Hundreds of US Catholic Bishops celebrate Mass in Orlando Hundreds of US Catholic Bishops celebrate Mass in Orlando 

Catholic Bishops consecrate USA to Sacred Heart of Jesus

Ahead of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, US Catholic Bishops gather in Florida to consecrate the United States to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

By Jenny Kraska*

On June 11, 2026, on the eve of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, the Catholic Bishops of the nation gathered in Orlando, Florida for a remarkable and deeply symbolic act: the consecration of the United States to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

At a time when political divisions run deep, institutions face declining trust, and many Americans express uncertainty about the future, the Bishops offered something that was neither a policy proposal nor a politician platform.

Instead, they offered a prayer. Yet this was no ordinary prayer.

Consecration is among the Church’s most profound spiritual acts. To consecrate is to entrust, to place oneself under the loving protection of Christ. It is an acknowledgment that, despite all human achievements and failures, history ultimately belongs to God.

In his homily for the occasion, Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore captured the meaning of the moment with clarity and conviction.

tanding before his brother Bishops and the faithful gathered for the liturgy, he explained that the Church was not gathering “first to celebrate ourselves, but to consecrate. To entrust.” Those simple words provided the key to understanding the significance of the day.

An Act of Faith

Archbishop Lori reminded the faithful that consecration is fundamentally an act of faith. It recognizes that the story of a nation is not merely the story of political leaders, military victories, economic accomplishments, or cultural achievements. It is also the story of God’s providence and grace at work through imperfect people.

As the United States approaches its Semiquincentennial, there will be no shortage of celebrations, commemorations, and historical reflections.

Yet the Bishops chose to begin this anniversary year not with triumphalism but with humility.

“We consecrate our nation,” Archbishop Lori said, “not because it is perfect, but because it is beloved by God.”

Those words offer a distinctly Christian vision of patriotism. Love of country does not require blindness to its faults. Genuine love seeks what is good, acknowledges what is broken, and entrusts both to the mercy of God.

The consecration therefore became an act of gratitude and repentance, thanksgiving and petition. The Bishops entrusted to the Heart of Christ the nation’s achievements and failures, its strengths and wounds, its hopes and fears.

The Heart of Christ and the Heart of a Nation

Drawing upon the Gospel of John, Archbishop Lori reflected on Jesus’ invitation: “Remain in my love.”

The Sacred Heart, he noted, is not merely a devotional image. It is the visible sign of God’s love made flesh—a Heart that has experienced friendship and betrayal, joy and sorrow, suffering and sacrifice.

The significance of this insight cannot be overstated. In a culture that often prizes autonomy and self-sufficiency, the Bishops publicly acknowledged that neither individuals nor nations can flourish apart from God.

The future of the country ultimately depends not only on stronger institutions or better policies, important as those may be, but on hearts transformed by divine love.

The Sacred Heart reminds believers that God does not stand distant from human struggles. He enters them. He bears them. He redeems them.

Sent Forth to Bear Fruit

Archbishop Lori reminded the faithful that consecration is not an ending but a beginning. The Church does not consecrate itself to the Sacred Heart merely to receive blessings.

It consecrates itself in order to become a more faithful instrument of Christ’s love in the world.

“The Sacred Heart does not divide; it reconciles,” the Archbishop said. “It does not harden hearts; it transforms them.” In a nation increasingly tempted to define itself through ideological conflict and cultural polarization, those words sounded both timely and prophetic. 

The true fruit of this consecration will not be measured by the beauty of the liturgy or the significance of the ceremony.

It will be measured by whether Catholics become more faithful disciples bearing witness to Christ’s love in their families, parishes, workplaces, communities, and public life. 

Trusting the One Whose Love Endures Forever

As the homily drew to a close, Archbishop Lori offered what may be the most enduring lesson of the day. 

As Americans look toward the nation’s 250th anniversary, he suggested that there are two temptations: nostalgia for the past and anxiety about the future.

The Christian answer to both is trust. “Today we choose something better: trust,” he said.

That trust is ultimately what the consecration expressed.

By consecrating the nation to the Sacred Heart, the Bishops did not claim that American is without flaws or that its future is guaranteed.

Rather, they proclaimed a deeper truth: that the nation, like every human person, is loved by God and stands in need of His mercy. On the eve of America’s 250th birthday, that may be the most important message the Church can offer.

* Executive Director, Maryland Catholic Conference

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13 June 2026, 16:17