel personal. He described the disciples’ restlessness not as rebellion but as a sign of being awake. Their longing wasn’t a defect—it was the beginning of transformation. “What if your restlessness,” he asked, “isn’t the problem? What if it’s the part of you that refuses to settle for less than what you were made for?”
This reframing hit home for many who had learned to treat their restlessness as a flaw. They had been numbing it with productivity, attention, and control, mistaking comfort for fulfillment. But the Pope challenged them to listen to their longing instead of silencing it. “The heart does not hunger for nothing,” he said. “Longing points to something real.”

As the message unfolded, it dismantled false expectations. Some had come seeking certainty without risk, direction without surrender, or faith without intimacy. But Pope Leo reminded them that the Christian life is not a system of solutions—it’s a relationship with a person. And relationships begin not with control, but with presence.
The Gospel scene came alive as the Pope described how the disciples, upon hearing Jesus’ question, responded not with theological arguments but with a simple, vulnerable request: Where are you staying? It was a plea for proximity, an invitation to come close enough for faith to become personal. “Can we come close enough,” the Pope asked, “for this to change us?”
This led to a deeper challenge: Do not be afraid to ask him what he is calling you to. Vocations—whether priesthood, religious life, marriage, or family life—are not burdens but paths to fulfillment. The Pope acknowledged the fears that often block young adults from embracing their callings: fear of losing control, fear of choosing wrongly, fear of sacrifice, and fear of standing apart. But he insisted that God’s call is not a trap; it’s an alignment with the deepest desires of the heart. “God does not compete with your joy,” he said. “He completes it.”

The message reached its climax with a call to trust. “Let Christ lead,” the Pope urged. “Surrender the false safety of control and allow him to guide you toward true fulfillment.” He pointed to Mary, Mother of God, as the ultimate example of trust—her “yes” to God’s plan, even without knowing all the answers, became a model for every restless heart.
The conference ended not with perfect clarity, but with peace. It was the peace of readiness, of no longer fearing the questions that point to transformation. The world outside remained bright with Christmas lights, but for those who heard the Pope’s message, something had shifted. They left not with every answer, but with the courage to ask: What do you seek? And, perhaps more importantly, Will you let him tell you who you are?
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