First Encyclical Next Monday - Presentation Includes Anthropic Co-Founder
Leo XIV’s first encyclical Magnifica humanitas, will be officially released on May 25 at the Vatican. It was signed on May 15, the 135th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s social encyclical Rerum novarum.
Magnifica humanitas focuses on the protection of the human person in the age of artificial intelligence.
The presentation will take place in the Vatican Synod Hall in the presence of Leo XIV next Monday.
Speakers include Cardinal Tucho Fernández, Cardinal Michael Czerny, and Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin.
Also participating are political theologian Professor Anna Rowlands, AI researcher Christopher Olah — co-founder of the American company Anthropic and head of research on the interpretability of artificial intelligence — and Professor Leocadie Lushombo of the Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University in California.
Prevost does not transmit the faith and morals that he himself maliciously contradicts. Prevost has declared war on the Law of God and on Catholic morality, inciting unrepentant sodomites, adulterers, and those who reject Christ to persist even more stubbornly in their rebellion against God. By bringing about the disobedience of Adam and Eve, the serpent caused them—and us—to suffer physical death. Prevost and Bergoglio are bringing about the eternal death of sodomites, adulterers, and all those who reject the Gospel of Christ—those who have chosen to believe these servants of the devil rather than to repent and abhor sin in order to obey God's laws and attain salvation. The Magisterium of the Church teaches that all acts and pamphlets of a heretic are invalid and null. Just as Bergoglio's pamphlets are null, so too are those of the apostate gay activist Robert Prevost.
This shameless man (Robert Prevost) has been exposed, and—much like a circus clown—he continues his performance as if he could conceal his betrayal of God. He believes that by turning his back on the evidence of his rebellion against God—and by persisting in his charade to keep the masses deceived—he will somehow be able to evade judgment. However, the more he ignores the time God has granted him for repentance—just as He granted it to Judas the Traitor—and the more he refuses to mend his ways and repent, the worse his fate will be. Tragically, what we witness day after day is that, instead of repenting, Prevost obstinately persists in consummating his betrayal of God.