Pope Francis paid a short visit Wednesday to the Little Sisters of the Poor community in Washington, D.C., to support them in their court case over the Affordable Care Act’s contraception mandate, the Vatican’s spokesman revealed.

It was a “short visit that was not in the program,” the Rev. Federico Lombardi, director of the Holy See Press Office, said at an evening news conference during the papal visit to the nation’s capital.

“This is a sign, obviously, of support for them” in their court case, he affirmed.

The sisters filed a lawsuit against the Obama administration over its 2012 mandate that employers provide insurance coverage for birth control, sterilizations, and drugs that can cause abortions. The sisters have maintained that to provide the coverage would violate their religious beliefs.

“This is a sign, obviously, of support for them” in their court case.

Even after the Obama administration modified the rules as an “accommodation” for objecting organizations, the sisters held that even under the revised rules, they would have to violate their consciences.

The majority of a three-judge panel for the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in July that the Little Sisters of the Poor did not establish that the mandate was a “substantial burden” on their free exercise of religion, and thus ruled they still had to abide by the mandate.

The papal visit was not on Pope Francis’ official schedule for his Washington, D.C., visit, which included Wednesday visits to the White House, a midday prayer service with the U.S. bishops at St. Matthew’s Cathedral, and the canonization mass for St. Junipero Serra at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

It was a “little addition to the program, but I think it has an important meaning,” Lombardi said.

He said the visit “is connected” to “the words that the pope has said in support of the position of the bishops of the United States in the speech to President (Barack) Obama and also in the speech to the bishops.”

Pope Francis, with Obama at the White House, called religious freedom “one of America’s most precious possessions” and had hearkened to the U.S. bishops’ defense of religious freedom.

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“All are called to be vigilant, precisely as good citizens, to preserve and defend that freedom from everything that would threaten or compromise it,” he had said.

It was a “little addition to the program, but I think it has an important meaning”

Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville, president of the U.S. Bishops Conference, said  he was “so pleased” to hear of pope’s visit with the sisters.

“As you know, the last thing the Little Sisters of the Poor want to do is sue somebody. They don’t want to sue in court,” he insisted. “They simply want to serve people who are poor and elderly, and they want to do it in a way that doesn’t conflict with their beliefs.”

The archbishop had previously warned against a “interpreting freedom of religion in a very narrow way” in the news conference, and emphasized that religion is not something practiced just for an hour on Sunday, but something lived out. To prove his point, he used the Little Sisters as an example.

“We need to make room within our nation for people who have deeply held religious beliefs not to be forced to do that,” he added.

This article originally appeared in Catholic News Agency.