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Catholics around the world celebrate as Robert Francis Prevost becomes Pope Leo XIV – live

Robert Francis Prevost: the moderate, good humoured first American pope

Sam Jones

Robert Francis Prevost – who has chosen the papal name Leo XIV – may not be the Latin American Jesuit wildcard that his predecessor, Pope Francis, was, but his election is similarly historic.

In the figure of the 69-year-old former head of the Augustinian order, the Roman Catholic church has its very first US leader.

Until Thursday evening, the idea of the fisherman’s ring being slipped on to a North American hand was seen as a fairly distant possibility.

Catholics around the world celebrate as Robert Francis Prevost becomes Pope Leo XIV – live
Robert Francis Prevost was only made a cardinal in 2023. Photograph: Yara Nardi/Reuters

The Vatican’s longstanding opposition to a US pope stemmed largely from the optics of having a pontiff from a political superpower and a country with such a hegemonic cultural and secular global influence.

But all that changed after a short conclave that chose a man who had been a cardinal for only a little more than two years.

While his appointment is likely to be welcomed by progressive factions within the church, it was probably not the news that some of his more conservative, Trump-aligned US brother cardinals had been hoping for.

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Stephen Cottrell, the archbishop of York and acting head of the Church of England, has said Anglicans “share in the great joy of our Roman Catholic sisters and brothers” in welcoming Pope Leo as “the Bishop of Rome”. He continued:

Pope Leo XIV’s many years of pastoral experience, his commitment to justice, and his deep spirituality are an example of life lived in service to Jesus Christ.

As Anglicans, we give thanks for his call to Christians to be bridge-builders across the divisions of our world, and the divisions that continue to exist between churches. This is something Jesus asks of us. He prays that the church will be one.

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