Audio By Carbonatix
Pope Leo XIV will give his first Sunday blessing and address to a crowd in St Peter's Square in the Vatican today.
He will recite the Regina Caeli prayer, in honour of the Virgin Mary, in his first public address since his election was announced with white smoke on Thursday.
After delivering Sunday mass, Pope Leo will bless those gathered on the square outside - and deliver his reflections.
On Saturday, he visited a shrine outside Rome and then prayed before the tomb of his late predecessor Francis inside the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.
Pope Leo will be formally inaugurated at a mass in St Peter's Square next week on 18 May.

The Pope was chosen as the new leader of the Catholic Church on Thursday, following a two-day conclave in Vatican City.
It has been a busy week for the pontiff, who held his first Mass as Pope in the Sistine chapel on Friday before speaking to cardinals on Saturday.
During this meeting, he described himself as an unworthy choice for Pope, and vowed to continue the "precious legacy" of his predecessor.
He highlighted the importance of missionary work and discussion – as well as care for those he called the "least and the rejected".
He explained he had chosen the name Leo after a 19th-century Pope known for his teaching on social justice.
The new Pope also suggested the development of artificial intelligence and other advances meant the church was necessary today for the defence of human dignity and justice.
He is due to hold an audience with the media on Monday ahead of his inauguration next Sunday.
As part of that mass he will deliver a homily in the presence of numerous heads of state and dignitaries.
The 69-year-old is the 267th occupant of the throne of St Peter, and the first American to become a pontiff. He will lead members of the Catholic Church's global community of 1.4bn people.
Born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago, he worked for many years as a missionary in Peru before being made an archbishop there. He also has Peruvian nationality.
Although Leo was born in the US, the Vatican described him as the second pope from the Americas. Pope Francis, from Argentina, was the first.
Pope Leo is widely seen as a moderate who can offer "continuity" and "unity" following the death of his predecessor last month.
The new pontiff is believed to have shared Francis' views on migrants, the poor and the environment.
In his first speech he told the crowds he wanted "to walk together with you as a united Church searching all together for peace and justice".
Latest Stories
-
From fear to empowerment: Dzifa Gunu’s mission to transform Ghana’s digital future
2 minutes -
Wontumi Farms, directors to face prosecution over GH₵24m alleged EXIM Bank loan fraud
8 minutes -
PAG demands answers on EOCO’s record GH¢337m recoveries
10 minutes -
AG: Gov’t will use surcharge and disallowance to recover mismanaged public funds
13 minutes -
Sarkodie recounts terrible ‘wee biscuit’ experience during US show
15 minutes -
1D1F: The policy that broke Ghana’s industrial summit
16 minutes -
GT Music Concert lights up Accra as Ghana and Nigeria’s stars share one stage
23 minutes -
Bawumia appeals to NPP delegates: ‘Vote for me on competence, track record and vision’
46 minutes -
NDC supported establishment of Office of the Special Prosecutor – Samuel Jinapor
50 minutes -
High Court bars investigative journalist from publishing on private individual, imposes GH¢10,000 cost
2 hours -
‘Inconsistent Vinicius Jnr not on Neymar’s level’ – ex Botafogo manager
2 hours -
T-bills: Government records 47% oversubscription; interest rates fall
2 hours -
OSP deserves a second chance; it must decentralise its operations
2 hours -
Dafeamekpor says OSP is “guzzling money”
2 hours -
Stabilising the cedi should not come at the expense of Ghanaian workers
2 hours
