logo
Bishop Ronald Hicks recalls connecting with Pope Leo XIV while growing up in the south suburbs

Bishop Ronald Hicks recalls connecting with Pope Leo XIV while growing up in the south suburbs

Yahoo28-05-2025

On May 8, white smoke from the Vatican sent the signal to the world; it was about to meet the first American pope.
Here in Chicago, the birthplace of Pope Leo XIV, and in his south suburban hometown of Dolton, Leo Mania took hold.
One of those already well-versed on the virtues of Father Bob Prevost was Rev. Ronald Hicks.
'I'm still wrapping my head around it,' Hicks said. 'What seems impossible is possible. And, it's just a time for great rejoicing.'
The last time I caught up with my St. Jude grade school classmate from South Holland was in 2020 when he was installed as the bishop of the Joliet diocese. Almost five years later, we reconnected to marvel at how our backyard in the south suburbs made history.
'He doesn't seem like some figure or theory out there. But he's a normal guy from a normal neighborhood we grew up in. For me, it makes him so relatable,' Hicks said.
Pope Leo XIV was inaugurated in a mass at Saint Peter's. Though on much larger scale, it was a scene much like the holy rite at Saint Raymond's Cathedral when Bishop Hicks was installed to the leadership position in Joliet. Hicks met the then-cardinal four years later when he was giving a talk at one of his parishes.
'I attended the talk, I sat there in the front row,' Hicks recalled. 'I think everyone walked away saying, I learned something tonight. I learned something about our faith. I learned something about our church. And, he did so in a way that was clear, concise. Creative and finally humble.'
The two chatted about Pope Francis, the universal church and work in his diocese. 'Five minutes turned into ten, ten to 15, and 15 to 20.'
And then he asked how he was doing. That's when he realized his skill as an orator and his passion, knowledge and intellect weren't his only assets.
'He takes more time to listen than to talk,' Hicks said. 'And, I experienced that with him.'
His down-to-earth approachability is one thing. Hicks says Leo also has a boldness that compels him to stand up for issues that impact the world: war, poverty and immigration.
'He doesn't back away or shy away. I think it's significant that he took the name Leo within our tradition. It just shows that he he has a love for social justice, that peace and social justice,' Hicks said.
And he'll do it, Hicks added, as a bridge builder.
'And then be a voice. A voice for, expressing what does the church teach and why, and, and try to do so with, with the heart of the shepherd,' Hicks said.
I asked Bishop Hicks if he sees any of himself in Pope Leo. What sort of inspiration, does he serve for him as a priest, as a bishop, as a man of God?
'I recognize a lot of similarities between him and me. So we grew up literally in the same radius, in the same neighborhood together,' Hicks said. 'We played in the same parks, went swimming in the same pools, liked the same pizza places to go to. I mean, it's that real.'
The pope and the bishop were also both missionaries to Latin America and found their ministry early in life.
But where these South Siders diverge is what baseball team they root for.
'[Pope Leo] is and always will be a Sox fan. And, I grew up a Cub fan,' Hicks said. 'I'm a Cubs fan because my father is a diehard Cubs fan. He wanted us to know we were loved, but that we'd stay Catholic and Cubs fans. In my family, there was not getting around either of those things.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says
Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says

CNBC

time9 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says

President Donald Trump's administration is renegotiating some of former President Joe Biden's grants to semiconductor firms, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said at a hearing on Wednesday, suggesting some awards may be axed. Some of the Biden-era grants "just seemed overly generous, and we've been able to renegotiate them," Lutnick told lawmakers on the Senate Appropriations Committee, adding the goal was to benefit American taxpayers. "All the deals are getting better, and the only deals that are not getting done are deals that should have never been done in the first place," Lutnick said, appearing to signal that not all the awards would survive renegotiation. Biden in 2022 signed the CHIPS and Science Act to plow $52.7 billion into boosting semiconductor chips manufacturing and research in the U.S. and luring chipmakers away from Asia. The program rolled out billions in grants for semiconductor heavyweights, including Taiwan's TSMC, South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix, as well as U.S.-based Intel and Micron. The grants, while signed, had only just begun to be disbursed by the time Biden left office. The details of those plans are not public but the money is meant to be disbursed as companies make progress toward their pledged plant expansions. Lutnick pointed to TSMC as an example of successful renegotiation. He said the chipmaker -- which won a $6 billion Chips Act award -- had increased by $100 billion its initial pledge to invest $65 billion in U.S. manufacturing. "We were able to modify the award for the same $6 billion of (government) funding," he said. TSMC announced the $100 billion in added investment in March but it was not immediately clear whether that was part of a renegotiation of its Chips Act award. TSMC declined to comment. Reuters reported in February that the White House was seeking to renegotiate the awards and had signaled delays to some upcoming semiconductor disbursements. Lutnick also said the administration agrees with the goal of having more than 50% of global AI computing capacity in America, responding to concerns that deals like the one announced by Trump last month to allow the United Arab Emirates to buy advanced American artificial intelligence chips could deprive the United States of key AI computing power.

