Pope Leo’s challenge: How to build unity in a fragmenting world

The selection of Robert Francis Prevost as the first American pope stunned Vatican watchers around the world. Many had long believed that an American would never be chosen to lead an institution with 1.4 billion followers because the United States already wields so much global power.

Taking the name Pope Leo XIV, he stepped onto the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica as tens of thousands gathered below him. Chants of “USA! USA!” could be heard after the bells of the basilica stopped ringing in welcome of the new head of the Catholic church.

He spoke no English. “Peace be with you,” he said in Italian. He continued his message of unity in Spanish and Latin.

Why We Wrote This

Pope Leo XIV stepped onto the balcony and the world stage May 8 as a bridge builder. He is the first person from the United States to lead the 2,000-year-old church. At a time of global trial, the new pope offered a message of unity, peace, and global citizenry.

In a world of deepening conflicts – in Ukraine and Gaza, Sudan and Myanmar, India and Pakistan – the new pope committed to building bridges. It will be a tall order amid widening cracks in the post World War II global order.

With so much division in the world, “he wants us to open up to each other,” says Asuncíon Mbunga, a nun from Equitorial Guinea. “He made it very clear in his first message that his priority is peace.”

He is the son of a Navy veteran and local librarian and – according to his brother – a White Sox fan. But as one Vatican insider put it: “He’s the least ‘American’ of the American cardinals.”

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