Time Magazine Honors Pope Leo XIV, Calling Him a 'Spiritual Counterweight' to Silicon Valley
By: Our Sunday Visitor
The magazine’s list includes “leaders,” “innovators,” “shapers,” and the group Pope Leo has been listed in, “thinkers”

(OSV News) — Pope Leo XIV has been named to Time magazine’s “Time 100 AI” list for 2025, recognized as one of the world’s top “thinkers” shaping how humanity confronts artificial intelligence.
Time magazine said he has chosen a name “in part to meet a revolution: that of AI.” The list includes “leaders,” “innovators,” “shapers,” and the group Pope Leo has been listed in, “thinkers.”
“His name choice is a tribute to Leo XIII, who served during the Industrial Revolution at the close of the 19th century, and railed against the new machine-driven economic systems converting workers into commodities,” Time wrote, presenting Pope Leo as part of the list.
The list is an “annual look at the most influential people in artificial intelligence,” Time said. Launched in 2023, “in the wake of OpenAI’s release of ChatGPT, the moment many became aware of AI’s potential to compete with and exceed the capabilities of humans,” the aim of the list is “to show how the direction AI travels will be determined not by machines but by people, innovators, advocates, artists, and everyone with a stake in the future of this technology.”
Pope Leo positioned as formidable counterweight
If Leo XIV continues to marshal the world’s Catholics against AI’s alienating potential, Time said, “Silicon Valley faces a formidable, and unexpected, spiritual counterweight.”
“Upon assuming the papacy in May, Leo XIV told the world that as artificial intelligence ushered in a ‘new industrial revolution,’ the technology would require the ‘defense of human dignity, justice, and labor.'”
Time underlined the influence and magnitude of the institution Pope Leo is a leader of, the Catholic Church, saying, “The Catholic Church comprises 1.4 billion believers; were it a nation, the church would be the world’s third-largest,” presenting the pontiff as someone who, in terms of AI, is “already making good on his vow.”
The magazine said that when the Vatican hosted a convening in June on AI, ethics, and corporate governance, Leo XIV’s keynote speech underlined AI’s potential as a force for good, particularly in health care and scientific discovery. But AI “raises troubling questions on its possible repercussions on humanity’s openness to truth and beauty, on our distinctive ability to grasp and process reality,” he added.
Vatican official warns of AI’s hidden costs
Time underlined that Pope Leo “warned that the technology could be misused” for “selfish gain at the expense of others, or worse, to foment conflict and aggression.”
The list, published August 29, includes tech CEOs, lawmakers, researchers, and artists, those who create AI engines, those who teach how to use them and research, and those who flag about its consequences for humanity.
Bishop Paul Tighe, a top official at the Vatican’s Dicastery for Culture and Education, speaking in Dublin August 23, cautioned on artificial intelligence, warning that its hidden environmental costs, impact on jobs, and broader social risks cannot be overlooked.
According to Bishop Tighe, who was ordained for the Archdiocese of Dublin in 1983, AI and the social issues that it gives rise to will be a priority for Pope Leo XIV.
“He has very clearly put it at the top of the agenda in terms of his choice of name and the link with ‘Rerum Novarum,’ and he explicitly said that reading the signs of the times this is something that we need to engage with,” the bishop said.
Dialogue with tech companies intensifying
Under Pope Francis, Time reminded, “the Vatican had pushed for a binding international treaty on artificial intelligence, sending the world’s tech CEOs into a defensive crouch.”
Bishop Tighe confirmed that the dialogue with tech companies has been “intensifying” now under Pope Leo, and that “an element of trust has emerged which means that people know we are trying to search together for the best outcomes and for the best possibilities. In that context, the trust itself permits a more open dialogue.”
There is “still a commitment and a desire to have that conversation,” which has involved Vatican departments such as the Pontifical Academy for Life, the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, and the Dicastery for Culture and Education, he underlined.
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Paulina Guzik is international editor for OSV News. Follow her on X. Sarah Mac Donald contributed to this report.