logo
#

Latest news with #Augustian

"A pope of the people": The first American pontiff is no Marxist, but friends say he's a reformer
"A pope of the people": The first American pontiff is no Marxist, but friends say he's a reformer

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

"A pope of the people": The first American pontiff is no Marxist, but friends say he's a reformer

Despite being the first pope from America, a country where the Catholic Church is known for its relative conservatism, Pope Leo XIV — who spent much of his adult life working in Peru — is expected to largely continue his predecessor's progressive reforms, despite some past comments criticizing the acceptance of LGBTQ+ 'lifestyle choices.' James Martin, an American Jesuit priest and the founder of Outreach, a prominent Catholic LGBTQ+ organization, told Salon that the new pope's background in Latin America 'means that he understands the global south,' a fact that likely contributed to his being selected as pontiff. 'I think that gave him some appeal for a lot of the cardinals,' Martin said. On many issues, such as his advocacy for immigrants, Leo — who before this month was known as Cardinal Robert Prevost — is expected to act in line with the direction taken by Pope Francis, which might be expected given the high-ranking roles that Francis appointed him to. His choice of the name Leo has also drawn attention for his namesake, Pope Leo XIII. Kristy Nabhan-Warran, a professor of Catholic Studies at the University of Iowa and an expert on Hispanic Catholicism, told Salon she took special note of this name, given that Leo XIII was known as an advocate for workers during the industrial revolution from 1878 to 1903. Leo himself made this connection, saying he chose the name to emphasize the social teaching the church offers in light of modern challenges, like artificial intelligence, that require a "defense of human dignity, justice and labor.' Nabhan-Warran said that while the new pope 'has not been called a liberation theologian,' his work in Peru mirrors some of the values espoused by liberation theologians, 'because among liberation theologians and liberation pastors, you have to walk the walk.' 'There are stories about him that are circulating, that are verified stories, carrying rice on his back to keep one's parish,' Nabhan-Warran said. 'You could say that this pope, Pope Leo XIV, when he was a cardinal and bishop and just parish priest, and before that, he was very much a pope of the people.' Others, like Leo's longtime friend Mark R. Francis, the former president of the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, point to his role in the Order of St. Augustine, which emphasizes bringing people together and building community. In the order's own words, its roughly 2,800 members aim to 'build community and serve the Lord's people.' 'I think he's going to be concerned with bringing people together, and that's part of the Augustian spirituality and something that I'm sure he's going to follow through with,' Francis said. He told Salon that he expects Leo to follow in his predecessor's footsteps but that he expects him to do so in a more deliberative and procedural way. 'He's not going to be shooting from the hip in terms of issues,' Francis said. 'He's less extroverted and exuberant. He's less spontaneous. He's going to be more deliberative, and that's just his personality.' Some comments from the new pope on LGBTQ+ issues, however, have drawn scrutiny and prompted speculation that he might lean more conservative. At the 2012 Synod of Bishops, a gathering where bishops convene to discuss church matters, he told the group he complained about how 'alternative families comprised of homosexual partners and their adopted children are so benignly and sympathetically portrayed on television programs and in cinema,' according to the Catholic News Service. 'The sympathy for anti-Christian lifestyle choices that the mass media fosters is so brilliantly and artfully engrained in the viewing public that when people hear the Christian message, it often inevitably seems ideological and emotionally cruel by contrast to the ostensible humaneness of the anti-Christian perspective,' Leo said. But Francis, who has known Leo since the 1970s, said that he expects the social justice aspects of his ministry to be 'very important,' adding that he 'wouldn't place too much confidence in stuff he said in 2012. "We all evolve on some of these more delicate issues," he said. And Leo is not perceived as representing the more conservative faction of the U.S. church. 'As one of the cardinals said, he's the least American of all the American cardinals,' Francis said, referencing Leo's career of service in Peru. Indeed, in more recent comments Leo has struck a different tone on LGBTQ+ issues than he did more than a decade ago. When Leo was made a cardinal by Pope Francis in 2023, Leo was asked whether his views had evolved under the influence of Francis. 'Doctrine hasn't changed, and people haven't said, yet, you know, we're looking for that kind of change, but we are looking to be more welcoming and more open, and to say all people are welcome in the church,' he responded. Michael O'Loughlin, executive director of Outreach, the LGBTQ+ Catholic organization, told Salon that he's hopeful but still waiting to see how Leo acts as pope. 'The interpretation people are making seems to be based on one comment from 2012, which was admittedly a more conservative tone, but that was a year before Pope Francis was elected, so his views may have shifted,' O'Loughlin told Salon. 'I'm also keeping an open mind because some of his comments yesterday seem to suggest he's more in line with Pope Francis.' O'Loughlin added that, in the days after Francis' election, there was also discussion of several past comments that were seen as anti-LGBTQ+, 'but he obviously took another direction.' If Leo is to follow his predecessor's direction, it's likely to put him at loggerheads with conservative Catholic leaders in the United States, who are broadly seen as more reactionary than their peers, particularly in Europe. Leo's career in Peru also seems to have been integral to his election as pope. Thomas Reese, a Jesuit priest and columnist at the National Catholic Reporter, was at the Vatican when Leo was elected pope. In his telling, that victory was powered by stalwart support from Latin American cardinals. 'What seems to have happened is that the Latin American cardinals were solidly united behind Prevost, and as a result, on the first ballot, he got a lot more votes than was expected, whereas some of the other people who were the supposed front runners didn't get as many votes as they thought they would,' Reese told Salon. On potentially finding himself at odds with the American Church and the conservative faction within it, Reese cautioned that 'Conservative Catholics in America have a very loud megaphone, but they don't have a lot of troops.' He pointed to a Pew Research survey from April of 2024, which found that 75% of American Catholics had a favorable opinion of Francis, despite him becoming a political lightning rod among American conservatives in the last five years of his life. 'Any politician in Washington would kill for those numbers,' Reese said. Reese compared the election to early presidential primaries, when a candidate's performance is often not just compared to how well other candidates did, but also to the expectations others had for them ahead of the election. 'Expectations of Prevost were low, and he exceeded them, and the cardinals started to say, 'Who's this?' and they took a look at them and liked him,' Reese said. 'The Latin American cardinals were totally on board with him. They didn't see him as a Gringo, they saw him as a colleague. They felt that he may have been born in the United States but that his heart was in Latin America.'

Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?
Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?

Yahoo

time12-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?

The Catholic Church elected its first American-born pope on May 8. Pope Leo XIV, born in Chicago, is also the first pope to be an Augustinian. Here's what it means to be an Augustian. Augustinians are members of the Order of St. Augustine, an international Catholic religious community of men and women. Augustinians serve God and His people in diverse ministries as pastors, educators and missionaries. The Order of Saint Augustine was born juridically in March 1244, when Pope Innocent IV united various groups of hermits in service to the Universal Church as a community of Mendicant Friars. The Order of St. Augustine, or Augustinian Order, is fundamentally based upon the teachings of Jesus Christ and later of Aurelius Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo. It was founded to live and promote the spirit of community as lived by the first Christian communities. The Order of St. Augustine includes some 2,800 Augustinians in 47 countries throughout the world. Pope Leo XIV is a Villanova graduate. Villanova University is an Augustinian institution. The Augustinians also sponsor Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts, along with several high schools and many Catholic parishes. This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: What is an Augustinian as Robert Francis Prevost named Pope Leo XIV

Selection of Robert Prevost as Pope has Phoenix's Catholic community excited about the church's next chapter
Selection of Robert Prevost as Pope has Phoenix's Catholic community excited about the church's next chapter

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Selection of Robert Prevost as Pope has Phoenix's Catholic community excited about the church's next chapter

