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Letters from Leo — the American Pope & US Politics

“Weapons and Walls” — In Madrid, Pope Leo XIV Rebukes the Politics Tearing Us Apart “No Just War” in Iran — Pope Leo XIV Retires the Warhawks’ Favorite Doctrine on the Flight to Madrid Pope Leo XIV’s New AI Encyclical Is Already Making a Dent in Trump’s Washington “I Asked Him for a Miracle” — Spike Lee Says Pope Leo XIV Is Pulling for the Knicks After Two Months of MAGA Attacks, Pope Leo XIV Outpaces Trump by 54 Points Pope Leo XIV Hands Vatican Communications to the Woman Who Pulled EWTN Back From the Brink Bishop Barron Claims the Left Wants to “Demonize” Trump. Standing With the Poor Is Not Demonization — It Is the Faith. The Splendor No Machine Can Replace “Useless” — Trump Renews His Attack on Pope Leo XIV After Chicago Mayor Visits Vatican Pope Leo XIV Just Quoted The Lord of the Rings Against Peter Thiel’s Empire — and Thiel Is Now Fleeing America ‘The Grand Humbling’ — Silicon Valley Responds to Pope Leo XIV “Disarm AI” — Pope Leo XIV Drops His First Encyclical on Slavery, Algorithms, and War The Spirit Walks Through Locked Doors Pope Leo XIV’s First Encyclical Arrives Tomorrow — Here’s What We Expect “Life Is Political” — Cardinal Michael Czerny Defends Pope Leo XIV’s Amidst Trump Attacks “An Eclipse of What It Means to Be Human” — Pope Leo XIV Previews AI Encyclical As Christian Persecution Surges in Netanyahu's Israel, Pope Leo XIV Confronts a Hatred Crisis That Has Reached American Streets What the Vatican Just Released on Gay Catholics — and Where Pope Leo Stands Sent by Pope Leo XIV, Cardinal Czerny Rebukes Trump’s Threats to “Take Cuba” Stephen Colbert’s White Whale — Will Pope Leo XIV Close The Late Show on Thursday? Joined By Anti-Catholic Pastors, Barron and Dolan Speak at Trump’s Prayer Rally Confronting Silicon Valley, Pope Leo XIV Drops His AI Encyclical on Memorial Day With Anthropic Onstage Don’t Cling to Me As Trump Attacks Pope Leo XIV and ICE Raids Catholic Parishes, Bishop Barron Tells Fox News the Real Threat Is Wokeism Americans Are Choosing Pope Leo XIV Over Donald Trump — and It Isn’t Close If You Want to Understand Pope Leo’s New Encyclical, Read This First “Elites That Care Nothing for the Common Good” — Pope Leo XIV Rebukes Trump’s European Arms Race “Schismatic Act” — Pope Leo XIV’s Doctrine Chief Warns Ultratraditionalist SSPX They Face Excommunication ICE Came for His Parishioners. Now Pope Leo XIV Is Sending Their Pastor to Lead a Diocese in Trump’s Florida. Pope Leo XIV Awards Top Diplomatic Honor to Iran’s Ambassador — Mid-War “A Dirty Cop” — Trump’s Jimmy Lai Comparison on the Eve of Beijing The Love Came First The Black Creole Mother Who Made the Pope Top MAGA Pastor Tells Fox News Trump Knows the Bible Better Than Pope Leo XIV MAGA Religious Leaders Dedicate and Bless 22-Foot Golden Trump Statue at Doral “This is An Hour For Love” — One Year of Pope Leo XIV “Wow, Okay!” — Pope Leo XIV’s Verdict on Marco Rubio’s Crystal Football “A Bit Strange” — Vatican’s Top Diplomat Rebukes Trump on the Eve of Rubio’s Audience With Pope Leo XIV “Would It Matter If I Told You I’m Pope Leo?” — The Bank Teller Who Hung Up on Robert Prevost Pope Leo XIV Rebukes Donald Trump’s Lies — and Marco Rubio Tells One of His Own “Endangering a Lot of Catholics” — Trump Smears Pope Leo XIV 48 Hours Before Rubio Meeting What Marco Rubio Actually Wants from Pope Leo XIV Who Got Left Off the List Trump Sends Marco Rubio — Not JD Vance — to Face Pope Leo XIV West Virginia Congressman Mocked Salvadoran Prisoners. Then Pope Leo XIV Sent Him a Salvadoran Bishop. “Repulsive and Barbaric” — The Pattern of Anti-Catholic Violence in Netanyahu’s Israel Pope Leo XIV Sends Former Undocumented Migrant to Trump’s West Virginia — Fulfilling the Retweet That Foretold His Papacy Pope Leo Said He Wasn’t Afraid of the Trump Administration. Neither Should We Be. ‘Citizen of the World’ — Elise Ann Allen’s Historic Biography of Pope Leo XIV Pope Leo XIV Buries Donald Trump in