Friday, 29 May 2026

Pope says AI must serve humanity, not power.

 Extract from Eureka Street

  • Claudio Betti
  • 28 May 2026                                   

 

It is clear that Pope Leo's document requires deeper analysis and cannot be exhausted by a rapid reading, yet some elements stand out immediately.

Not an era of change, but a change of era. Pope Francis' expression runs throughout the entire encyclical Magnifica Humanitas by Leo XIV. The impression is that the Pope reads our time as a historical phase marked by the meeting of two major phenomena. On one side, the extraordinary growth of technological capabilities and the possibilities offered by artificial intelligence. On the other side, the emergence of a culture where the language of force, control, and competition gradually replaces cooperation, fraternity, and shared responsibility. More than a document dedicated to artificial intelligence, the encyclical is a reflection on the human person and the destiny of contemporary society. AI becomes the visible starting point, almost the concrete place where deeper questions become evident. The real question running through the text concerns the human being: how people understand themselves, work, power, freedom, truth, and relationships.

Cardinal Fernández also observed this during the presentation of the document, insisting on the subtitle of the encyclical, which identifies its core concern as safeguarding the human person. In short, this should not be read as an encyclical about artificial intelligence, but as an encyclical in the time of artificial intelligence. The distinction is fundamental. An encyclical on artificial intelligence would probably have focused on technical characteristics, systems, regulations, and the limitations of digital tools. Leo XIV chooses a different path. Artificial intelligence represents the historical context within which deeper questions emerge. The real issues concern the human person, dignity, work, freedom, truth, power, and the future of human coexistence.

The first impression is that we are facing a new Rerum Novarum. At the end of the nineteenth century, Leo XIII confronted a revolution changing the world. Factories, machines, capital, and industrial transformations reshaped work and social life. On one side, immense wealth was produced. On the other side, new forms of poverty and exploitation emerged. Leo XIII understood that the problem was not the machine. The problem was humanity within the new system.

Leo XIV also adds an important observation regarding the birth of Rerum Novarum itself. He recalls that the encyclical did not arise simply from theoretical reflection or abstract principles. It was born from listening. Leo XIII looked at a changing world. He observed new factories, new forms of poverty, injustices, and suffering emerging at the heart of the industrial revolution. Before speaking, he listened. Before offering principles, he sought to understand.

Magnifica Humanitas arises from the same attitude. The encyclical is born from listening to the signs of the times, according to the language of the Second Vatican Council. It is also born from listening to real people, their fears, hopes, wounds, and expectations. This recalls the opening of Gaudium et Spes, when the Council states that “the joys and hopes, the griefs and anxieties of the people of this age, especially of those who are poor or in any way afflicted, are the joys and hopes, the griefs and anxieties of the followers of Christ.”

This point deserves attention because it prevents an overly abstract reading of the document. Artificial intelligence is not observed from above as an isolated technical phenomenon. It is considered from the perspective of the men and women who will experience its consequences. It focuses on those who risk losing employment, those who could be excluded from decision-making processes, and those who could become invisible within increasingly automated systems.

 

“At Babel, human beings seek a single language. They seek uniformity, control, and power. At Pentecost, something different happens. A new language is not born. A language made new is born. Each person continues to hear in their own language and history. The Spirit does not eliminate differences. It makes them understandable. Unity does not arise from uniformity but from communion.”

 

As often happens in Catholic Social Teaching, the encyclical's gaze begins with those on the margins. With people who risk having no voice. With those who often remain at the edges of major historical transformations. Listening to the signs of the times becomes inseparable from listening to the sufferings and expectations of the men and women of our age.

Today the risk appears different, yet surprisingly similar. If in the past human beings risked becoming components within the industrial machine, today they may become data, algorithms, digital profiles, statistics, or measurable performances. It is not difficult to recognise signs of this transformation. Technological capacities continue to grow, possibilities of control increase, and enormous wealth concentrates in the hands of very few economic and technological actors. Some enter the future at extraordinary speed while others risk being left behind.

The encyclical therefore asks a simple and radical question. Who truly benefits from progress? Who remains outside? Who becomes invisible?

The document places itself within the broader tradition of the Church's social teaching. Recalling Paul VI, it brings back a significant expression: the Church is “an expert in humanity”. This phrase does not mean the Church possesses technical expertise superior to scientists, economists, or engineers. It means something different. Through centuries of history, wars, crises, and transformations, the Church has learned to continually ask what makes the human person truly human. Its fundamental questions do not concern the functioning of machines but the destiny of persons.

