Wednesday, May 27, 2026

A capitalist (priest) reads ‘Magnifica Humanitas’

 

Faith and Reason

A capitalist (priest) reads ‘Magnifica Humanitas’

Copies of "Magnifica Humanitas" are seen 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

I am a capitalist. As a graduate of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who studied finance, accounting and economics (and worked in corporate finance before entering the Jesuits), I believe that capitalism is the economic system that most efficiently distributes goods and services. Adam Smith’s image of the “invisible hand,” in which self-interest and the desire to make money naturally drive people to respond to market forces in a more efficient way than in any other system, has always made sense to me. And the market (or economy) does best when left alone, not managed by the state. This notion, sometimes called “free-market capitalism,” “laissez-faire capitalism” or “neo-liberalism,” has always rung true.

Seeing What’s Not There

 

Bishop Robert E. Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota speaks at the Rededicate 250 (OSV News screenshot).

“Religion and humanity had nothing to do with this question. Interest alone is the governing principle with nations.”

 —John Rutledge of South Carolina, August 6, 1787, during debate on the slave trade, recorded in James Madison’s “Notes on the Debates in the Federal Convention”

I tried to watch as much as I could of “Rededicate 250: A National Jubilee of Prayer, Praise, and Thanksgiving,” held on the National Mall on May 17. Featuring Evangelical leaders like Dutch Sheets and Lou Engle on the same stage as Bishop Robert Barron, the event purportedly marked the 250th anniversary of a “Day of Humiliation, Fasting, and Prayer” observed by the Second Continental Congress. Its estrangement from the rigors of history and theology stretched farther than the Trump administration’s seeming determination to avoid “humiliation” and “fasting.” Despite an abundance of contrary evidence, for a long time the common refrain among Catholics and Evangelicals (generally those lining up behind Republican candidates) has been that the United States was founded explicitly as a Christian nation, just as the speakers at Rededicate 250 affirmed over and over. Our founding documents make no such claim. None of the men present at the Continental Congress or the Constitutional Convention said any such thing. Yet still the idea persists.

Catholic leaders weigh in on pope's AI encyclical, say it will take time to fully unpack

 

Catholic leaders weigh in on pope's AI encyclical, say it will take time to fully unpack

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Pope Leo XIV calls for AI to be ‘disarmed,’ directed to the common good

 

Speeches

Pope Leo XIV calls for AI to be ‘disarmed,’ directed to the common good

Pope Leo XIV attends the presentation of "Magnifica Humanitas" at the Vatican's Synod Hall May 25, 2026, the first encyclical of his papacy, which focuses on the rise of artificial intelligence. Credit: OSV News photo/Yara Nardi, Reuters

Editors’ note: This is the full text of the address from Pope Leo XIV during the presentation and promulgation of his encyclicalMagnifica Humanitas.

Dear brothers and sisters,

I want to thank all of you for being here today, for your interest. I sincerely thank those who have organized this meeting today, and especially those who shared their competence and experience in the different reflections that we have listened to.

In a special way I would like to thank Mr Olah for accepting our invitation. In turn, in the name of the Church, I accept your invitation to walk together, to listen and to speak and together to find the way for humanity, in this time of artificial intelligence

Reviving the Pro-Life Democrat

 

Former U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., speaks during the annual March for Life rally in Washington January 21, 2022 (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn).

Last year, New York Times columnist and podcaster Ezra Klein suggested that the Democratic Party should be willing to run pro-life candidates for office. “I want to see real decisions being made to try to compete in Kansas and Missouri and Ohio,” he told New Yorker editor David Remnick. “When Obamacare passed, about forty House Democrats were pro-life. People got very upset about that. I get why, but I think it’s worth thinking about this.” In an interview with his colleague Ross Douthat, he said Democrats need “to open your coalition to people you didn’t want it open to before.” The reaction was fierce. “Throwing vulnerable people under the bus,” read a response in The New Republic, isn’t “a compelling electoral strategy.” In Slate, Jill Filipovic opined that “pro-choice politics are also smart politics even in red states.” 

Podcast: 'Has God given us the freedom to destroy ourselves and our world?' asks John Dominic Crossan

 

Podcast: 'Has God given us the freedom to destroy ourselves and our world?' asks John Dominic Crossan

Pope Leo, Anthropic co-founder call for church-tech ethics partnership at 'Magnifica Humanitas' release

 

Pope Leo, Anthropic co-founder call for church-tech ethics partnership at 'Magnifica Humanitas' release

Divine Mystery: As immense as the universe and intimate as one’s breath

 

Divine Mystery: As immense as the universe and intimate as one’s breath