Pope Leo Issues Urgent Warning About AI and Calls for Major Reform

Pope Leo has delivered a serious warning about the future of artificial intelligence, urging global leaders to take immediate action and implement significant changes.

As AI continues to transform industries and redefine daily life, its rapid advancement is already leaving a noticeable impact on the workforce. Concerns are mounting over how this technological shift will affect future generations.

Economists have started advising young people to consider careers in hands-on trades—such as plumbing, electrical work, and decorating—fields that are expected to remain resilient and reliant on human skills.

Prominent thinkers, including the late Stephen Hawking and tech pioneer Bill Gates, have also voiced deep concerns about the growing influence of AI, warning that its unchecked development could pose serious risks to humanity.

Now, the new Pope Leo has weighed in on the controversial debate several times, showing just how concerned he is about it.

The pope has issued several warnings about AI (Simone Risoluti - Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

The pope has issued several warnings about AI (Simone Risoluti – Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

The Chicago-born head of the Roman Catholic Church has wasted no time in issuing his stark warnings ever since he came to the lofty post on May 8 this year.

Within weeks, he argued the Church ought to be standing up for workers’ rights across the globe, stating: “In our own day, the Church offers everyone the treasury of its social teaching in response to another industrial revolution and to developments in the field of artificial intelligence that pose new challenges for the defense of human dignity, justice, and labor.”

Now, he’s touched on the topic again, this time voicing concern AI could have adverse affects on the development of young people, intellectually, neurologically and spiritually.

Delivering the message to a major conference on AI in ethics, that was partly held in the Vatican, Pope Leo stressed his concern over the emerging tech and its possible implications for humankind.

AI is already changing the working landscape (Ying Tang/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

AI is already changing the working landscape (Ying Tang/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

“All of us, I am sure, are concerned for children and young people, and the possible consequences of the use of AI on their intellectual and neurological development,” he said.

“Our youth must be helped, and not hindered, in their journey towards maturity and true responsibility,” while stressing that they ‘are our hope for the future.’

“Society’s well-being depends upon their being given the ability to develop their God-given gifts and capabilities. In the end, authentic wisdom has more to do with recognising the true meaning of life, than with the availability of data.”

The pope was reportedly pleased that the conference took place from the Apostolic Palace as he said it the setting presents a ‘clear indication of the Church’s desire to participate in these discussions that directly affect the present and future of our human family’.

Pope Leo says he's worried about future generations (Getty Images)

Pope Leo says he’s worried about future generations (Getty Images)

He added that while AI is ‘undoubtedly an exceptional product of human genius,’ it is, ‘above all else, a tool’.

Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost even went so far as to pick his papal name, Pope Leo XIV, in a nod to the threat.

The former Pope Leo XIII came to the position during the start of the Industrial Revolution, during which he made the plight of workers and their human rights a top priority.

The new pope’s comments also come as his predecessor, the late Pope Francis, similarly issued such warnings during his 12-year tenure.

Francis had called for an international treaty to regulate AI and urged global leaders and politicians to ensure that vital decisions ultimately still fall on the shoulders of humans.