King Charles III, Supreme Governor of England, and Pope Leo XIV, head of the Roman Catholic Church, today made history by praying together publicly in the Sistine Chapel, completing a symbolic act of reconciliation that formally closes a rift stretching back nearly 500 years to the Protestant Reformation.
The joint prayer was the centerpiece of the King's state visit to the Holy See on Thursday, a moment hailed by both Buckingham Palace and the Vatican as a "landmark" in ecumenical relations between the two global Christian faiths.
The Five-Century Divide Transcended
The King's participation in the solemn ecumenical service marks the first time since the 16th-century schism, triggered by King Henry VIII’s split from Rome, that a reigning British monarch has joined a Pontiff in public worship.
The ceremony, held beneath Michelangelo’s iconic frescoes, featured a joint choir performance by the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel Choir and choristers from St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, visually and audibly symbolizing the new era of Christian unity.
A Buckingham Palace spokesperson framed the visit as a vital demonstration of solidarity:
“At times of such global challenge, it has seldom been more important for Christian communities around the world to unite in faith and in fellowship... This provides a bulwark against those promoting conflict, division and tyranny.”