For this reason, one of the most interesting aspects of the encyclical is that the Church does not seek a new enemy. It did not do so during the Industrial Revolution and does not do so today with artificial intelligence. Magnifica Humanitas does not construct a conflict between faith and technology. Anna Rowlands recalled this during the presentation. The Church has often seen technological innovations as opportunities for growth and encounter. Printing enabled an unimaginable spread of knowledge. New forms of communication transformed how the Gospel was proclaimed. The internet has opened new possibilities for knowledge and relationships.

The question is not whether technology should be accepted or rejected. The question concerns how it is inserted within a vision of the human person and society.

Here one of the most beautiful biblical images of the entire document emerges. On one side stands Babel. On the other side stands the rebuilding of Jerusalem in the time of Nehemiah. Babel represents a project of domination and self-sufficiency. Human beings seek to ascend to heaven through their own strength. They seek greatness and uniformity. The logic of Babel is also the logic of force that attempts to build the world from above, imposing a single language, a single direction, and a single criterion of judgment. Jerusalem instead represents a city built upon communion. If Babel is born from the desire to reach God through human power, Jerusalem is born from the encounter between God and humanity. If Babel creates uniformity, Jerusalem preserves differences. If Babel seeks domination, Jerusalem creates belonging.

There may be an element that at first appears secondary but carries deeper meaning. The encyclical is published not only on the one hundred and thirty-fifth anniversary of Rerum Novarum. It is also promulgated the day after Pentecost. It is difficult to consider such a coincidence irrelevant. If the reference to Rerum Novarum places the document within the great journey of Catholic Social Teaching, the timing of Pentecost adds another dimension. At Babel, human beings seek a single language. They seek uniformity, control, and power. At Pentecost, something different happens. A new language is not born. A language made new is born. Each person continues to hear in their own language and history. The Spirit does not eliminate differences. It makes them understandable. Unity does not arise from uniformity but from communion.

Perhaps artificial intelligence itself can be read through this perspective. It may become the new language of humanity. Anna Rowlands observed that every major technological transformation opens new possibilities for communication and encounter. The question is not simply whether to use this language or not. The question is what spirit will inhabit it. Christians may be called to transform a new language into a language made new, that is, an evangelised language. A language capable of safeguarding what is human, creating relationships instead of isolation, fostering encounter instead of domination, and opening spaces for truth and hope instead of feeding only speed, control, and power.

Leo XIV therefore asks a question that runs throughout the encyclical. What are we building?

History does not appear as an automatic mechanism already written. The encyclical speaks of a great construction site of our age. We are called to live within this site with freedom and responsibility. We are not passive spectators of the transformations taking place. We are builders. The future does not simply happen. It is built through concrete decisions. Humanity is not crushed by inevitable processes. Human beings still possess the freedom to direct history.

The issue becomes even clearer when the document addresses the theme of human dignity. The encyclical insists on the ontological dignity of the person. Dignity does not derive from success, productivity, or social usefulness. It does not depend on intellectual capacities. It belongs to every human being simply because he or she exists.

The implications are enormous. An artificial system may classify data, construct predictions, recognise patterns, and identify correlations. It cannot determine the value of a person.

The encyclical then introduces another theme that occupies a central place in the text, namely truth. Leo XIV observes that the problem of AI concerns not only what we are able to do but also what we are able to believe. Truth is described as a common good and not as the property of those who possess greater power or visibility. The risk does not consist simply in the presence of false information. There is a deeper issue. Digital platforms can create environments in which what is most visible automatically becomes what appears most true.

For this reason, the encyclical speaks of a true ecology of communication. Rules are needed, along with transparency, serious journalism, critical thinking, and spaces in which dialogue and verification of facts truly matter.

Alongside truth, the educational dimension also emerges strongly. One of the most interesting observations concerns education in the age of AI. Educating people in the use of artificial intelligence also means teaching them when and for what purposes not to use it. The speed with which we now obtain answers risks extinguishing something essential: the desire to ask questions in the first place.

At this point another question emerges, one that directly concerns the mission of the Church. What does it mean to evangelise in the age of artificial intelligence? It does not simply mean using new tools or new platforms. It means proclaiming the Gospel within a culture that increasingly interprets reality through data, algorithms, and measurable performance. Evangelising today may mean reminding people that they are more than their digital profile, more than their measurable achievements, and more than their data. There are fundamental dimensions of human experience that cannot be reduced to an algorithm, such as love, forgiveness, gratuity, compassion, and hope.

