‘Magnifica Humanitas’ – Pope Leo XIV’s Encyclical on AI – Coming On 25th May 2026

May 18, 2026 | 0 comments

In unusual collaboration with the founder of the controversial AI firm ‘Anthropic’ Pope Leo XIV will publish his first personal encyclical ‘Magnifica Humanitas‘ (Magnificent Humanity) on Monday May 25th 2026.

Expected to warn strongly on  the educative and ethical dangers of AI (computerised artificial intelligence), the encyclical could further ruffle the feathers of the US Trump administration, at war as it is in court with Anthropic over the refusal of the firm to give the administration unlimited control of its AI engine ‘Claude’ for military and surveillance purposes.

Speaking recently of the dangers of over-reliance on all digital technology the pope bewailed “a distorted system, which reduces people to numbers, exacerbating competitiveness and leaving us caught in spirals of anxiety … we are not the sum of what we have, nor a random collection of matter in a silent cosmos. We are a desire, not an algorithm!”

An NCR article on the pope’s choice of Anthropic to help launch this enclyclical quotes Brian Patrick Green, director of technology ethics at Santa Clara University in ‘Silicon Valley’, California:

“Anthropic is the company that has really staked their position as the ethical AI company, saying no to the U.S. government when it comes to lethal autonomous weapon systems … and against mass surveillance of Americans … so they put down those two stakes in the ground and said we’re not going to go past this point.”

For this NCR article on this highly unusual event, click here.

For the full CRUX report of this impending event, click here.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ACI’s Campaign for Lumen Gentium 37

The Promise of Synodality

What we have experienced of synodality so far gives ACI real hope that a longstanding structural injustice in the church may at last be acknowledged and overcome.

As all Irish bishops well know, the 'co-responsibility' they urge lay people to share - as numbers and energies of clergy decline - has been sabotaged time and again by canonical rules that deny representational authority and continuity to parish pastoral councils.  ACI's 2019 call for the immediate honouring of Lumen Gentium Article 37 becomes more urgent by the day and is supported by the following documents - also presented to the ICBC in October 2019.

The Common Priesthood of the People of God and the Renewal of the Church
It was Catholic parents and victims of clerical abuse who taught Catholic Bishops to prioritise the safeguarding of children in the church

Jesus as Model for the Common Priesthood of the People of God
It was for challenging religious hypocrisy and injustice that Jesus was accused and crucified. He is therefore a model for the common priesthood of the laity and for the challenging of injustice - in society and within the church.

A Suggested Strategy for the Recovery of the Irish and Western Catholic Church
Recovery of the church depends upon acknowledgment of the indispensable role of the common priesthood of the lay people of God and the explicit abandonment by bishops and clergy of paternalism and clericalism - the expectation of deference from lay people rather than honesty and integrity.

For the full story of ACI's campaign for the honouring of Article 37 of Lumen Gentium, click here.

Prayer

"Come Holy Spirit, Renew Your wonders in this our day, as by a new Pentecost. Grant to Your Church that, being of one mind and steadfast in prayer with Mary, the Mother of Jesus, and following the lead of blessed Peter, it may advance the reign of our Divine Saviour, the reign of truth and justice, the reign of love and peace. Amen."

Saint Pope John XXIII, 1962 - In preparation for Vatican Council II, 1962-65.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This