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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Nicole Winfield

Pope Leo XIV mobbed by Catholic influencers at Vatican festival

Pope Leo XIV received a "rock star's welcome" at the Vatican's festival for Catholic influencers on Tuesday.

At the event, the pope urged attendees to ensure human relations do not suffer amidst the spread of digital ecosystems and artificial intelligence.

The gathering brought together priests, nuns, and ordinary faithful who utilise their social media presence to preach and teach the faith.

History's first American pontiff was mobbed by hundreds of these influencers, their mobile phones hoisted high to stream the encounter, upon his arrival in St Peter's Basilica after a special Mass.

These pilgrims have descended on Rome for a special Holy Year celebration of so-called "digital missionaries", forming part of the Vatican’s week-long Jubilee for young people, which culminates this weekend with a vigil and Mass in a vast field on Rome’s outskirts.

Leo thanked the young people for using their digital platforms to spread the faith, and he gamely posed for selfies. But he warned them about neglecting human relationships in their pursuit of clicks and followers, and cautioned them to not fall prey to fake news and the “frivolity” of online encounters.

“It is not simply a matter of generating content, but of creating an encounter between hearts,” Leo said in a speech that showed his ease switching from Italian to Spanish to English. “Be agents of communion, capable of breaking down the logic of division and polarization, of individualism and egocentrism.”

“It is up to us – to each one of you – to ensure that this culture remains human,” he said. “Our mission – your mission – is to nurture a culture of Christian humanism, and to do so together” in what he called the only networks that really matter: of friendship, love and the “network of God.”

Warnings against going off-message

For the past two days, the Vatican’s message to the young influencers has been one of thanks for their social media evangelizing, but also a warning to not allow their posting to go off-message or to neglect the human dimension of all encounters.

For Leo, the issue is particularly heartfelt since he has said that addressing the threat to humanity posed by AI will be a priority of his pontificate.

The Rev. David McCallum, an American Jesuit who heads a leadership development program and presented Monday, held periodic breaks with instructions for those in the audience to actually speak with the person next to them, for up to 10 minutes at a time.

Cardinal Antonio Tagle, the head of the Vatican’s evangelization office, urged the influencers to avoid anything that smacks of false advertising, coercion or brainwashing in their posting, or to use their platform to make money. He noted that he himself had been victim of a fake video advertising arthritis medicine.

“Brothers and sisters, be discerning,” Tagle told the influencers in his homily at Tuesday’s Mass.

A mini World Youth Day in Rome

Tuesday began with groups of influencers and young pilgrims passing through the basilica’s Holy Door, a rite of passage for the estimated 32 million people participating in the Vatican’s 2025 Holy Year celebrations. This week, downtown Rome swarmed with energetic masses of teenage Catholic scouts, church and Catholic school groups.

It all had the vibe of a scaled-down World Youth Day, the once-every-three-year Catholic Woodstock festival that was inaugurated by St. John Paul II.

The most recent one in Lisbon, Portugal went viral thanks to the Rev. Guilherme Peixoto, a village priest in northern Portugal who also happens to be a DJ. He’s in Rome this week, though it’s not clear if he will reprise his now-famous set that woke the young people up before Pope Francis’ final Mass in Lisbon.

In it, he spliced into the set both St. John Paul II’s exhortation to young people to “be not afraid” and Francis’ appeal in Lisbon that the church has room for everyone, “todos, todos, todos.”

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