Showing posts with label Pope Leo XIV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pope Leo XIV. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2026

Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical Magnifica humanitas to be published May 25

 First of all, that's a heckuva birthday gift to me — I eagerly anticipate it. It will be about preserving the human person in the age of artificial intelligence.

Secondly, it bears the Pope’s signature dated May 15th, 135th anniversary of the publication of Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum Novarum. Rerum Novarum which addressed the issues of the working class. It is a seminal work of Catholic social teaching and you see it referenced frequently in subsequent enclyclicals by later popes, including John Paul II.

So that's a deliberate comment before we even get to see it about where the pope is going with this.

You can read all about it everywhere. But I was just so excited that I had to post something myself. Cant't wait!

Friday, August 8, 2025

We are made for an existence that is constantly renewed through gift of self in love

The first reading, taken from the Book of Ecclesiastes, invites us ... to come to terms with the experience of our limitations and the fleeting nature of all things that pass away (cf. Eccl 1:2; 2:21-23). On a similar note, the Responsorial Psalm presents us with the image of “the grass that is renewed… in the morning it flourishes and is renewed; in the evening it  fades and withers” (Ps 90:5-6). These are two strong reminders which may be a bit shocking, but which should not frighten us as if they were “taboo” issues to be avoided. The fragility they speak of is, in fact, part of the marvel of creation. Think of the image of grass: is not a field of flowers beautiful? Of course, it is delicate, made up of small, vulnerable stems, prone to drying out, to being bent and broken. Yet at the same time these flowers are immediately replaced by others that sprout up after them, generously nourished and fertilized by the first ones as they decay on the ground. This is how the field survives: through constant regeneration. Even during the cold months of winter, when everything seems silent, its energy stirs beneath the ground, preparing to blossom into a thousand colors when spring comes.

We too, dear friends, are made this way, we are made for this. We are not made for a life where everything is taken for granted and static, but for an existence that is constantly renewed through gift of self in love. This is why we continually aspire to something “more” that no created reality can give us; we feel a deep and burning thirst that no drink in this world can satisfy. Knowing this, let us not deceive our hearts by trying to satisfy them with cheap imitations! Let us rather listen to them! Let us turn this thirst into a step stool, like children who stand on tiptoe, in order to peer through the window of encounter with God. We will then find ourselves before him, who is waiting for us, knocking gently on the window of our soul (cf. Rev 3:20). It is truly beautiful, especially at a young age, to open wide your hearts, to allow him to enter, and to set out on this adventure with him towards eternity.
Pope Leo XIV, Jubilee of Youth Homily, August 3, 2025

 This is truly a beautiful reflection. It makes me look forward to reading Pope Leo's thoughts whenever they come my way.