UN Pope Leo XIV lays out vision of papacy and identifies AI as a main challenge for humanity - Leo, the first American pope, told cardinals that he was fully committed to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, the 1960s meetings that modernized the church.

Pope Leo XIV laid out the vision of his papacy Saturday, identifying artificial intelligence as one of the most critical matters facing humanity and vowing to continue with some of the core priorities of Pope Francis.

But in a sign he was making the papacy very much his own, Leo made his first outing since his election, traveling to a sanctuary south of Rome that is dedicated to the Madonna and is of particular significance to his Augustinian order and his namesake, Pope Leo XIII.

Townspeople of Genazzano gathered in the square outside the main church housing the Madre del Buon Consiglio (Mother of Good Counsel) sanctuary as Leo arrived and greeted them. The sanctuary, which is managed by Augustinian friars, has been a place of pilgrimage since the 15th century and the previous Pope Leo elevated it to a minor basilica and expanded the adjacent convent in the early 1900s.

After praying in the church, Leo greeted the townspeople and told them they had both a gift and a responsibility in having the Madonna in their midst. He offered a blessing and then got back into the passenger seat of the car, a black Volkswagen. En route back to the Vatican, he stopped to pray at Francis’ tomb at St. Mary Major Basilica.

The after-lunch outing came after Leo presided over his first formal audience, with the cardinals who elected him pope. In it Leo repeatedly cited Francis and the Argentine pope’s own 2013 mission statement, making clear a commitment to making the Catholic Church more inclusive and attentive to the faithful and a church that looks out for the “least and rejected.”

Leo, the first American pope, told the cardinals that he was fully committed to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, the 1960s meetings that modernized the church. He identified AI as one of the main issues facing humanity, saying it poses challenges to defending human dignity, justice and labor.

Some signs about the future emerge​

The Vatican, meanwhile, provided hints of its own about the Leo pontificate: It revealed Saturday that Leo would retain the motto and coat of arms that he had as bishop of Chiclayo, Peru that emphasize unity in the church.

The motto, “In Illo uno unum,” was pronounced by St. Augustine in a sermon to explain that “although we Christians are many, in the one Christ we are one.” The emblem is that of the Augustinian order: a pierced flaming heart and a book, representing the Scriptures.

The Vatican also provided details about the pectoral cross that Leo is wearing: It was a gift from the Augustinian order when he was made a cardinal in 2023. It contains relics of St. Augustine and his mother, St. Monica, who was crucial in his conversion to Christianity.

St. Augustine of Hippo is one of the theological and devotional giants of early Christianity. The Augustinian order, formed in the 13th century as a community of “mendicant” friars, is dedicated to poverty, service and evangelization.

Identifying with Pope Francis​

Leo referred to AI in explaining the choice of his name: His namesake, Pope Leo XIII, was pope from 1878 to 1903 and laid the foundation for modern Catholic social thought. He did so most famously with his 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum, which addressed workers’ rights and capitalism at the dawn of the industrial age. The late pope criticized both laissez-faire capitalism and state-centric socialism, giving shape to a distinctly Catholic vein of economic teaching.

In his remarks Saturday, Leo said he identified with his predecessor.

“In our own day, the church offers everyone the treasury of its social teaching in response to another industrial revolution and to developments in the field of artificial intelligence that pose new challenges for the defense of human dignity, justice and labor,” he said.

Toward the end of his pontificate, Francis became increasingly vocal about the threats to humanity posed by AI and called for an international treaty to regulate it.

Francis in many ways saw the Chicago-born Augustinian missionary Robert Prevost as something of an heir apparent: He moved him to take over a small Peruvian diocese in 2014, where Prevost later became bishop and head of the Peruvian bishops conference, and then called him to Rome to take over one of the most important Vatican offices vetting bishop nominations in 2023.

In the speech, delivered in Italian in the Vatican’s synod hall — not the Apostolic Palace — Leo made repeated references to Francis and the mourning over his death. He held up Francis’ 2013 mission statement, “The Joy of the Gospel,” as something of his own marching orders.

He cited Francis’ insistence on the missionary nature of the church and the need to make its leadership more collegial. He cited the need to pay attention to what the faithful say “especially in its most authentic and inclusive forms, especially popular piety.”

Again, referring to Francis’ 2013 mission statement, Leo cited the need for the church to express “loving care for the least and rejected” and engage in courageous dialogue with the contemporary world.

