Pope Leo XIV is pictured in a combination photo with Bill Bickel, associate director of Catholic Charities in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. Bickel and Pope Leo have been close friends for 46 years, and it's a bond Bickel said has been life-changing from the beginning. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez/OSV News photo, courtesy Archdiocese of Indianapolis)

Indiana Catholic got life-changing advice from Pope Leo



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A day before the conclave to elect a new pope began May 7, Bill Bickel sent an email to his friend of 46 years, Cardinal Robert F. Prevost.

In the email, the associate director of Catholic Charities in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis wrote, “Please know that Flor and I are holding you in our prayers during this historic moment in our Church. We trust the Holy Spirit will be with you, guiding you with wisdom and filling you with peace.”

A short while later, Cardinal Prevost responded, “Thanks, Bill. We all pray that the Spirit will be our guide! — Bob.”

Two days after that email exchange, Bickel became overwhelmed with emotion when he watched on television as his friend was introduced as Pope Leo XIV, the new leader of the universal Church.

He listened in amazement as the person he credits with giving him powerful, compassionate advice that changed his life appeared on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica, greeting the roaring crowd in the square below and people around the world with this initial message, “Peace be with you all,” and later, “May we all walk together toward that homeland that God has prepared for us.”

“It was just unbelievable, unbelievable,” Bickel told The Criterion, Indianapolis archdiocesan newspaper. “My phone started blowing up, but I just wanted to take in the moment to see Bob. And then as he was addressing the people in the square and around the world, I started to get a little nervous for him, thinking this weight is just unreal.

“But then I swung to, ‘God’s providence is in this.’ The email he sent me on Tuesday where he said the Spirit is in this, is absolutely right,” Bickel said. “Since then, I’m praying for him. And I will say this: There is no one better to lead the global Catholic Church than him. I’m still in awe.”

The friendship of Bickel and the man who will forever be known now as Pope Leo XIV started with a shared dream to serve God and his people. Seven years older, Prevost was already deep in his formation as an Augustinian priest in 1979 — the year Bickel was a high school senior exploring his own desire to be an Augustinian. He and two other young men joined with Prevost on a road trip from Chicago to Villanova University near Philadelphia to learn more about the Augustinian path to the priesthood.

The trip to Villanova convinced Bickel of his desire to be an Augustinian priest. 

The paths of the two friends toward the priesthood are extremely similar, with Bickel following his Augustinian brother on many of the same stops along the road: attending minor seminary in Michigan, graduating from Villanova, studying at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, entering the novitiate in St. Louis, professing first vows.

And all through that journey, Bickel looked up to his friend, admiring his faith and his personal qualities.

“Just a humble, generous, intelligent brother Augustinian,” Bickel said, noting that Pope Leo was a math major at Villanova and earned a doctoral degree in canon law. “Intelligent but incredibly approachable. He always had time for you.”

They both served the poor and vulnerable in Peru. It was also a time that Bickel turned to his friend for advice about the toughest, most heart-wrenching choice he ever had to make.

During those roughly 18 months of serving together in Peru in the late 1980s, Bickel worked in the villages of the west coast and the Andes mountains of Peru while the future pope served the poor in similar areas farther south. The few American Augustinians from the Chicago province serving in the Peruvian missions at the time, they connected and shared stories, challenges and hopes at meetings of members of their order.

In a private meeting, Bickel shared with his friend about the soul-searching choice he had to make.

“I met Flor, who was a Peruvian working in similar mission-based work,” Bickel recalled. “As time went on, I knew I needed to speak openly about it. I went to Bob, and I said, ‘I’m thinking a lot more about Flor than I’m thinking about renewing my vows.’

“He gave me the advice that set the trajectory of my life. I mean it.

“He told me, ‘You have to determine whether this is genuine joy and love or it’s infatuation. We — he didn’t say me, he said we — are away from our homes, away from our families, we’re in a foreign country. There is absolute loneliness in this work. You need to distinguish between the two, and you need to take the time to do that.'”

The emotion swelled up for Bickel again as he said, “I did. And I chose Flor.

“I told Bob, ‘I’m leaving something I love very much for someone I love more.’

While their paths have diverged since then, the commitment of the two friends to the vulnerable has continued.

The future pope kept the poor of Peru a priority during much of his service to the Augustinians and the Church.

Married to Flor for more than three decades, Bickel has served the archdiocese for the past 30 years as a leading advocate for the homeless in central and southern Indiana.

Flor has also long served the legal needs of immigrants and refugees who come to Catholic Charities for help, assisting them in starting a new life in the United States. They have a daughter, Susana, a son, Gabriel, and a grandchild, Omar.

Bickel still finds himself in the adjustment period of calling his friend “Pope Leo” instead of “Bob.”

Bickel emailed his friend on the day of the papal election, beginning the message with this wish, “God bless you, Pope Leo XIV!”

Two days later, the new pope sent Bickel an email, thanking him and ending his reply with a simple “Leo.”

OSV News

OSV News is a national and international wire service reporting on Catholic news.

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