The moment the white smoke appeared above the Sistine Chapel, I immediately turned on my television, because I wanted to see who the new pope would be, and then hopped on social media, because I knew that the internet could tell me more about the new pope faster than television could. That, and the memes would be good.
The memes came first, naturally, flying in harder and faster than they ever did with Pope Francis, because the new pope was American. Not just that ā Robert Francis Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV, was from Chicago, with a bio full of cultural touchstones that the American meme economy grasped immediately: Did the pope ever drink Malort? Was the pope a Cubs or a Sox fan? Was God going to intercede on behalf of the Knicks in the NBA playoffs because the pope graduated from Villanova? The next wave of information was, Iād suspected, going to be news and articles about his upbringing, pastoral history and religious stances ā things that would tell the world what sort of leader this new pope would be.
And then someone I followed posted a screenshot from an X account with the handle @drprevost: three retweets, over the past three months, that linked to articles harshly criticizing Donald Trumpās immigration policy. True, they werenāt words directly from then-Cardinal Prevost himself, but they were signs of life and intent nonetheless: a brief, unguarded moment, a marker that he was active and engaged, that spoke volumes about the new popeās innermost thoughts. I guess he didnāt have time to wipe his socials, I thought first, knowing that a giant MAGA political backlash was on the horizon. The pope only has an hour ā if that ā between being chosen and revealing himself to the world. Definitely not enough time to make sure his timelines are clean.
And then I paused. Wait. Why am I thinking about the POPE cleaning up his timelines?
Iām not a Catholic, and didnāt grow up one. The best description of my religious affiliation is probably ālapsed Buddhist.ā But Iāve always been intrigued by the Catholic Church as an institution: its deep history, its vast theology, its artistic influence and societal dominance, the internal politics and external diplomacy of the modern Vatican. I sometimes joke that I treat and exoticize Catholicism the same way that white men exoticize Japan, but my fascination itself is sincere: I am astonished that somehow, the Vatican has maintained its mysticism in the modern era ā an earthly waypoint between the physical and the divine.
Which is why I still have a hard time wrapping my head around the fact that less than two hours into his papacy, I learned more about the pope through his digital footprint than I did through the information filtered through Vatican press releases or interviews with his friends and family.
I learned from his retweets (and the discourse around the retweets) that he supported gun control legislation and Syrian refugees, opposed the repeal of DACA, condemned the 2017 massacre at Charlottesville, and called on Trump to support climate change legislation. I learned that heād written a book on religious statistics (available on JSTOR). I learned from one post that heād been a registered Republican, only to learn moments later that Illinois doesnāt have partisan voter registration. (The Washington Free Beacon reports that Leo XIV has previously voted in Republican primaries.) I wouldnāt have been surprised if someone posted a screenshot of the popeās Venmo transactions.
And then I came across something more intimate: Pope Leo XIVās personal Facebook profile.
I didnāt even have to go digging for it. A friend of mine whoād attended an Augustinian high school sent it to me, because it was apparently going viral among people whoād attended Augustinian educational institutions, because everyone who ever went to an Augustinian school in the United States somehow knows someone who knows him. Robert Prevostās account is currently set to private ā wild, because 68-year-olds rarely set their Facebook accounts to private by default ā but there is one public photo available: the future Pope Leo XIV, wearing aviators and a black windbreaker, atop a pony. Thatās a meme right there, thought my horrible, earthly, secular mind.
Without thinking about it, I copied the link and nearly sent it to a group chat, before catching myself in disgust. Viral or not, this was the private account of a man whoād had some degree of a private life when he got out of bed this morning, and clearly had not anticipated being elected pope. Anyone who harbored the ambition of becoming the spiritual leader of 1.4 billion people worldwide would, at a minimum, probably make sure his socials were secure ā that his 172 Facebook friends were masked from the rest of the world, or that his retweets from 2017 wouldnāt set off a diplomatic firestorm from an impulsive president or a spiteful vice president ā before he surrendered his electronic devices at the conclave.
I donāt think I would have paused to send that social media profile if it had belonged to anybody else: a politician, a celebrity, a coworker whom I didnāt know well, a blind date who needed vetting. And thereās a strong argument to be made that mining any public figureās digital activity is fair game, particularly if theyāre political leaders held to some degree of accountability. Venmo requests are enough to tank congressmenās careers. Old tweets can land someone in hot water in the present day. Finding a former Fox News anchorās phone number linked to a public Google Reviews account can indicate a massive national security crisis.
The moment you try to apply that standard to the freaking pope, though, the logic just grinds to a halt ā not because a world leader shouldnāt be held to this standard, but because it is utterly baffling that one can even mine the socials of the Vicar of Christ. In fact, itās baffling to think that a religious figure could be subjected to scrutiny of their internet history, or that they possess something as anodyne as a digital footprint ā particularly someone inheriting a role that supposedly dates back to the time of Jesus and was established by Saint Peter the Apostle, whose predecessors are ancient saints and medieval rulers, and who claims the title of Godās representative on Earth, according to the 1.4 billion members of the church he leads.
Maybe obsessing over the popeās retweets is a uniquely secular, American way to assess an American pope ā not through his leadership of the Order of Saint Augustine or his ministerial work in Peru, but through his voting record, sports loyalty, or whether heās retweeted mean things about the President. (We are a very tribalist nation that only thinks about things through the lens of being American.) We are now collectively engaged in mining the metadata of Pope Leo XIVās former life for clues as to the direction of his papacy just as much as we are trying to divine meaning from his choice of regnal name and the thirteen Leos that came before him. Frivolous or not, the digital history of a religious figure is now a thing that exists.
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