Close Menu
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
  • Home
  • USA
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Realtor
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic Surgeon
    • Beauty Cosmetics
  • Economy
  • Life Style
Trending
  • Winter Weekend Menu: 10 Easy, Comforting Recipes to Make With Friends | Wit & Delight
  • Coffee Break: More on the Disruption of American Science and Good News on Intranasal Viruses to Combat Respiratory Viruses
  • Players, teams to watch in the 2025 NCAA women’s softball tournament
  • cdocs came to the rescue a cerec journey| CDOCS Article
  • Tips for Making it Work – MAXPRO Fitness
  • How they train – Anna Purchase
  • Trump to Withdraw Nominee to Lead Consumer Bureau
  • Pak using civil airlines as shield against India’s counter offensive
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
Friday, May 9
  • Home
  • USA
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Realtor
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic Surgeon
    • Beauty Cosmetics
  • Economy
  • Life Style
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
Home » News » New pope chooses Leo as his papal name. Here’s why pontiffs change their names and what they mean.

New pope chooses Leo as his papal name. Here’s why pontiffs change their names and what they mean.

Jessica BrownBy Jessica Brown World
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Cardinal Robert Prevost Has been announced as The new Pontiff and has chosen the name of Pope Leo XIV.

There are no writings or official criteria for the name of a Pope, but choose names that have meaning in the Catholic tradition.

The importance of a Pope’s name

The name chosen by a new Pope “will indicate a certain spirit, direction and vision of the new Pope,” said Dennis Doyle, theologian theologian and professor of religious studies at the University of Dayton.

“The first thing you would be, what name was that name before?” Hey said. “That would mean something about the direction that Pope Wusses will take.”

Leo has been chosen 13 times before.

“The name Leo dates back to Pope Leo the Great,” the first Pope with the name of Leo, on Thursday CBS News, Candida Moss, said Thursday.

Also known as Pope Leo I, his papacy was 440 to 461. He is famous for meeting with Attila and deter by attacking Rome.

“What does this mean for our new Pope? Well, it could mean that Hey will face oppressive political forces in the world,” Moss said.

Leo I is also known as “a great intellectual and theological reformer,” Moss said. He wrote Leo’s volume, a document that influenced the official doctrine that defined Jesus Christ as completely human and complete divine.

“Our new Pope has a doctorate in Canon’s law, so we could expect Hey to clarify the church’s teachings on central themes,” Moss said.

Doyle also pointed to the last Pope to use Leo’s name, Pope Leo XIII, who was the head of the Catholic Church between 1878 and 1903.

“Perhaps he is more famous for writing the rerum Novarum,” said Doyle, which translates into “new things,” but the Latin meaning is also “in revolutionary changes.”

The RERUM Novarum addressed the rights and capitalism of workers in the dawn of the industrial era and is considered the first Catholic social encyclical, which establishes the basis for modern Catholic social thinking.

This could indicate that Pope Leo XIV is interested “in the promotion of Catholic social education in today’s world,” said Doyle. “Perhaps Catholic social education, if tasks seriously, could be something to help overcome poliazation.”

Bishop Robert Barron, or the Diocese or Winona-Rochester, also saw the connection with Leo XIII and said he believes that the name is “very significant.”

Leo XIII was a “great 19th -century Pope,” Barron told CBS News. “When the revolutions occurred in the 18th century, and the philosophical revolutions of the nineteenth century, the Church initially said ‘no’ to much of that. Leo represents a very nuanced and intelligent commitment to modernity, not to cross it, without saying that completely, but not say, using the resources of our own traditions to involve creative modernity.”

The name Leo “is a deep sign of commitment to social problems,” said Natalia Imperatori-Lee, president of Religious Studies of the University of Manhattan, to Associated Press.

Because of that, the election or name of Pope Leo XIV also suggests a continuation of much of Pope Francis’s ministry.

Pope FrancisWhose birth name was Jorge Mario Bergoglio, chose a papal name that had chosen a bone for a Pope before, so in his case, “do you have to ask, well, there is some biblical figure or people in the tradition that have had this name?” Doyle said.

For Francis, it was San Francisco de Asís, known for his charity and simplicity.

What are the most common papal names?

The names most used by the potatoes have a leg:

  • John: 23 times
  • Benedict: 16 times
  • Gregory: 16 times
  • Clement: 14 times
  • Leo: 14 times
  • Innocent: 13 times
  • Pío: 12 times

As with Leo’s name, “there could be more than one reference in the name that the Pope chooses,” Doyle explained.

Pope Benedict XVI paid tribute to Benedict XV, who directed the duration of the World Church the First War, but also to San Benedict of Nursia, who founded the Benedictine Order and influenced the dissemination of Christianity through Europe.

The name John, the most popular, could return to the Gospel of John, who is one of “the most beloved of the Gospels,” said Doyle. It can also refer to San Juan Bautista, the prophet who baptized Jesus.

Have your names always changed the potatoes?

Not all potatoes in history have changed their name. Of 266 potatoes before Pope Leo XIV, 129 have chosen new names, according to Vatican News.

The practice became more entrenched around the eleventh century, a period of German potatoes that chose the names of the bishops of the primitive church of “a desire to mean continuity,” said Rev. Roberto Regoli, historian of the Pontifical Gregorian University of Rome, to the AP.

For many centuries, the new potatoes tended to choose the name of the Pope that had raised them to the cardinal.

Only from the mid -twentieth century began to choose names that indicate the goal of his papacy, said Regol.

Names never chosen by a Pope

Some biblical names that have not been used by a Pope are Joseph, James and Andrew.

The Popes have not chosen Peter’s name, out of respect for St. Peter, a disciple of Jesus who is recognized as the first Pope, experts say.

The Association press

Contributed to this report.

More than CBS News

Nicole Brown Chau

Nicole Brown Chau is an edge manager for cbsnews.com. She writes and edits national news, health stories, explanatory and more.

Previous ArticleUSA Fencing controversy grows after DOGE hearing on trans athletes
Next Article ICICI Venture transfers its PE, VC, real estate fund management businesses to ICICI Prudential AMC

Keep Reading

Brother says Pope Leo XIV always “had that calling”

Who is the new pope? American Cardinal Robert Prevost becomes Pope Leo XIV

CBS News among U.S. outlets allowed into Russia for Victory Day parade as Trump thaws relations with Moscow

5/7: CBS Evening News – CBS News

2025 papal conclave begins at Vatican, with black smoke indicating no new pope chosen in first vote

Pakistan leader vows to avenge India’s “act of war” after missile strikes

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

USA

  • World
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Life Style

Business

  • CEO
  • Realtor
  • Entrepreneur
  • journalist

Sports

  • Athlete
  • Coach
  • Fitness Trainer

Health

  • Doctor
  • Plastic Surgeon
  • Beauty Cosmetics
© 2017-2025 usabiznews. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.