A Just War. Pope Leo and Trump. - Australian Fabians

A Just War. Pope Leo and Trump.

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Published
28 April 2026
Topics
Human Rights
Religion

Pope Leo XIV has spoken on several occasions about the urgent need to seek peace and not war. President Trump and other American politicians have essentially told him to mind his own business and to stick to issues of religious teaching and belief.

But Pope Leo is indeed sticking to his essential business: that of ethical and moral leadership.

The Catholic Church has very explicit teachings about war, which can provide a moral compass for our times. These have two elements. When is it right or morally justified to go to war (The Jus Ad Bellum); and how should war be conducted (the Jus In Bello).

The Church holds that war is a tragic business and should be avoided at all costs. But it recognizes that sometimes force may be justified to respond to grave injustice or violence.

Saint Augustine of Hippo, in the 5th century developed the view that war could be justified in certain circumstances to restrict evil forces. Centuries later, his teaching was clarified in much greater detail by the famous theologian Thomas Aquinas, in the 13th century.

This ‘just war theory’ is still held today as part of official Catholic Church teaching. It is outlined in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (reference sections 2307-2317).

The Jus Ad Bellum requires the following conditions to be fulfilled.

  • There must be a just cause. Force can be used as a form of self-defense by nations against serious aggression. But it cannot be justified by revenge against aggression, or as an attempt to gain economic advantage.
  • War can only be waged by a proper and legal authority, such as a national State or government.
  • There must be a good intention, such as to seek justice and peace, or an end to violence. The goal of gaining power, of destroying another nation state or dominating another culture would not justify military aggression.
  • All other peaceful efforts must have been tried first, such as negotiation, or economic sanctions.
  • There also must be some reasonable prospects of obtaining a positive outcome. Otherwise, a war is only likely to cause more suffering, and would be judged immoral. This principle of proportionality is common in Catholic social and moral teaching. The positives likely to be gained must significantly outweigh the damage that might be caused by any action.

The second part of the Catholic Church’s teaching on The Just War relates to how the war itself should be conducted. This part of the teaching is called: Jus In Bello.

Even if it is possible to justify a war in relation to the earlier conditions, it is important also to consider the way such a war is actually fought.

  • A key element of this teaching is that civilians should never be deliberately targeted.
  • There should be a degree of proportionality in the use of force, a common feature of much Catholic moral teaching. The degree of harm likely to result should always be proportionate to the likely outcome.
  • There should be no actions that could in themselves be classified as evil, such as torture, rape, targeting civilians, or genocide.

Much of the content of the United Nations Declarations following the Second World War was founded on traditional Catholic Church teaching of this nature.

The Catholic Church’s Just War teaching developed over centuries as the shape and manner of wars became more dramatic. For example, the increase in the power and destructive capacity of the weapons used, and in the difficulty of separating combatants from civilians.

The two World Wars had an important impact, urging a clarification of the Church’s teaching. The Church never admits to changing its teaching, just explains the changes as ‘a development of doctrine’!

Following the major conflicts, there was a significant movement (or clarification) in the Church’s teaching, from allowing war according to the above conditions, towards a deepening questioning of the morality of war itself.

The big change came during the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s. Vatican II declared that actions targeting whole populations were ‘a crime against God and humanity’.  Indiscriminate destruction, such as nuclear war, was explicitly condemned.

The teaching also incorporated a recognition of the proper place for conscientious objection, in other words refusing to fight on moral grounds. This became more common in Australia during the Vietnam War.

There was a stronger emphasis on legitimate defense and peace making and prevention of harm. This marked a significant change in emphasis, where the teaching was placing a moral limit on action, rather than giving moral approvalto actions in certain circumstances.

The introduction of nuclear weapons led to a significant change. Pope John XXIII in his encyclical Pacem in Terris (1963) placed a new emphasis on the importance of global governance and human rights. That document argued that war is no longer a proper method of resolving disputes in this nuclear age.

Later, Pope John Paul II took strong opposition to preventive wars such as in Iraq in 2003. And he considered nuclear deterrence as only a temporary, but morally uncertain, stop gap measure. It was never endorsed as morally good, but only as a deterrent measure of last resort.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church in the 1992 edition made the conditions of justifying warfare extremely demanding. The existing teaching was not abandoned, but the development of doctrine refined it in this way.

  • There must be an expectation of lasting, grave and certain damage
  • All alternatives must have been tried
  • There must be a serious prospect of a positive outcome
  • There must be no greater harm resulting.

This development of teaching made it much harder to morally justify the use of war in the modern age. Most conflicts today would not qualify.

Recent Developments under Pope Francis

In his encyclical letter called Fratelli Tutti (2020), Pope Francis wrote: It is very difficult nowadays to invoke the rational criteria elaborated in earlier centuries to speak of the possibility of a ‘just war’.

In recent years, the emphasis of the Catholic Church has moved from asking when war is justified to how do we prevent war altogether? The focus it suggests should be on mediation, the promotion of human rights and the role of international institutions, such as the United Nations.

The Catholic Church’s current teaching is not an outright rejection of all wars but a much greater constriction. It has gone from the idea that war can be justified in certain circumstances to something more like making those conditions so strict that modern warfare could rarely meet them.

Pope Leo

So, finally, why has Pope Leo been so committed to speaking publicly about efforts to promote peace at the present time?

A few clues exist in his choice of Leo as his formal title and his membership of the Order of Saint Augustine within the Catholic Church.

The Augustinian Order was founded in the 13th century by the likes of Pope Innocent IV and Pope Alexander IV. It was influenced by the teachings of Saint Augustine from the 4th century.

Augustine had a strong religious conviction that the seeking of peace was the deepest human goal. He defined peace as the tranquility of orderin other words, a type of harmony where everything is rightly ordered towards God.

For Augustinians, promoting peace means restoring right relationships, both within the self, between people, and in the wider society.

The current Pope’s choice of Leo as his Papal Title, is now understood to reflect an endeavor to continue the work of Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903). Leo XIII’s encyclical letter Rerum Novarum dealt with the underlying causes of social unrest, workers’ rights, and economic justice, and was very much related to the promotion of peace in society and in the wider world.

So, there is absolutely no surprise that Pope Leo XIV has kept a consistent focus in his preaching and teaching on the critical importance of promoting peace in the contemporary world.

His current emphasis on this teaching is both consistent and apolitical. If he wanted to be political in this matter, he could be… but he is far too intelligent,and a man of far too great integrity, to do that.

Peter Norden AO,

April 2026

Peter is a Fabian and a former Jesuit priest. His forty years in The Jesuits, and the close associations he had during that time with key leaders in the Catholic Church, both nationally and internationally, gave him a more than ordinary insight into this area of contemporary community interest and concern.

In 2007, he was made an Officer in the Order of Australia for services to community development through social research and programs aimed at assisting marginalized young people and offenders, to the mental health sector, and to the Catholic Church in Australia.

 

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