Finally, one of the most dramatic themes of the entire document emerges, namely the relationship between artificial intelligence and war. Here the theme of the age of force returns. War slowly risks becoming something normal. The language of absolute security and power tends to replace that of diplomacy, cooperation, and the patient construction of peace. Artificial intelligence may accelerate this process by making conflict faster, more impersonal, and more distant from moral responsibility.

In his public remarks, Leo XIV used a very powerful image when he stated that artificial intelligence must be disarmed. This expression does not mean eliminating technology or stopping progress. It means removing these instruments from the logic of force and domination. No algorithm can make war morally acceptable. No machine can assume the ethical weight of a human life.

At the end, Magnifica Humanitas brings everything back to a very simple question. It is not about the machine. It is about us. Are we building ever more powerful tools, or are we building more human beings?

 

 

Dr Claudio Betti is a historian and director of Australian Catholic University’s Rome Campus.

 

 

Mosquitoes can learn to be attracted to the smell of repellent, study finds.

Extract from ABC News

Close up photo of a mosquito on a green leaf.

Yellow fever mosquitoes carry a number of diseases including dengue fever, which kills roughly 40,000 people each year. (iNaturalist: Alfonso Auerbach, CC BY-NC 4.0)

In short:

Scientists have found that mosquitoes can learn to associate repellent with food.

Their study suggests mosquitoes can overcome their aversion to repellents, which could have implications for our understanding of what steps we need to take to protect ourselves from being bitten.

What's next?

The researchers say these findings haven't been tested in mosquitoes outside the lab, and that people should continue to use repellents to prevent a range of potentially deadly diseases.

Benjamin Netanyahu directs Israel's military to take over 70 per cent of Gaza.

Extract from ABC News

A little boy looks through tent sheets.

Israel effectively controls an estimated 64 per cent of Gaza. (Reuters: Dawoud Abu Alkas)

In short:

Benjamin Netanyahu has directed Israel's military to take more of Gaza, saying he will "start" by seizing 70 per cent of the Palestinian territory,

Israel effectively controls an estimated 64 per cent of Gaza, now bombarded to ruins by Israel's two-year military assault that followed the 2023 Hamas attack on southern Israel.

What's next?

Mr Netanyahu's directive comes as Israel escalates its attacks in Gaza during Eid al-Adha celebrations.

Victoria Park advocates urge Queensland government to stop stadium work until Indigenous heritage challenges assessed.

Extract from ABC News

By Will Murray

A woman in a blue jacket looking at a tree in the foreground.

Gaja Kerry Charlton is a signatory to five challenges to the Victoria Park stadium project. (ABC News: Will Murray)

In short:

Advocates are urging the Queensland government to pause construction at Victoria Park until challenges under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act can be assessed.

A new report has also found the site's status as a spring complex will not survive development and ancient trees cannot be replaced.

What's next?

The park will change from council to Games Independent Infrastructure and Coordination Authority (GIICA) ownership on Monday, but excavators and fencing are already on site.

Pope Leo warns tech elite about the moral risks of AI.

Extract from Eureka Street

 

Pope Leo XIV structures his Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”) encyclical around a potent metaphor: artificial intelligence represents the “construction site” of our present age, and we have two potential paths before us. We can either build the tower of Babel, that ultimate symbol for human hubris in which technology is used in an attempt to reach heaven without God’s assistance or blessing, or we can build the city in which we dwell with God and with one another in all life’s fullness.

The newest social encyclical, launched Monday 25 May 2026, is subtitled “On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence”. The nuance is important here. The encyclical is not a narrow response to AI but a broad contribution to Catholic social teaching. Grounded in a thorough exposition of the Church’s social doctrine, Magnifica Humanitas hearkens back explicitly to Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891), which upheld the dignity of work against the challenges of the second industrial revolution. This connection is further strengthened by the signing of Magnifica Humanitas on 15 May, the anniversary of Rerum Novarum.

The world waited a week for the encyclical’s presentation and promulgation after its signing due to a break from tradition. The presence of several cardinals alongside His Holiness at the launch of the encyclical was familiar, but the pope also chose to include two female theologians – Professor Anna Rowlands of Durham University and Professor Leocadie Lushombo of Santa Clara University – and Anthropic co-founder Christopher Olah. The line-up of speakers perhaps recognises that the Church must maintain dialogue across the domains of contemporary life if its relevance and moral authority are to be acknowledged beyond a Catholic context.