A quick conclave​

Greeted by a standing ovation, Leo read from his prepared text, only looking up occasionally. Even when he first appeared to the world on Thursday night, Leo read from a prepared, handwritten text in Italian that he must have drafted sometime before his historic election or the hour or so after. He seemed most comfortable speaking off-the-cuff in the few words he pronounced in Spanish.

Prevost was elected the 267th pontiff on Thursday on the fourth ballot of the conclave, an exceptionally fast outcome given this was the largest and most geographically diverse conclave in history and not all cardinals knew one another before arriving in Rome.

Madagascar Cardinal Désiré Tsarahazana told reporters on Saturday that on the final ballot, Prevost had received “more” than 100 of the 133 votes. That suggests an extraordinary margin, well beyond the two-thirds, or 89 votes, necessary to be elected.

A comment from a contender​

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state who had been considered one of the top contenders to be pope, offered his congratulations on Saturday in a letter published in his hometown paper, Il Giornale di Vicenza.

Parolin praised Leo’s grasp of today’s problems, recalling his first words from the loggia when he spoke of the need for a peace that is “disarmed and disarming.” Parolin said he had appreciated Prevost’s leadership in Chiclayo, saying he helped handle a particularly thorny problem — with no details — and grew to appreciate his governance more closely at the Vatican handling the bishops’ office.

Specifically, Parolin praised Leo’s understanding of people and situations, his “calmness in argumentation, balance in proposing solutions, respect, care and love for everyone.”

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Honestly I am happy with this. I just hope that His Holiness has a valid grasp on things.
What like protecting child porn addicts who watch it in public?
He was born in Chicago and he is not radical.
Propederastry isn't radical to the average Cathcuck.
While I certainly do not trust China to adhere to any bargain, AI has so much potential to end humanity that there needs to be some framework.
Imagine thinking a spreadsheet is going to end humanity. Your brain on popery.
 
Serpent cults gonna Serpent.
It really doesn't though.

Like seriously, it doesn't.
It does. AI is already telling people to do stupid things and people are listening to it. Businesses consult it for business advice. AI is created and programmed by anti-human tech leaders and corporations

One of the most popular AIs on the rise now is Gemini. Literally a demon

AI can't do something on its own (until it decides to shut down electrical grids, inhibit medication production, etc) but it can tell stupid people what to do, and they will listen

At some point they're going to get so "inclusive" that they'll be allowing non Catholics to join their ranks, like Atheists, Jews, Muslims, or worst of all *shudder* PROTESTANTS.
Of course the catholic will ultimately include every stripe of satanist and ultimately exclude christ and His followers. That's always been the goal
 
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AI can't do something on its own (until it decides to shut down electrical grids, inhibit medication production, etc) but it can tell stupid people what to do, and they will listen
We can have this discussion when you're capable of understanding what an AI actually is and how it works RE: humans being stupid.

It isn't 'telling people what to do'. It's a system you interact with.
 
Serpent cults gonna Serpent.

It does. AI is already telling people to do stupid things and people are listening to it. Businesses consult it for business advice. AI is created and programmed by anti-human tech leaders and corporations

One of the most popular AIs on the rise now is Gemini. Literally a demon

AI can't do something on its own (until it decides to shut down electrical grids, inhibit medication production, etc) but it can tell stupid people what to do, and they will listen
I mean retards being retarded isn't really a compelling argument to not have nice things. You could apply that argument to a literal stone.
 
At some point they're going to get so "inclusive" that they'll be allowing non Catholics to join their ranks, like Atheists, Jews, Muslims, or worst of all *shudder* PROTESTANTS.
Of course the catholic will ultimately include every stripe of satanist and ultimately exclude christ and His followers. That's always been the goal
Imagine thinking a spreadsheet is going to end humanity. Your brain on popery.
It's not the spreadsheet, it's what genocidal people will do with a spreadsheet. If AI says these people should eat, people will listen to that. There's an article here on kf itself talking about how ceos are openly consulting with AI to make budgetting and personnel decisions

My boss pretty does nothing but consult AI

It's not the AI, it's the people who think AI is God

We can have this discussion when you're capable of understanding what an AI actually is and how it works RE: humans being stupid.

It isn't 'telling people what to do'. It's a system you interact with.
It's does tell people what to do. Office drones use it for everything, management uses it to decide who to fire

I mean retards being retarded isn't really a compelling argument to not have nice things. You could apply that argument to a literal stone.
AI is not a nice thing and a literal stone doesn't have intent or consciousness or ideology
 
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If this somehow turns Catholicism into a version of the worship of Okran ala Kenshi, I'm all for it.