New Polling Trump Border Czar Tom Homan Mockingly Invites Pope Leo XIV on an ICE Raid What I Saw — And Felt — At Pope Francis’s Funeral We’re Called to Be Channels — Not Filters “Not Overtly Confessional” — Pope Leo XIV’s Indictment of Christian Political Performance As Trump Revives Firing Squads, Pope Leo XIV Salutes Efforts to End Death Penalty Report: Trump Administration Is Spying on Pope Leo XIV’s Vatican “I Cannot Be in Favor of War” — Pope Leo XIV's Wide-Ranging In-Flight Press Conference From Africa “Ravaged by Tyrants” — Pope Leo XIV's Africa Journey and the End of the ‘Quiet’ Papacy “God Never Abandons You” — Pope Leo XIV in Rainsoaked Bata Prison Visit One Year Later, We Are Still Pope Francis’s Legacy “Disrespectful and Violent” — Bishop Rodríguez Rebukes Trump From Mar-a-Lago’s Diocese Are Not Our Hearts Burning Within Us? The Parents of Minab School Children Killed in US Bombing Write to Pope Leo XIV “In the One, We Are One” — A Letter to My Conservative Catholic Friends Pope Leo XIV Is Not Fighting Donald Trump — The President Is Fighting Him “He’s a Saint” — Francis’s Last Word on Pope Leo XIV “I’m Uniquely Qualified” — Sean Hannity Lectures Pope Leo XIV on the Bible Pope Leo XIV Will Outlast Donald Trump — and Why We Will Defeat MAGA Anti-Catholicism “Ravaged by a Handful of Tyrants” — Pope Leo XIV in Cameroon After Trump’s Attack on Pope Leo, a Bomb Threat Came for His Brother in Suburban Chicago Trump Administration Strips Catholic Charities of $11 Million After Attacking Pope Leo XIV “Something Called the Just War Doctrine” — Speaker Johnson Lectures Pope Leo XIV on Augustine U.S. Bishops’ Doctrine Committee Rebukes JD Vance After He Lectures Pope Leo XIV on Theology JD Vance Twice Tells Pope Leo XIV to Stay Out of American Politics Today, the Church Fought Back Against Donald Trump “I Am Not Afraid” — Pope Leo XIV Responds to Trump’s Tirade Against the Church Trump Attacks Pope Leo XIV: “If I Wasn't in the White House, Leo Wouldn't Be in the Vatican” “We’re Better Than This” — Pope Leo XIV’s Top Three US Cardinals on 60 Minutes Thomas Deserved Better “Enough of War” — Pope Leo XIV Denounces the “Delusion of Omnipotence” at St. Peter's Prayer Vigil “Very Bad Form” — What Six Independent Reports Tell Us About the Pentagon’s Meeting With the Vatican Pope Leo XIV Says Christians Never Side With Those Who Launch Bombs “I'll Support You” — The Sentence That Undid JD Vance's Catholic Conscience on Iran “More Voices Against the Madness” — Cardinal Parolin Urges Catholics to Not Leave Pope Leo XIV Alone on Iran There Will Be No Second Avignon: Americans Stand With Pope Leo XIV The Pentagon Threatened Pope Leo XIV’s Ambassador With the Avignon Papacy Trump Backs Down Hours After Pope Leo XIV Called His Iran Threat “Unacceptable” “Contact Your Congressmen” — Pope Leo XIV Enlists Americans to End the Iran War After Suggesting Trump War Crimes “A Whole Civilization Will Die Tonight” — Trump Invokes God for Iran Annihilation as Pope Leo XIV Stands Alone Pope Leo XIV Teared Up for Francis — and Gave Us a Glimpse of the Bond That Made Him Pope While Trump Promises Hell on Earth, Pope Leo XIV Preaches Peace The Ground Is Shaking “Lay Down Your Weapons!” — Pope Leo XIV Decries War in First Easter Address “Man Can Kill the Body, But Not Love” — Pope Leo XIV’s First Easter Vigil Homily Confronts the Powers of Death A Letter to New Catholics Entering the Church Tonight Something Strange is Happening Trump-Vance White House Escalates Holy Week Assault Against Catholic Church Why Is This Night Different From All Other Nights? “Not Sponsored by the Lord” — Military Archbishop Broglio Declares Iran War Unjust The Eucharist Isn’t A Prize for the Perfect
One Year Later: The True Meaning of an American Pope
Christopher · 2026-05-08 · via Letters from Leo — the American Pope & US Politics
Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost presides over his first Holy Mass as Pope Leo XIV with cardinals in the Sistine Chapel at the conclusion of the Conclave on May 9, 2025.

