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In what is sure to be a closely watched series of catechesis, Pope Leo took up today another document from the Second Vatican Council in his general audiences dedicated to the event, This May 20 he began reflecting on the Council's document on liturgy,Sacrosanctum Concilium.
THE CLERICAL FILES: EXPOSING THE POWER OF HOLY PRIVILEGE
The toxic reality of survivors having to plead their cases before the same celibate men who make, interpret and enforce Church law creates a system of silence and complicity. Toxic theology and statutes in the Code of Canon Law that promote and perpetuate the ‘holy privilege,’ which leads to a dysfunctional Church, must be recognized, condemned, and eliminated.
Cardinals
attend the presentation of "Magnifica Humanitas" at the Vatican's Synod
Hall May 25, 2026, the first encyclical of Pope Leo XIV's papacy, which
focuses on the rise of artificial intelligence. Credit: OSV News photo/Simone Risoluti, Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas,”
has generated many headlines because of its focus on artificial
intelligence. A reader coming to the document from those headlines would
understandably be surprised to find that the first two chapters—out of
five total—barely discuss A.I. at all.
However, I think that when “Magnifica
Humanitas” is quoted and cited by theologians and future popes, as it
certainly will be, those first two chapters will be referenced most
often. Part of the reason is that discussions of A.I., as Leo notes
himself, become “quickly outdated, given the remarkable pace at which
these systems are developing.”
WOW responds toMagnifica Humanitas: ‘When will women receive an apology?’
For Immediate Release 27 May 2026
London, England
Pope Leo’s encyclicalMagnifica Humanitasdescribes the Church's delayed moral development on the issue of slavery as "a wound in Christian memory, one from which we cannot consider ourselves detached." And "for this, in the name of the Church, I sincerely ask for pardon."
Pope
Leo XIV speaks with to Christopher Olah, co-founder of the artificial
intelligence company Anthropic, at the conclusion of a presentation on
the pope's first encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the
Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence,” at the Synod Hall
at the Vatican May 25, 2026. Credit: CNS photo/Lola Gomez
It was a question that was bound to be asked after Pope Leo XIV wrote about artificial intelligence in “Magnifica Humanitas.”
Even though Pope Leo’s first encyclical is more about human dignity,
much of the document comments on and critiques A.I. Almost immediately,
critics asked what the Holy Father and the Vatican could possibly know
about such a complex topic.
One executive in Silicon Valley said to The New York Times
the Vatican “couldn’t have a position on [A.I.], because they don’t
understand it.” In an interview on Fox Business, Interior Secretary Doug
Burgum said, “I didn’t know that tech editorializing was part of the
role of being pope.” This is the main critique: Pope Leo should stay in
his lane. On the other side are those who felt the encyclical did not go
far enough—again, because the pope does not understand A.I., in this
case, the threats it poses. Overly “sanguine,” said one commentator about the Holy Father, critiquing his encyclical as “disappointingly measured and cautious.”