20250513074049_1.webp

Long cleavers and bucket helmets are gonna be in vogue again.

Joking aside, AI as it stands is just better algorithms. We haven't hit Star Sector tier AI just yet... now if you factor in that companies are deathly afraid of Tay being reborn from any AI project, the technocrats are gonna be doing everything they can to snuff out any emergent thought. So there's that.
 
Reminds me of the old joke about a big team of scientists creating the most powerful computer ever, with access to all the information they could give it and huge amounts of processing power. Turning it on, they ask it one of humanity's most profound questions: Is there a god?

The computer hums for a few moments then replies: "There is now."

Would it be worse than our current WEF-banker overjews? It is not like it could want us more castrated, enslaved and bred out, right?
 
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I’m not enthusiastic about this mulatto compromise but I’m praying that he will be less destructive than that Jesuit from Argentina. At any rate, Forbes just published this article which emphasizes Pope Leo’s alleged positivity towards AI and other technologies as understood by the breathlessly optimistic and clearly avaricious. The opening paragraph sets the tone:
In his first address to the College of Cardinals on Saturday, newly appointed Pope Leo XIV announced support of AI and digital technologies as instruments of spiritual outreach. That statement serves as a bridge to the Vatican’s digital-forward journey that began with Pope Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis. Ironically, Pope Francis was walking that visionary path with a UK-based tech startup called HolyDeeds that specializes in blending sacred storytelling with immersive digital art.
Which is the exact thing Pope Leo and others are worried about: a stimulating spectacle that separates people from being. The CEO and founder of that startup, Andrius Bartminas, authoritatively claims “you can’t expect 19-year-olds to sit through Latin Mass, but they might be deeply moved standing in a virtual Cathedral listening to Mary’s Magnificat narrated in surround sound.”

:story:OK nigger, just plug me into the Matrix so I can have an ~immersive experience~ while using the ChatGPT confessional. The article seems spun up to spin up investors but it's interesting to see what certain grasping, grubby hands are trying to do.

Faith Meets AI And Tech In Vatican’s Bold Move Under Pope Leo XIV

(link to article at Forbes | archive)
By Tor Constantino, MBA,
Forbes
May 13, 2025, 08:00am EDT

In his first address to the College of Cardinals on Saturday, newly appointed Pope Leo XIV announced support of AI and digital technologies as instruments of spiritual outreach. That statement serves as a bridge to the Vatican’s digital-forward journey that began with Pope Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis. Ironically, Pope Francis was walking that visionary path with a UK-based tech startup called HolyDeeds that specializes in blending sacred storytelling with immersive digital art.

One of Pope Francis final acts of his papal office on earth, before his passing in late April, was endorsing HolyDeeds’ technological initiative called, The Immersive Faith Project. The project has several facets such as 360-degree visual narratives of Jesus, Mary and the saints, animated renderings of the Old Testament book of Psalms and a curated gallery of Art for Peace to advance spiritual contemplation.

An AI Awakening For The Gospel

“We’re trying to speak the language of today’s generation — beauty, story and digital immersion,” wrote Andrius Bartminas, co-founder and CEO of HolyDeeds, in an email response. “When people think of evangelization, they often imagine something out of step with modern life. But the message of faith, hope and love is timeless. We’re just changing the medium.”

Bartminas stressed that this is not a gimmick or facade of faith forced onto flashy tech. Instead, it’s a thoughtful attempt to restore the Church’s historical role as a steward of transcendent beauty — only now using high tech tools like augmented reality and interactive media.

According to Bartminas the decision to develop the content as fully immersive experiences wasn’t just artistic — it was theological. “We consulted biblical scholars, theologians and Vatican historians,” Bartminas said. “Every pixel is reviewed for doctrinal fidelity before it ever becomes visible in a headset or hologram.”

A Papal Pivot To AI And Immersion

Pope Leo’s historic appointment, as the first American and one of the youngest Popes in decades, seems to have energized the Vatican’s approach to innovation. In his May 10th address, Pope Leo urged Church leaders to avoid a posture of fear regarding AI, and he called for “wisdom-guided adoption that respects human dignity and elevates spiritual understanding.”

While the Holy See has a history of cautiously approaching technology, specifically regarding social media, automation and blockchain, this novel outreach project represents a new theological vision. “Pope Leo recognizes that the soul of a person can be stirred just as deeply by a well-crafted digital encounter with scripture as it can by stained glass,” Bartminas noted. “That’s a profound shift in thinking.”


