Pastoral Perambulations


Magnifica Humanitas: From Social Teaching to Social Doctrine

May 31, 2026

Fr. Tom writes: What follows is, without irony, an AI generated summary of the main points of Pope Leo’s first major encyclical. In it, he “rebrands” Catholic Social Teaching as Catholic Social Doctrine. That shift of nomenclature is significant: careful wordsmith that he is, Pope Leo raises the stakes by redefining Christian Humanism that began with Paul and Augustine through Aquinas, Erasmus, Thomas More, Cardinal Newman, Leo XIII, and Vatican II’s Gaudium et Spes as the official doctrine of the Church, not just another teaching that can be ignored. More analysis to follow over the summer. 


ChatGPT summarizes: Pope Leo XIV’s Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”), published the day after Pentecost, is the first papal encyclical devoted entirely to the moral and spiritual implications of artificial intelligence. The document frames AI not merely as a technological development but as a profound theological challenge concerning the meaning of the human person, freedom, community, and creation itself. Drawing consciously on Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891), which addressed the Industrial Revolution, Pope Leo XIV presents AI as the defining social question of the twenty-first century.  


The encyclical’s 245 paragraphs are broken into an introduction and five chapters. The first two lay out the development of Catholic social doctrine from Leo XIII to today and how its principles apply to the technological age. Chapter three introduces “the technocratic paradigm” of AI and the imbalance of digital power. Chapter four addresses truth, democracy, work, education, and human freedom in the AI era, while chapter five analyzes the normalization of war and the fight for power, arguing that everyone bears responsibility for building a civilization of love through peace and justice.


The encyclical’s central theological claim is that human dignity originates in humanity’s creation imago Dei—in the image and likeness of God. Pope Leo argues that no machine, regardless of sophistication, can possess the spiritual depth, moral agency, or transcendent vocation of the human person. AI may imitate cognition, but it cannot replicate conscience, relational love, sacrificial freedom, or the soul. This distinction becomes the foundation for the encyclical’s broader ethical vision. Human beings are not reducible to information, productivity, or computational patterns; they are creatures called into communion with God and one another.  


A recurring theme in the document is the danger of “technological idolatry.” Leo warns that modern societies increasingly treat technological power as salvific, investing AI with quasi-religious expectations of omniscience and mastery. He interprets this tendency through the biblical image of the Tower of Babel: humanity attempting to transcend creaturely limits through prideful self-construction rather than humble dependence on God. The Pope contrasts “constructing Babel” with “rebuilding Jerusalem,” using these biblical symbols to distinguish systems built on domination from communities ordered toward justice, solidarity, and worship.  


Theologically, Magnifica Humanitas insists that technology is never morally neutral. Human tools embody the desires, assumptions, and moral orientation of their creators. Consequently, AI systems inevitably reflect spiritual and ethical visions of humanity. If developed primarily for profit, surveillance, or military dominance, AI risks deforming both society and the soul. Leo repeatedly argues that sin manifests structurally through systems that reduce persons to data points or economic units. Thus the encyclical extends Catholic social teaching into the digital age, interpreting algorithmic exploitation as a new form of alienation and even a potential “digital slavery.”  


Another major theological dimension concerns human labor. Echoing Rerum Novarum, Leo presents work not merely as economic activity but as participation in God’s creative action. Human labor possesses spiritual dignity because it expresses creativity, responsibility, and service to the common good. The Pope therefore criticizes forms of automation that treat workers as expendable obstacles to efficiency. While acknowledging AI’s benefits in medicine, education, and communication, he argues that economic systems must remain ordered toward integral human flourishing rather than technological optimization alone.  


The encyclical also develops a theology of embodiment and relationality. Leo warns that excessive dependence on digital mediation can weaken authentic human encounter and erode the practices of empathy, contemplation, and presence. Christian anthropology, he argues, understands persons as embodied beings whose identities are formed through relationships, worship, suffering, and love—not through virtual simulation. For this reason, the Pope strongly rejects transhumanist ideologies that seek to erase the distinction between human beings and machines or promise immortality through technological enhancement. Such visions, he argues, confuse redemption with self-engineering.  


One of the encyclical’s strongest sections addresses warfare and political power. Leo condemns autonomous weapons and declares that traditional “just war” reasoning becomes increasingly untenable when lethal decisions are delegated to algorithms. Human moral responsibility cannot be outsourced to machines. The Pope therefore calls for the “disarming” of AI and for robust international regulation rooted in the common good rather than corporate or geopolitical competition. 


Ultimately, Magnifica Humanitas is less a rejection of technology than a theological defense of humanity. Pope Leo envisions the Church as a moral witness reminding the modern world that progress without wisdom becomes destructive. AI must remain subordinate to the transcendent dignity of the person and to humanity’s divine vocation toward communion, justice, and love. The encyclical argues that the future of civilization will depend not only on what humanity can build, but on whether it remembers what it is.

Blessings,