Thank you for reading! Letters from Leo is a reader-supported publication dedicated to covering Pope Leo XIV, the Catholic Church, and American politics. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.

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Editor’s note: One year ago today, on May 8, 2025, white smoke billowed from the Sistine Chapel chimney and the world met its first American pope. I wrote the essay below for Time on the afternoon of his election. I’m republishing it now to mark the anniversary — one year wiser, and more grateful than ever for the providential gift of Pope Leo XIV. Let me know if you think my initial sentiments stand true a year later.

Image

On May 8, I stood on the colonnades of St. Peter’s Square on the beautiful afternoon a new pope was elected, shoulder to shoulder with pilgrims from every corner of the globe. The roar that erupted when white smoke billowed from the Sistine Chapel chimney is something I’ll never forget.

The earth beneath my feet shook as the bells of the ancient basilica tolled. And then the announcement: the unknown Robert Francis Prevost had been elected the vicar of Jesus Christ. Silence — everywhere. “Who?” an elderly nun next to me asked. Overconfident in my Latin skills and my biographical knowledge of the 133 cardinal-electors, I exclaimed: “Robert, Sister! He’s from America — he’s one of us.”

The cardinal-electors had chosen a Midwesterner to be the Successor of Saint Peter. As the bells of St. Peter’s pealed and the red velvet drapes parted on the balcony, we knew we were seeing the dawn of a new era for the Church — and, in some ways, for America too.

For the first time ever, the most famous American in the world is not the president or a Hollywood icon or tech billionaire — it’s the pope.

This is more than a Catholic triumph; it’s a cultural watershed for the United States. In a society that often equates American influence with might or money or celebrity, now our foremost representative on the global stage is a humble man in a white cassock, preaching love, justice, and mercy.

Back home in the U.S., the news of an American pope set off a flurry of excitement — and a scramble to claim him in our own image. Within hours, politicians on both sides of the aisle were applauding the new pontiff’s election, each with their partisan subtext.

Progressive Democrats pointed out his strong record on social justice, immigrant rights, and poverty, hoping to cast him as one of their own. Conservative Republicans, meanwhile, highlighted his orthodox Catholic stances on issues like abortion and religious liberty, eager to claim a spiritual endorsement of their platform. (Though some in the MAGA contingent are seemingly ready to criticize him already.)

This tug-of-war to politically appropriate the pope was perhaps inevitable. Yet it misses the mark of who Pope Leo XIV really is. Like any good priest, he is going to comfort and challenge all of us, regardless of politics.

In Vatican circles, the early consensus is that Pope Leo XIV may become to Pope Francis what Paul VI was to John XXIII, or what Benedict XVI was to John Paul II. In other words, he is seen as a man who can bring structure, discipline, and tangible reforms to consolidate the prophetic vision of his predecessor. Pope Francis lit an evangelical fire in the Church’s conscience over the past decade, preaching about the peripheries, mercy, and care for the poor.