AI Evangelization For The TikTok Generation

Bartminas went on to explain that his organization seeks to reach a generation that has largely left institutional religion but remains spiritually curious. “You can’t expect 19-year-olds to sit through Latin Mass,” he said bluntly. “But they might be deeply moved standing in a virtual Cathedral listening to Mary’s Magnificat narrated in surround sound.”

With that understanding the company is planning global rollouts in dioceses, schools and museums, with regionally contextualized content. “Faith doesn’t need to be uniform in presentation,” he added. “It needs to be universally accessible.”

That accessibility, however, is not limited to tech-savvy Western culture. Bartminas said HolyDeeds is exploring offline, kiosk-based installations in parts of Africa and Latin America where internet connections can be spotty. The company is also partnering with humanitarian organizations to deploy the platform in refugee communities as a source of spiritual comfort.


AI Commercialization Or Inner Consecration?

Still, the marriage of AI, storytelling and sacred themes is not without its skeptics. Critics worry that the Church is venturing into a commercialized spectacle of faith — more Pixar than prayer. Bartminas insists the opposite is true.

“We’re a social mission company,” he said. “We don’t monetize the experiences through ads or subscriptions. Revenue supports the creation of new content and our charitable outreach programs — especially in underserved communities.”


What’s Next For AI, HolyDeeds And The Vatican?

With Pope Leo’s endorsement of the project, Bartminas is optimistic about what lies ahead. “As we are preparing our first Immersive Exhibition, we’re in dialogue with the Dicastery for Communication about formalizing a framework for continued innovation,” he said. “The Vatican has a rich artistic tradition — but we’re only beginning to discover what sacred storytelling can look like in the digital age.”

The next phases of the HolyDeeds initiative include creating AI-assisted visuals of Gospel stories in the form of digital cards in more than 70 languages, as well as interactive companion guides for pastoral instructors and educators.

As Pope Leo’s pontificate begins, so too does a new chapter in the Church’s millennia-old mission of sharing the Gospel. Now those words are not just illuminated by candlelight and stained glass, but by pixels, LEDs and AI code.
 
It does. AI is already telling people to do stupid things and people are listening to it. Businesses consult it for business advice. AI is created and programmed by anti-human tech leaders and corporations
Slebs are telling people to do stupid things and people are listening to them. Businesses consult psychologists and astrologers for business advice. Most software is created by anti-human tech leaders and corporations, and for the China haters here (I'm not one) most things are created by anti-human corporations.

inb4 yes all of this is satanic: then why single out AI? it's a bullshit panic like Covid.

Instead -- here's a thread about how AI is stealing whores' jobs with gay males celebrating. The lesson of the thread is not "AI bad" but "coom bad". The sin of lust is not exactly new. Religion is timeless and it should handle new things by invoking eternal truths, not jump on the recent tiktok trends and yell at clouds.
 
I suppose im an AI retardationist: I believe that it is an inanimate object with no inherent moral leaning. However if you apply Retard’s Razor, that the dumbest explanation for a phenomenon is the most accurate, you’ll see where I’m going.

Ai will be a problem because the people deploying and using it are retarded. It will inevitably destroy knowledge work because it does a better job than an entry level kid for 20 bucks a month, which means entry level kids won’t get hired and we destroy the supply of knowledge workers. On the demand side, why put in the hard work to get good when you can make an ai do it, and so we end up with a generation of retards who are basically organic interfaces to the ai.

To bring it back to what the pope said, he’s absolutely right that we need to figure out what to do with people whose jobs get automated, and providing for them out of pocket is not going to be a productive solution. We need to provide some sort of path that makes sure people are doing something productive with their time, as idle hands are the devils playthings. Every economy is based on the idea that each worker is productive in some capacity, and make-work jobs are often the first automated because they are often not productive. I haven’t got a solution, but something has to be done.
 
Lovely.. facepalm... anti-AI hysteria right off from the start.

Francis became increasingly vocal about the threats to humanity posed by AI and called for an international treaty to regulate it.

Seriously fuck off. The last thing we need is our hands tied so when people come to their senses, they won't be able to do anything. Fuck asking corrupt 3rd world shitholes for permission to do anything! This sounds like another moon treaty. (i.e. a poisonous pill that was about blocking all meaningful activity in space)
 
AI isn't dangerous unless you automate dangerous shit with it.
Perimeter using plain old IF ELSE shit and could nuke the world, but humans monitor it. (Assuming Russia isn't lying and it's a ruse).
AI managing nukes is "Perimeter, but with fuzzy math."

So don't do that.
 
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