Norwegian confirmands meet Pope Leo XIV in private Vatican audience
Two young Norwegian confirmands from the 2_igreja congregation in Oslo have been confirmed during a private visit to Pope Leo XIV in Rome, the Catholic Diocese of Oslo confirmed today. The pair, identified only as 16-year-olds from the parish of St. Olav, met the pontiff in a 20-minute audience on 28 May, marking the first time a group of Lutheran-origin confirmands from Norway has been received by a pope in a non-ecumenical setting.
According to Bishop Bernt Eidsvig, the visit was arranged at the request of the confirmands’ parents, who sought a “moment of spiritual encouragement” ahead of the youths’ confirmation in the Church of Norway. The diocese stressed that the meeting was pastoral, not theological, and that no joint liturgical act took place. The confirmands presented the pope with a hand-stitched altar cloth bearing the Norwegian coat of arms, a gift later described by Vatican spokesperson Matteo Bruni as “a sign of the deep bonds between the Nordic peoples and the universal Church.”
The visit coincides with Pope Leo XIV’s impending trip to Spain, where he is expected to address the country’s political divisions. Spanish bishops have framed the journey as an opportunity to “revitalise democratic dialogue,” with Madrid’s auxiliary bishop Luis Argüello telling *El Mundo* that the pope’s words in Congress could “restore the prestige of the Cortes.” The Norwegian confirmands’ audience, however, was not listed on the Vatican’s official schedule, and no photographs have been released.
Background: The 2_igreja initiative, launched in 2024 by the Oslo diocese, offers Catholic confirmation preparation to young people from Lutheran backgrounds who wish to deepen their faith within the Catholic Church. While the Church of Norway does not recognise Catholic confirmation, the programme has grown to include 47 participants this year, up from 12 in its first year. The visit to Rome underscores the Vatican’s quiet outreach to Northern Europe, where Catholic communities remain small but increasingly diverse.
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