Pope Leo, a calm lawyer-bishop with years of governance experience, seems aptly cast for that role. His job now is to take Francis’s lofty ideals and hammer them into lasting policy. If Francis was the dreamer, Leo will be the doer.

For all the lofty historical comparisons, sometimes the ordinariness of this moment is what strikes me most. After the white smoke cleared and the crowds drifted home singing hymns, I did something utterly mundane: I pulled out my phone and shot off a text to an old contact I had in my phone from a decade past. Except that old contact is now the pope.

I thumbed, hitting send with a mix of giddy disbelief and pride. Almost immediately, the message bubble turned green, undeliverable.

Of course it did. Father Bob had traded his iPhone for the Fisherman’s Ring, and his private cell number was probably deactivated by the Vatican within minutes of Habemus Papam.

I laughed at myself for thinking I could just text the pope, but the impulse itself says so much: We Americans are used to our leaders being just a tap away, and for a moment, I had forgotten that my countryman on the balcony was now a universal pastor with an entirely different life.

Still, the very fact that the new pope had a number in my contacts list is a testament to his accessibility and American-ness.

For an American Catholic like me, that hint of shared culture is both charming and reassuring. It reminds us that the papacy isn’t an abstract institution; it’s held by a person, and now that person happens to hail from our own shores.

Pope Leo’s election has instantly made the rituals of the Vatican feel a touch more familiar to Americans — and perhaps made the idea of holiness feel a touch more attainable.

Beyond the novelty and pride, many of us are looking to this new pope with a deeper longing: could this be a moment of moral and institutional renewal for America? It’s no secret that our country has been sorely divided in recent years. We’ve endured bruising political fights, a crisis of truth and civility, even an insurrection and the ongoing temptation of authoritarian politics.

Trust in institutions is at a historic low; faith communities themselves are riven by conflict. Americans, in short, are hungry for healing — a restoration of integrity in our public life and compassion in our communities.

In this context, the first American pope feels providential. Who better than an American, steeped in the ideals of liberty under God, to remind the world that faith and freedom stand together against loneliness and isolationism?

Don’t be surprised if he soon uses his moral pulpit to gently, but firmly, push back against the siren song of authoritarian leaders — be they on the international stage or lurking in our domestic politics.

His voice, coming from an American who cannot be dismissed as “anti-American,” might uniquely rally the conscience of our people. At the very least, his example of servant leadership — prioritizing the poor, dialoguing with opponents, renouncing worldly power — is a much-needed antidote to the cynical power-grabs we’ve grown accustomed to.

Without rehashing this era’s divisiveness too much, it’s fair to say this is a time when America’s image was often tied to loud, combative nationalism and a cult of personality.

How poetic, then, that as we turn the page, the world’s spotlight shifts to an American known for quiet service and spiritual depth. Pope Leo XIV’s rise doesn’t erase our nation’s struggles, but it does offer a new narrative for what American leadership can mean. It suggests that America’s greatest export might not be our entertainment or weaponry, but our capacity for idealism and moral vision.

At Letters from Leo, we stand with the millions of Americans — Catholics and people of goodwill alike — who believe that what Pope Leo XIV represents is the country’s truer self: a republic of moral seriousness, a people whose deepest aspirations bend toward dignity, mercy, and the common good.

In an age poisoned by cruelty, where authoritarian temptations gnaw at our institutions and our souls, we remain rooted in a faith that refuses to flinch — and in a vision of America capable of being something far larger than its loudest, ugliest impulses.

This is the fastest-growing Catholic community in the country because people are hungry for something deeper than rage and propaganda. They want courage, truth, and a politics of conscience — and right now, with an American on the Chair of Peter and an authoritarian in the Oval Office, that hunger has never been more urgent.

If you believe this movement matters — Catholics and people of goodwill standing for human dignity against the politics of cruelty — I’m asking you to join us.

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Thank you for reading. I’ll see you on the road.

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