‘To the Heights!’: SEEK 2026 invites young Catholics to rediscover holiness

In Columbus, Ohio, college students are gathering this week for SEEK 2026, the annual conference hosted by the Catholic student ministry FOCUS. The conference is being held simultaneously in three cities — Columbus; Fort Worth, Texas; and Denver — with more than 26,000 students attending across all locations.

The unifying theme across all three sites is “To the Heights!” drawn from the life of St. Pier Giorgio Frassati, the young Italian layman canonized this past September alongside St. Carlo Acutis by Pope Leo XIV.

A display of St. Pier Giorgio Frassati sits at SEEK 2026 in Columbus, Ohio, on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. This year’s SEEK theme across all three of the conference locations is “To the Heights!”, inspired by St. Pier Giorgio, who was canonized in 2025. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News
A display of St. Pier Giorgio Frassati sits at SEEK 2026 in Columbus, Ohio, on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. This year’s SEEK theme across all three of the conference locations is “To the Heights!”, inspired by St. Pier Giorgio, who was canonized in 2025. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News

Frassati, who cared deeply for the poor, received the Eucharist daily, and loved the outdoors, frequently used the phrase “Verso l’alto” and wrote it on photographs taken during mountain climbs as a sign of his lifelong pursuit of heaven.

Acutis, who died from acute promyelocytic leukemia at the age of 15 in 2006, became known for his devotion to the Eucharist and for using technology to share Eucharistic miracles online. Both saints show young Catholics today that holiness is possible in ordinary life.

The limitless love of God

On the conference’s opening night on Jan. 1, speakers began unpacking what the pursuit of “the heights” means in Christian life. Sister Josephine Garrett of the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth, one of the keynote speakers, framed the theme not as an abstract ideal but as a personal encounter with God.

“The heights that this conference speaks of is only one thing,” Sister Josephine told the Columbus crowd. “It’s the love of God — the love that he has for me, and the love he has for you.”

Sisters Cassidy (left) and Carlie Foos (right), from Kansas, Ohio, attend their very first SEEK Conference on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News
Sisters Cassidy (left) and Carlie Foos (right), from Kansas, Ohio, attend their very first SEEK Conference on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News

That love, she suggested, is the force that draws believers upward; not away from the world but rather deeper into it, transformed by God’s presence.

For Father Vincent Bernhard, OP, associate director of the Catholic Center at New York University, Frassati’s witness feels especially relevant for young Catholics today.

A Dominican friar for eight years, Bernhard has attended SEEK three times and recently led 15 young men in a pilgrimage following Frassati’s footsteps through Turin and up to the Rocca di Polona, ending in Rome to pray before his tomb on display for the Jubilee of Youth.

“People are looking for direction,” Bernhard told CNA. “When they come to the Church wanting to live the faith vibrantly, they’re often misunderstood. That was Frassati’s experience too.”

Bernhard described Frassati’s faith as “radical, complete, and holy,” noting that his total gift of self to God often set him apart from others — even within his own family. Yet it was that constant striving for “higher and better things,” he said, that gave Frassati his joy.

“At the end of his life,” Bernhard said, recalling Frassati’s death from polio at age 24, “he understood that his lifelong desire to go ‘to the heights’ meant he was heading toward the height of heights: heaven.”

‘We can be saints, too’

For many students at SEEK, Frassati’s canonization — alongside Acutis’ — has made sainthood feel newly attainable.

“’To the Heights!’ means striving for heaven every day,” said Gabrielle Nofal, 22, a student attending SEEK with others from the University of South Carolina. “Young people are often told we’re not good enough, but seeing saints canonized around our age shows us that we can be saints, too.”

She noted that witnessing their lives inspires her own faith: “It made me want to replicate their authentic joy; especially the way Frassati just loved people with his whole heart. Carlo, too, even evangelized his nanny and teachers at school. They really just radiated the light of the Lord.”

Sisters Carlie, 21, and Cassidy Foos, 20, who traveled from rural northwest Ohio with different campus groups, said the theme helps them reorient their focus toward eternity.

“This world isn’t it,” Cassidy said. “There’s something higher. It’s about connecting and focusing on eternity, not just what’s in front of us.”

Carlie added: “When I think of saints, I usually think of people from long ago. Seeing ones from our time or around our age, like Frassati and Carlo, is so encouraging. They show that holiness is possible now, and that we can live faithfully and joyfully with heaven in mind, no matter what we’re experiencing.”

Jumping to ‘the heights’

The theme is highlighted in playful ways at Columbus’ “Mission Way,” a bustling area of vendors, stands, and activities. Students can try “Jump to the Heights,” sprinting and leaping to hit targets placed high above — an embodiment of the conference’s message of striving upward.

A participant at SEEK 2026 “jumps to the heights” on Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News
A participant at SEEK 2026 “jumps to the heights” on Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. | Credit: Gigi Duncan/EWTN News

Students from Missouri University of Science and Technology described the theme using Frassati’s own imagery. “It’s like finding that mountain of faith and using SEEK as a stepping stone to grow,” said Blake Schreckenberg, 19.

His classmate Lane Jennings, 19, said SEEK has helped him move beyond a surface-level understanding of Catholicism. “I knew a lot about the faith before, but SEEK goes deeper and ‘to the heights.’ It’s not just answers; it’s understanding how to live faithfully.”

University of Louisville students, including David Deneve, 19, connected the playful activity and theme to a spiritual reflection. “To me, ‘to the heights’ means that God is above us, and we need to keep our eyes focused on him in everything that we do. His will is the best possible path.”

Thomas Davis, 23, added: “Although God meets us at our lowest points, through his love and through the Church, he raises us to something higher. Just like Frassati and Acutis.”

As the conference continues through the week, students will encounter the theme in Mass, confession, Eucharistic adoration, and speaker sessions. Shortly before the opening night Mass in Columbus, Father Kevin Dyer, SJ, offered only a brief glimpse of the excitement that lies ahead.

“We’re going to learn that phrase means together this week,” he said. “To the Heights!”


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