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The New Pope's Hardest Year: Leo XIV's Baptism of Fire on the World Stage
Pope Leo XIV was elected less than a year ago. He has already navigated a US-Iran war, the Holy Sepulchre crisis, and a Palm Sunday that will be studied in Catholic history. Here is how he has performed.
Pope Leo XIV was elected less than a year ago. He has already navigated a US-Iran war, the Holy Sepulchre crisis, and a Palm Sunday that will be studied in Catholic history. Here is how he has performed.
- Pope Leo XIV was elected less than a year ago.
- The pontificate of Pope Leo XIV began with the specific kind of institutional difficulty that no Vatican preparation can fully address: inheriting a papacy at a moment of acute global crisis that demands a moral voice wh...
- Leo — born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago, the first American pope and the first pope from the Augustinian order in centuries — was elected by the conclave that followed Pope Francis's death on Easter Monday 2025.
Pope Leo XIV was elected less than a year ago.
The pontificate of Pope Leo XIV began with the specific kind of institutional difficulty that no Vatican preparation can fully address: inheriting a papacy at a moment of acute global crisis that demands a moral voice while requiring political judgment so careful that any misstep creates lasting international complications.
Leo — born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago, the first American pope and the first pope from the Augustinian order in centuries — was elected by the conclave that followed Pope Francis's death on Easter Monday 2025. His first year has coincided with the US-Israeli campaign against Iran, Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine, the energy crisis affecting the populations whose pastoral care the papacy exercises, and the specific Jerusalem crisis that placed him in the position of praying for Christians who could not observe Holy Week rites because of a conflict involving his own home country.
His responses have been calibrated with a precision that suggests either exceptional political instinct or very good advisors — probably both. He has condemned war without naming the US, condemned religious justifications for war without singling out Hegseth, prayed for civilians on all sides without appearing to morally equate aggressors and defenders, and maintained relationships with heads of state across the political spectrum without appearing to endorse any of them.
The Palm Sunday homily will be remembered. The Isaiah quotation about hands full of blood — directed at 'those who wage war' without specifying who they are — managed the rhetorical feat of saying something intensely specific while maintaining absolute deniability of any specific targeting. It is the kind of speech that only makes sense coming from someone who occupies a position that is simultaneously above politics and inescapably within it.
His first apostolic journey — to Monaco in June — will be watched for what it signals about his priorities and his communication style at a moment when the world is still trying to understand who Pope Leo XIV actually is.