President Trump signs travel ban targeting 12 countries with 'hostile attitudes' to the US
President Trump signs travel ban targeting 12 countries with 'hostile attitudes' to the US

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

President Trump signs travel ban targeting 12 countries with 'hostile attitudes' to the US

President Trump has signed an order banning people from 12 countries from entering the US. He said Sunday's had shown "the extreme dangers posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted, as well as those who come as temporary visitors and overstay their visas". "We will not allow people to enter our country who wish to do us harm," he said in a video statement. The countries affected are: Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. The White House said they posed a "very high risk" to the US and had poor screening and vetting to identify dangerous individuals. People from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela will also face partial restrictions. Mr Trump's proclamation said America must ensure people entering don't have "hostile attitudes toward its citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles" - and don't support terror groups. The move echoes a controversial executive order enacted eight years ago during his first term, when he banned people from predominately Muslim countries. The countries initially targeted then were Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen. said on Thursday that policy was a "key part of preventing major foreign terror attacks on American soil". His new list adds more countries, but notably removes Syria after Mr Trump met the country's leader recently on a trip to the Middle East. Athletes and their coaches competing in the 2026 World Cup and the 2028 Olympics, both of which are taking place in the US, will be exempt. Permanent US residents and existing visa holders are also among those unaffected. The list was put together after the president asked homeland security officials and the director of national intelligence to compile a report on countries whose citizens could pose a threat to the US. The ban takes effect from 9 June but countries could be removed or added. The proclamation states it will be reviewed within 90 days, and every 180 days after, to decide if it should be "continued, terminated, modified, or supplemented". "These commonsense restrictions are country-specific and include places that lack proper vetting, exhibit high visa overstay rates, or fail to share identity and threat information," said White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson. President Trump's first travel restrictions in 2017 were criticised by opponents and human rights groups as a "Muslim ban". It led to some chaotic scenes, including tourists, students and business travellers prevented from boarding planes - or held at US airports when they landed. Mr Trump denied it was Islamophobic despite calling for a ban on Muslims entering America in his first presidential campaign. It faced legal challenges and was modified until the Supreme Court upheld a third version of it in June 2018, with judges calling it "squarely within the scope of presidential authority".

Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen
Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen

USA Today

time33 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen

Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen The White House investigation comes on top of similar inquiries at the Justice Department and a House committee. Show Caption Hide Caption Biden speaks in public for first time since cancer diagnosis Former president Joe Biden delivered his first public speech at a Memorial Day event in Delaware since his cancer diagnosis was announced. WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump ordered an investigation of former President Joe Biden's alleged "cognitive decline" to determine who decided his signature should be applied to official documents by autopen. Trump's directive to the White House counsel, David Warrington, in consultation with Attorney General Pam Bondi, ratchets up the pressure behind Trump's longstanding criticism of Biden's mental ability. The probe comes amid similar inquiries at the Justice Department and in a House committee. "This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history," Trump wrote in his order. "The American public was purposefully shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power, all while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to effect radical policy shifts." But Biden has replied in a series of recent public appearances that he was in command of his faculties. He has also been critical of Trump, arguing that his successor was taking a hatchet to the Social Security Administration. "They are wrong,' Biden said of his alleged cognitive decline on ABC's "The View." Trump directed the investigation to cover whether Biden's aides coordinated to shield the public from information about Biden's mental and physical health. A new book, "Original Sin," describes aides shielding Biden from Cabinet secretaries and limiting his access. Biden recently revealed his diagnosis of prostate cancer. Trump also directed the investigation into how Biden took executive actions during his final years in office, to determine who ordered the autopen for granting clemencies or other presidential actions. Presidents have used autopens for decades under DOJ memo Presidents have used automated pens to mimic their signatures on documents for decades, often when away from the office, when Congress completed urgent legislation. Justice Department memos in 2002 and 2005 confirmed that a president could direct an aide to use an autopen to sign legislation that remains valid under the Constitution. "This memorandum confirms and elaborates upon our earlier advice that the President may sign a bill in this manner," the 2005 memo said. Biden pardoned his brother, James Biden, and other relatives for unspecified crimes during his final days in office. Biden had previously pardoned his son, Hunter Biden, after gun and tax convictions. At the Justice Department, pardon attorney Ed Martin said he would investigate Biden's pardons and use of the autopen. Congressional Republicans have long argued that the president profited from his son's and brother's overseas business deals, which the family denied. The chairman of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, Rep. James Comer, R-Kentucky, asked former Biden aides to sit for transcribed interviews about his mental fitness for office. Trump notes special counsel's finding about Biden's condition Trump's order highlights a particular sore point involving the different treatment of him and Biden in retaining classified documents after leaving office. Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith charged Trump with unlawfully retaining more than 100 classified documents at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, where they were retrieved 18 months after he left office during an FBI search. The charges were dropped when Trump was elected to a second term under a policy against prosecuting a sitting president. Special counsel Robert Hur decided against charging Biden for classified documents found at his Delaware home and a Washington, D.C., office during a search Biden invited. Hur concluded jurors would have found Biden "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.' "For years, President Biden suffered from serious cognitive decline," Trump wrote. "The Department of Justice, for example, concluded that, despite clear evidence that Biden had broken the law, he should not stand trial owing to his incompetent mental state."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store