ObserverNote.comNewsFirst American elected pontiff, get to know Pope Leo XIV 

Featured

Recomended

Tulsi Gabbard Ominous Warning: “Nuclear Annihilation Is Closer Than Ever”

In a more than three-minute video released online, U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard delivers an emotional and urgent warning: the world is...
spot_img

Pope Leo XIV, 69, was elected to take up the papal seat on Thursday, on the second day of the papal conclave’s deliberations. 

Born Robert Prevost on Sept. 14, 1955 in Chicago, Ill., he was a suspected front-runner to succeed Pope Francis after his passing late last month, though some reporting suggested his being an American could actually count against him due to concerns that the U.S. could further exert its geopolitical prowess through the religious leader. 

Leo XIV was first brought to the Vatican by Francis to serve as prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops in January 2023, which is one of the most important positions in the Catholic Church as it vets bishop nominations issued globally. 

LIVE UPDATES: CARDINAL ROBERT PREVOST ANNOUNCED AS FIRST AMERICAN POPE, TAKING NAME LEO XIV

Francis then elevated him to the position of Cardinal in September 2023. 

Leo was reported to be closely aligned to Francis’s teachings as leader of the Catholic Church, particularly when it came to his positions regarding the environment, outreach to the poor and migrants, and opening the Catholic Church to embrace more followers.

Before making it to the highest position afforded in the Catholic Church, he first entered the novitiate of the Order of Saint Augustine in Saint Louis, in 1977, which essentially marked his period of training before he took his “holy orders.”

In August 1981, he gave his solemn vows, and by 1982 he was ordained as a priest.

By 1985 he joined the Augustinian mission in Peru, where he served as chancellor of the Territorial Prélature of Chulucanas for one year.

CARDINAL ROBERT PREVOST ANNOUNCED AS FIRST AMERICAN POPE, TAKING NAME LEO XIV

Between 1987 and 1988, he returned to the U.S., where he served as pastor for vocations and director of missions for the Augustinian Province of Chicago, before he returned to Peru for another 10 years to head the Augustinian seminary in Trujillo and teach Cannon Law. 

Eventually, he made his way back to his hometown, where, in 1999, he was elected provincial prior of the “Mother of Good Counsel” in Chicago.

Leo would go on to be elected twice as leader of the Augustinian religious order, a 13th century order founded by St. Augustine.

He had caught the attention of Francis, who, after becoming pope in 2013, moved Leo back to Peru in 2014 to serve as the administrator and eventually archbishop of Chiclayo.

Leo got his Peruvian citizenship in 2015, where he remained until he was moved to the Vatican in 2023. 

During his final years in Peru, Leo also served as vice-president of the permanent council of the Peruvian Bishops’ Conference from 2018 to 2023, which likely helped him secure his role as prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops under Francis. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Latest

spot_img

Trump’s Immediate Immigration Crackdown January 2025

Donald Trump’s presidency began on January 20, 2025, and from his very first day in office, he immediately started working on immigration that aligned...

Opinion

Trump’s Rejection at the G7: A Stark Signal to Zelensky

Why is Zelensky, the leader of a country that is neither a G7 member nor anywhere near being one, sitting at the same table...

Trump’s Tariffs Aim at Achieving Balanced Trade

Trump’s Tariffs Aim at Achieving Balanced Trade In recent years, the conversation surrounding free trade has sparked intense debates. While the concept of free trade...