The Brief St. Mary's Biscillica celebrates the selection of American Robert Prevost as Pope. Diocese of Phoenix Bishop John Dolan says the selection will have a worldwide impact in and outside the church. Elsewhere in Phoenix, Brophy College Preparatory President Bob Ryan says the whole school was buzzing about the historic selection. PHOENIX - Catholics across the Valley are also reacting to the selection of American Robert Prevost as the new leader of the Catholic Church. St. Mary's Biscillica has a history with the papacy. The backstory Pope John Paul II came to visit back in 1987. Now, it is decorated to celebrate a new chapter in the Catholic Church. What we know The joyous rings of bells across St. Mary's Biscillica in downtown Phoenix May 8. The trees and balconies are draped with gold banners, in honor of the new pontiff: Leo XIV. "He will have a worldwide impact with people within the church and outside the church," said Bishop John Dolan. Bishop John Dolan with the Phoenix Diocese says he's already ushering in several firsts for the papacy. Not only is he the first American Pope, he is also the first Pope to be a member of Augustian religious order. Local perspective The historic day also made an impact at Brophy College Preparatory off of Camelback and Central. "We had a viewing party in the activity center, and a lot of teachers, when there was white smoke, they turned it on in their classroom," said Bob Ryan, the school's President. President Bob Ryan says it was a moving moment for the high school students, who were no older than six when Francis became Pope, to witness the moment unfold. "Kids were excited and at lunch today, that was the buzz around campus," said President Ryan. As for how Leo will approach his new role, Bishop Dolan says his first words as pope, emphasizing peace, gives a profound glimpse into what could be ahead. "He used the words that Pope Francis would often use: build bridges. So in many ways, I think that he is going to be talking about that too," said Bishop Dolan. He added that Pope Leo's missionary life in Peru will likely also be prominent, reaching out to the poor and marginalized. Big picture view Not only is Pope Leo from the United States, he's from Chicago - a city with strong connections to Phoenix. Some of the people we spoke to felt a lot of pride from their Midwest ties to the newest pontiff. "I've had four or five customers all excited about it, 'hey guess what! Guy's from Chicago!" said Bob Pappanduros, owner of The Chicago Hamburger Co. News of the first American Pope made it to Pappanduros through his customers. Bob, who grew up in Chicago himself, says the city raises strong characters. "He's gonna have to be a pretty tough guy, for one," said Pappanduros. Dig deeper On a deeper level, others were sharing the hope Pope Leo leads with compassion. "I think he's going to bring, you know, that sensitivity to diversity and inclusion and that's what we would want from a pope because that's what God's love is about. He loves everyone, he created everyone," said Karen Mariana. Lifelong Catholic, Alisa Mann, hopes Pope Leo continues on the principles of Pope Francis. "There were lots of changes with the previous Pope and, you know, a lot of modernization and a lot of different things. For someone who's been a Catholic their whole life and went to a private Catholic school, definitely a lot of changes and so exciting, as you know, we continue to modernize this church," she said. The other side Meanwhile, Bob Pappanduros is looking forward to adding a new face to the walls of his restaurant. "I have a wall in the corner that has every mayor's election poster since old man Daley in the 1950s, and so I told the second or third customer that came in today who told me about the Pope that I want his election poster. Elect Bob for Pope!" he said.

Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?
Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?

The Catholic Church elected its first American-born pope on May 8. Pope Leo XIV, born in Chicago, is also the first pope to be an Augustinian. Here's what it means to be an Augustian. Augustinians are members of the Order of St. Augustine, an international Catholic religious community of men and women. Augustinians serve God and His people in diverse ministries as pastors, educators and missionaries. The Order of Saint Augustine was born juridically in March 1244, when Pope Innocent IV united various groups of hermits in service to the Universal Church as a community of Mendicant Friars. The Order of St. Augustine, or Augustinian Order, is fundamentally based upon the teachings of Jesus Christ and later of Aurelius Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo. It was founded to live and promote the spirit of community as lived by the first Christian communities. The Order of St. Augustine includes some 2,800 Augustinians in 47 countries throughout the world. Pope Leo XIV is a Villanova graduate. Villanova University is an Augustinian institution. The Augustinians also sponsor Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts, along with several high schools and many Catholic parishes. This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: Pope Leo XIV is first Augustinian pope. What is the Augustinian order?

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