The presence of the Anthropic co-founder alongside the Holy Father at the encyclical’s launch should not be interpreted as an endorsement of any aspect of the current AI landscape, however. While Anthropic has worked hard to distinguish itself from its competitors as the AI company that takes the perspectives of religious and philosophical traditions seriously in the development of its model, Olah himself acknowledged that the incentive structures of the AI industry do not always push innovation in the direction of the common good. Instead, tech executives are swayed by commercial and geopolitical concerns, as well as plain old ambition and pride.

This dissonance between a world dominated by tech interests and the vision of the common good upheld by the Church pervades the encyclical. Pope Leo returns to the dignity of work emphasised in Rerum Novarum, warning against the new threat posed by AI to employment and job security. Work is a fundamental human good, in and of itself, not merely a means to generate income and certainly not an activity to be exploited for maximal gain.

Magnifica Humanitas resonates more strongly still with Pope Francis’ Laudato Si’ (2015, “On Care for Our Common Home”). Like his predecessor, Pope Leo critiques the technocratic paradigm for the way in which it concentrates wealth and power in the hands of an elite few and increases precarity and fragility everywhere else. Magnifica Humanitas reminds us that technology is not neutral, and that a technological mindset has captured our age, such that all problems are framed as solvable through technology.

 

“We can either build the tower of Babel, that ultimate symbol for human hubris in which technology is used in an attempt to reach heaven without God’s assistance or blessing, or we can build the city in which we dwell with God and with one another in all life’s fullness.”

 

The various means of safeguarding the human person detailed in the encyclical push against this technological zeitgeist. There are calls to slow down AI development while genuine and broadly representative moral frameworks are articulated; to practise restraint in AI use; to privilege the dignity of work as foundational to human life over efficiency in workforce decisions; to ensure that the distribution of financial credit supports income generation primarily through labour; and to use taxation to redistribute wealth accrued through technological investments. In a move that will undoubtedly provoke much debate, Pope Leo also identifies a need to update just war theory, rendered insufficient in the contemporary arena of war by the prevalence of algorithms that remove human moral discernment from decision-making processes.

In a document filled with references to prior magisterial texts, Vatican communications and theological writings, Leo calls on the wisdom of none other than Gandalf, Tolkien’s wizard sage, as he entreats us to do our part:

 

“It is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till.”

— The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Book V, Chapter IX

 

Although Pope Leo describes AI as “a valuable tool that requires vigilance”, it is clear from the entirety of the encyclical that he finds many more reasons for vigilance when it comes to current AI tools than he does to ascribe value to them. Leo invokes the notion of “disarmament” with respect to AI, again underscoring its problematic entanglement with contemporary warfare. The practical guidance offered calls us to adopt the perspective of victims, with victims of war singled out in particular. Peace is built through practising justice.

These exhortations are strengthened by the humble posture taken up in the encyclical concerning the Church’s history. Pope Leo acknowledges that the Church was complicit in slavery and slow to condemn it; he asks for pardon. This examination of conscience is critical in maintaining the vigilance required to avoid new forms of slavery. The encyclical is alert to the danger of digital colonialism, imposed through algorithmic overreach, data appropriation and extractive labour conditions in the development of AI models and infrastructure.

The encyclical is not good news for the technological elite. The only way forward for artificial intelligence involves its rescue from monopolistic control and ambitions of dominance, and the redistribution of its fruits to benefit all people. It requires coordinated resistance, via governance, regulatory and financial mechanisms, to the value-capture logic of algorithmic evaluation and optimisation narratives in determining what constitutes human flourishing. But the vision of humanity outlined by Pope Leo is truly magnificent, and worth the effortful resistance and shared moral discernment required to build the city of God.

 

 

Associate Professor Victoria Lorrimar is Director, Centre for Technology and Human Futures, Institute for Ethics and Society University of Notre Dame Australia

 

Thursday, 28 May 2026

Hamas confirms that Israeli air strike killed its new military leader in Gaza.

 Extract from ABC News

People carry bodies wrapped in cloth down a city street.

Palestinians held a funeral for Mohammad Odeh the day after he was killed by Israel. (Reuters: Mahmoud Issa)

In short:

Dozens of Palestinians have carried the body of Hamas' armed wing chief through the streets of Gaza a day after he was killed by Israel.

Mohammad Odeh death comes little more than a week after his predecessor was killed in an Israeli strike.

What's next?

Israel says it will continue to target Hamas militant leaders.