A missionary pope: What Pope Leo XIV’s years in Peru tell us about how he’ll lead the church
Dan Turley, O.S.A., was not among the people surprised that his friend and fellow Augustinian, Cardinal Robert Prevost, had been elected pope. “I was not totally shocked. I was sort of even expecting it, you could say.” He had snapped awake in the middle of the night at the time he believes the world’s cardinals had been electing his old friend to the highest office in the church.
“I asked myself, ‘I wonder if he has been chosen…’” He can’t help but chuckle as he shares the story.
“I know the new pope, Leo XIV, very well,” Bishop Turley says, speaking from Chicago where he has “retired” to work with Augustinian pre-novices and assist with the archdiocese’s confirmation program. “He’s just a wonderful person…. If you commission him in something, you delegate something to him, you know that it’s going to be done and that it’s going to be done well.”