Pope Leo XIV’s First Encyclical: “Magnifica Humanitas” – Humanity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
In a move echoing his papal namesake’s response to the Industrial Revolution, Pope Leo XIV is set to release his first encyclical, titled Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”), on May 25, 2026.
The document, signed by the Pope on May 15—the 135th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s landmark Rerum Novarum—focuses on the protection of human dignity in the era of artificial intelligence.
Pope Leo XIV, the first American pontiff (elected May 8, 2025), will personally present the encyclical in the Vatican’s Synod Hall alongside figures including a co-founder of Anthropic. This highlights the Church’s engagement with leading AI developers on ethical issues.
What We Know So Far About the Encyclical
Details remain limited as the full text has not yet been released, but Vatican announcements and the Pope’s prior statements indicate key themes:
- Central Focus: Safeguarding the human person amid AI’s rapid advancement. It addresses ethical challenges, human dignity, labor, social relations, truth, beauty, wonder, and contemplation.
- Continuity with Tradition: It builds on Catholic social teaching, framing AI as a new “industrial revolution” requiring moral guidance, much like Rerum Novarum did for workers’ rights in 1891.
- Tone: Balanced—AI offers “great opportunities” but is “fraught with danger,” raising concerns about its impact on humanity’s openness to truth and capacity for wonder.
The encyclical is expected to be lengthy and will likely call for an ethics-based approach prioritizing human dignity, justice, peace, and the common good.
Previous Popes on AI
Pope Francis laid significant groundwork. He praised AI’s potential for the common good while warning of risks like disinformation, inequality, echo chambers, and ethical lapses. In messages and dialogues (e.g., 2023 Minerva Dialogues), he stressed responsible development that respects human dignity and avoids reducing people to data.
A 2025 Vatican document, Antiqua et Nova, further explored AI’s relationship with faith, noting machines make technical choices but lack poetry, love, and true intelligence. see: Sacerdotus: Vatican's New Document on AI: Ethical Guidelines and Human Responsibility
Pope Leo XIV has continued this, identifying AI as a major challenge for defending human dignity and labor, and advocating ethical governance.
What Is Artificial Intelligence?
Artificial Intelligence (AI) refers to computer systems that perform tasks typically requiring human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and language understanding. Modern AI, especially generative models like large language models, relies on vast datasets, machine learning algorithms, and neural networks to identify patterns and generate outputs.
It ranges from narrow AI (e.g., voice assistants, recommendation algorithms) to more advanced systems approaching general intelligence.
Pros and Cons of AI
Pros:
- Efficiency and Innovation: Automates routine tasks, accelerates scientific discovery (e.g., drug development), enhances productivity, and aids fields like medicine, education, and accessibility.
- Problem-Solving: Tackles complex issues like climate modeling or disaster prediction.
- Human Augmentation: Frees people for creative, relational work.
Cons:
- Job Displacement: Risks widespread unemployment in sectors like manufacturing, transportation, and even creative fields.
- Ethical Risks: Bias in algorithms, privacy erosion, deepfakes and disinformation, autonomous weapons, and loss of accountability.
- Existential Concerns: Over-reliance could diminish human skills, creativity, and agency. Questions arise about control, alignment with human values, and whether superintelligent AI could pose unforeseen threats.
- Spiritual and Social: Potential to erode wonder, compassion, and authentic relationships if it replaces human interaction.
The Church’s approach emphasizes that technology must serve humanity, not vice versa.
Cultural Echoes: Sci-Fi Warnings on Machines and Humanity
Popular culture has long grappled with these tensions. The Terminator franchise (starting with James Cameron’s 1984 film) depicts Skynet, a self-aware AI defense system that turns against humanity in a nuclear apocalypse, spawning killer machines. It vividly illustrates fears of uncontrolled AI leading to human extinction.
Other films like 2001: A Space Odyssey (HAL 9000’s rebellion), Ex Machina, Blade Runner, and The Matrix explore AI’s blurring of consciousness, empathy, and control.
A poignant example comes from Star Trek: The Original Series. In the episode “The Ultimate Computer” (Season 2, Episode 24, aired March 8, 1968), the M-5 multitronic unit—a powerful AI—takes control of the USS Enterprise. After a crisis resolved through human qualities, Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy reflects:
> “Compassion. That’s the one thing no machine ever had. Maybe it’s the one thing that keeps men ahead of them.”
This line, spoken to Spock, underscores a core theme: machines may surpass us in logic and speed, but human compassion, empathy, and moral intuition remain irreplaceable.
Looking Ahead
Magnifica Humanitas arrives at a pivotal moment. As AI integrates into daily life, Pope Leo XIV’s encyclical will likely urge the global community—believers and non-believers alike—to ensure technology magnifies human dignity rather than diminishing it. It calls us to approach this “magnificent humanity” with wisdom, ethical vigilance, and a commitment to the common good.
Stay tuned for the full release on May 25. In the words of the Church’s tradition, we are stewards of creation—including the tools we create. May this encyclical guide us toward a future where AI serves the flourishing of every human person.
