When Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas in May 2026, it did not feel like just another Church document. Instead, it was like a voice stepping directly into the confusion of the present moment, speaking not only to Catholics, but to anyone trying to make sense of a world increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence.
Reading it, I had the feeling that the encyclical is less about technology itself and more about the deeper question beneath it: what does it mean to be human at a time when machines are beginning to imitate, assist, and sometimes even replace aspects of human life?
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| Image created using AI |
The document opens with a sense of urgency. Pope Leo describes our time as one of decisive change, where humanity stands at a crossroads. The rise of artificial intelligence is not treated as just another technological innovation, but as something more profound—something that challenges how we understand progress, society, and even ourselves.
He frames this moment with two powerful biblical images: the Tower of Babel and the rebuilding of Jerusalem. One represents a world built on pride, control, and the illusion of self-sufficiency; the other reflects a world built patiently, with God at its center, attentive to the dignity of each person.
As I examine that contrast, it became clear that the encyclical is not asking me to judge AI as good or bad. Instead, it is asking a harder question: what kind of world am I helping to build, even in small, everyday ways?
What struck me next was how the Pope situates this moment in a longer story. He draws a line from earlier social encyclicals, especially Rerum Novarum, reminding us that the Church has always tried to speak to the “new things” of each era. But there is something different about this moment. Artificial intelligence seems to blur boundaries that once felt stable—between human and machine, labor and automation, truth and manipulation. The encyclical suggests that this is not simply another issue to be addressed using existing categories; it is a development that presses us to rethink those categories themselves.
At the center of all this reflection is a deceptively simple claim: human dignity is absolute. It does not depend on our abilities, our productivity, or our usefulness. In a world that increasingly measures everything—efficiency, attention, performance—this insistence feels almost countercultural. It is also deeply reassuring. It reminds me that my worth is not something I earn or optimize. It is something I receive.
That insight becomes especially important as the encyclical turns to the realities of work and the economy. Artificial intelligence promises productivity and innovation, but it also carries the risk of displacing workers and concentrating power in the hands of a few. Yet Pope Leo’s concern is not only economic. It is human. Work, he reminds us, is more than a way to earn a living; it is a way of participating in creation, of contributing to the common good, of expressing something of our own humanity. When work is reduced to a function that can be optimized or replaced, something essential is lost.
As I read this, I found myself examining how easily I slip into making my own work in terms of deadlines, outputs, measurable results. The encyclical gently challenges that mindset. It invites a deeper reflection: not just “What am I producing?” but “What kind of person am I becoming through what I do?”
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| Pope Leo XIV signing Magnifica Humanitas photo from Vatican Media website |
The document also lingers on the subtler ways technology shapes daily life. It speaks of truth, communication, and relationships, pointing to the dangers of misinformation, manipulation, and the quiet erosion of attention. In a digital environment designed to capture and hold our focus, the risk is not only that we will be misled, but that we will slowly lose the capacity for reflection itself.
This part felt uncomfortably familiar. It is easy to think of technology as something external, something we use. But the encyclical suggests something more unsettling: that technology also uses us, shaping our habits, our desires, even our sense of reality. The call, then, is not to withdraw from the digital world, but to inhabit it differently: with awareness, discipline, and a commitment to truth.
The global dimension of the encyclical brings the conversation to an even more serious level. Artificial intelligence is not only transforming economies and personal lives; it is also reshaping power. The potential use of AI in warfare, the concentration of data in private hands, and the growing inequalities between those who control technology and those who do not all raise urgent moral questions.
Here, Pope Leo offers a stark contrast between what he calls a “culture of power” and a “civilization of love.” The former is driven by domination and competition; the latter by justice, solidarity, and peace. It is a familiar theme in Catholic social teaching, but in the context of AI, it takes on new urgency. The tools we are creating are powerful enough to amplify whichever path we choose
Reading all of this as a Catholic, I found that the encyclical was not primarily asking me to take a position on artificial intelligence. It was asking me to examine my own life more deeply. It reminded me that being human is not about keeping pace with technological change, nor about maximizing efficiency or productivity. It is about relationship—with God, with others, and with the world.
As such, even ordinary choices take on new meaning. How I use technology, how I spend my attention, how I relate to others in a digital environment, all of these become part of a larger moral landscape. The encyclical invites me to resist the temptation to drift passively with technological currents and instead to act intentionally, guided by a sense of responsibility.
What I found most powerful, in the end, was the quiet insistence that nothing essential about the human person has changed. Even in an age of artificial intelligence, the deepest truths remain: that we are created, that we are loved, and that our dignity is not contingent on anything we produce or achieve.
Magnifica Humanitas does not offer easy answers. It does not pretend that the challenges of AI can be resolved through simple guidelines or regulations. But it does something perhaps more important. It calls us back to first principles. It reminds us that the future is not determined by technology alone, but by the values and convictions we bring to it.
And in doing so, it leaves me with a question that lingers long after the reading ends: not what artificial intelligence will become, but what we, as human beings, will choose to become alongside it.
For those who want to read it firsthand, the full text of the encyclical is available here:
👉 Magnifica Humanitas on the Vatican Website
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