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Editor’s note: This article is adapted from the Laetare lecture on March 26, given in New York after the author was awarded the Loyola Medal by the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola.
Pope Francis’ vast legacy will take a generation to unpack. But already it is being developed in Pope Leo XIV, who was “the last surprise of Pope Francis” according to the subtitle of a recent account of the conclave that elected him from America correspondent Gerard O’Connell and Elisabetta Piqué. The cardinals spoke in the weeks before that election a year ago of the need to press on with the era opened by Francis, which they sought to capture in such words as humble, pastoral, merciful, synodal, missionary, discerning and fraternal.
Reflecting their desires, Leo told the cardinals right after the conclave that he would “continue on the journey” Francis had started. He described it as “renewing the path of the Second Vatican Council,” which, he said, Francis “masterfully and concretely set forth” in his first great teaching document, “The Joy of the Gospel” (“Evangelii Gaudium”).
The insulting shouts are met with cheers from within the town hall.
At the microphone, a man yells at the life-size cardboard cutout of Eli Crane, our U.S. Representative from District 2, who had not responded to the invitation to the town hall from his constituents in Flagstaff, Ariz.
“Eli Crane does not care about his constituents! He is a self-centered disgrace, who doesn’t even live in his district!”
The room sends forth an uproar of agreement. I squirm in my seat. As a Catholic who is active in environmental and creation care advocacy, I also don’t agree with many of Eli Crane’s policies, but this moment felt uncomfortably emblematic of the way I’ve noticed our country falling deeper into division and hatred.
EDITORIAL: If, God willing, this surreal episode is coming to a close, it’s a good time to reflect on some of the lessons we can learn from it.
Could we be nearing a cessation of hostilities in one of the world’s most senseless conflicts? Let’s hope so.
We’re speaking of the fierce criticism President Donald Trump has leveled this past week against Pope Leo XIV, which has stunned and deeply offended many of the president’s Catholic supporters.
In a series of diatribes — coupled with a sacrilegious AI-generated image, which Trump posted on social media and later took down, depicting himself dressed like Jesus — the president repeatedly accused the American-born Pontiff of liberal politicking, chafing at his vocal opposition to the U.S.-led war with Iran and the Trump administration’s aggressive mass deportation of immigrants living in the country illegally.