試す 金 - 無料
MAKING POPE LEO
Time
|July 28, 2025
How a kid from the Midwest became the leader of the Catholic Church
“I’M TICKED,” SAYS JOHN PREVOST, THE RETIRED Midwestern high school principal who is now, abruptly and without warning, globally famous and in demand. “I didn’t want to be, but I’m so angry.” He’s sitting at the table of Denise and Rob Utter, who have invited a bunch of people from their local Catholic parish, about 45 minutes south of Chicago, to talk about their friend and John’s kid brother Bob, whom they have known for decades, over pizza. Sometimes they call him Father Bob. Occasionally they remember to call him by his new name, Pope Leo XIV, but it’s unfamiliar to their tongue. One of the guests accidentally calls him Pope Pius.
It’s probably not all fun and games to be the spiritual leader of 1.4 billion people from very different cultures at a time when the Catholic Church is recovering from multiple scandals, riven from within, financially ensnarled, and, especially in the so-called developed nations, wrestling with a growing disinterest in the stuff it does best—ancient ritual, obligatory gathering, biblical exegesis. But it’s also a teensy bit of a drag to be his brother.
Pope Leo XIV, 69, is the person to whom lots of people look when they want to come in contact with God. John Prevost, 71, is the person to whom they look when they want to reach the Pope. His mailbox is inundated. A local accounting firm sent him a 30-page pitch deck on how it would sort out the Vatican's finances. Another opportunist sent him two baseballs, asking for them to be forwarded to His Holiness, newly anointed as the world’s most famous White Sox fan. “Dear Mr. Prevost, please have your brother sign these baseballs,” the accompanying letter said, according to its recipient. “You can keep one and run a fundraiser.” His mail carrier is sympathetic, advising him to hire someone to handle the paper blizzard.

このストーリーは、Time の July 28, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Time からのその他のストーリー
Time
James Van Der Beek
James Van Der Beek, best known for playing Dawson Leery in the '90s teen drama Dawson's Creek, \"passed peacefully,\" his family said, on Feb. 11 at age 48, after a battle with colorectal cancer.
1 min
March 09, 2026
Time
Robert Duvall
Actor of distinction
1 min
March 09, 2026
Time
Jesse Jackson
JESSE JACKSON WAS ENROLLED AT THE Chicago Theological Seminary in 1965 when he decided to join other like-minded students in traveling to Selma, Ala., where Martin Luther King Jr. was leading a march to the state Capitol in Montgomery.
1 min
March 09, 2026
Time
Sentencing of Hong Kong publisher raises fears in Taiwan
WHEN A HONG KONG COURT HANDED media tycoon and pro-democracy leader Jimmy Lai a 20-year jail term on national-security grounds on Feb. 9, his son called it a “death sentence” given Lai’s age, 78, and deteriorating health. Others saw the same bleak implications for freedoms in Hong Kong—and a glimpse into what could be in store for others Beijing views as troublesome.
1 min
March 09, 2026
Time
LONE STAR PREVIEW
A wild Texas primary illuminates the dilemma facing both parties
3 mins
March 09, 2026
Time
How will we take the news of alien life?
LOOKING FORWARD TO THE DISCOVERY of life in space? Maybe you should think twice.
2 mins
March 09, 2026
Time
Thierry Diagana
A NEW TREATMENT FOR MALARIA
2 mins
February 23, 2026
Time
Mike Doustdar
MULTIPLYING WEIGHT-LOSS MEDS
2 mins
February 23, 2026
Time
THIS ISN'T OVER
TODAY, THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF Iran resembles a half-lifeless body collapsed on the ground, but holding a gun.
3 mins
February 23, 2026
Time
OUR AGE OF DISTRUST
In 1624, the English poet John Donne wrote, “No man is an island entire of itself.” And yet in 2026, the Edelman Trust Barometer finds that 7 out of 10 people across 28 nations are hesitant or unwilling to trust people who have different values, approaches to societal problems, or backgrounds than they do. For most people, distrust is now the default instinct. Only one-third tell us most people can be trusted.
3 mins
February 23, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

