'Who's that Gen Z priest?': Pope Leo XIV stirs up the internet after flashing the '6-7' gesture with kids at the Vatican
What pops into your mind when one says the word “Vatican”?
Centuries of restrained etiquette, the passage of tradition, and a bunch of folks conforming to that age-old culture, trying to make-do without chaos, as much as possible.
It makes sense because the Vatican has seen centuries of drama, from political struggle to Renaissance scandals, and wild theological debates. But nobody saw this coming in 2026: the Holy See became the accidental host for one of the weirdest viral moments the internet’s ever pushed out!

The Gen-Z pope in the house!It happened over the weekend. Pope Leo XIV , hanging out with a bunch of kids at the Vatican, decided to join in and try the “6-7” hand gesture that’s been all over social media. Within hours, clips were everywhere: TikTok, Instagram, X, random meme pages. Millions watched, laughed, and, honestly, couldn’t believe the pope was suddenly part of some Gen Z internet craze.
Per CBS News, this was Saturday in St. Peter’s Square, the pope was greeting families and kids, just doing public Pope things. Italian priest/influencer Don Roberto Fiscer filmed the scene, and you could see the kids showing Pope Leo the “6-7” trend, which is basically the poster child for internet nonsense. Most grown-ups just nod and move on when faced with stuff like this, but Leo XIV? He leaned in, repeated the phrase, copied the hand motions, and totally won the crowd. The kids cheered and laughed while the pope grinned right along with them.
And, really, for most people watching online, it felt a little unreal. You’ve got the head of the Catholic Church, an institution known for sticking to ancient rituals and serious traditions, suddenly playing along with TikTok memes.
Quite obviously, the internet hasn’t stopped talking about it.
The “6-7” gesture: What about it?Here’s the truth about that gesture: nobody has any clue what it is exactly about.
“6-7”, people say it as “six-seven”, popped up on TikTok and other video apps over the past year, mostly among teenagers and younger kids. Usually, it’s people chanting “six-seven” while rhythmically moving their hands up and down. Looks meaningful, isn’t. It’s beautifully pointless.
Language experts have tried explaining it, but the real joke is there’s nothing to explain. No hidden meaning, no punchline, no deeper truth. It’s just digital nonsense, boosted until everybody acts as if it matters.
And maybe that’s why seeing the pope do it was so funny.
Watching adults try to get Gen Z humour is always comedy gold. When the adult is the spiritual leader of millions? It’s next level.
The internet’s reaction: ‘The pope has cultural range’Social media went berserk as soon as the clip hit. Memes took over X and TikTok; some said the Vatican had officially entered its “chronically online era.” Others thought Leo XIV looked chill and pretty approachable with the kids.
One popular comment dubbed him “a pope with cultural range.” Another joked, “Vatican social media team definitely wasn’t ready for this.” Some compared the moment to a substitute teacher nailing internet slang and instantly becoming a hit with students.
People even pointed out that younger audiences just connect more with authenticity and spontaneity. The pope letting kids teach him something silly and laughing along made him feel genuinely relatable.
Even folks who don’t usually pay attention to Catholic news admitted they enjoyed the clip.
In the end, it was just a wholesome scene: kids showing a grown man a ridiculous trend, and him jumping in without making it weird.
Who is Pope Leo XIV?For the unversed, this guy is Robert Prevost from Chicago, now Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, chosen almost a year ago. Since day one, he’s been way more relaxed and conversational in public than most expected.
Past popes have sometimes dabbled with modern media. Leo XIV, though, has already racked up some unexpectedly viral moments. Whether joking in English, talking about AI, or casually tackling digital ethics, he gets that the Church has to live in an internet world now.
However, despite building such a joyous and friendly reputation, nobody really expected him to hop into a TikTok meme cycle this quick, which indicates a bigger change in the rigid religious “scene”. Global leaders, even religious ones, are starting to realize how humour, memes, and digital references shape how people connect.
Maybe that’s why the Vatican clip really hit home.
The Vatican is ancient, steeped in ritual and formality, while TikTok trends run on pure chaos. But there’s something innately human about seeing authority figures lighten up around kids. It reminded everyone that, deep down, even the pope’s just a guy reacting to something funny as it happens. For a few seconds in St. Peter’s Square, an ancient institution stopped worrying about understanding the new generation and just laughed with them.
In a world full of doomscrolling, outrage, and endless arguments, everybody just paused to enjoy something harmless and silly: an elderly pope learning a nonsense hand gesture from a bunch of kids.
Centuries of restrained etiquette, the passage of tradition, and a bunch of folks conforming to that age-old culture, trying to make-do without chaos, as much as possible.
It makes sense because the Vatican has seen centuries of drama, from political struggle to Renaissance scandals, and wild theological debates. But nobody saw this coming in 2026: the Holy See became the accidental host for one of the weirdest viral moments the internet’s ever pushed out!
The Gen-Z pope in the house!It happened over the weekend. Pope Leo XIV , hanging out with a bunch of kids at the Vatican, decided to join in and try the “6-7” hand gesture that’s been all over social media. Within hours, clips were everywhere: TikTok, Instagram, X, random meme pages. Millions watched, laughed, and, honestly, couldn’t believe the pope was suddenly part of some Gen Z internet craze.
Per CBS News, this was Saturday in St. Peter’s Square, the pope was greeting families and kids, just doing public Pope things. Italian priest/influencer Don Roberto Fiscer filmed the scene, and you could see the kids showing Pope Leo the “6-7” trend, which is basically the poster child for internet nonsense. Most grown-ups just nod and move on when faced with stuff like this, but Leo XIV? He leaned in, repeated the phrase, copied the hand motions, and totally won the crowd. The kids cheered and laughed while the pope grinned right along with them.
And, really, for most people watching online, it felt a little unreal. You’ve got the head of the Catholic Church, an institution known for sticking to ancient rituals and serious traditions, suddenly playing along with TikTok memes.
Quite obviously, the internet hasn’t stopped talking about it.
The “6-7” gesture: What about it?Here’s the truth about that gesture: nobody has any clue what it is exactly about.
“6-7”, people say it as “six-seven”, popped up on TikTok and other video apps over the past year, mostly among teenagers and younger kids. Usually, it’s people chanting “six-seven” while rhythmically moving their hands up and down. Looks meaningful, isn’t. It’s beautifully pointless.
Language experts have tried explaining it, but the real joke is there’s nothing to explain. No hidden meaning, no punchline, no deeper truth. It’s just digital nonsense, boosted until everybody acts as if it matters.
And maybe that’s why seeing the pope do it was so funny.
Watching adults try to get Gen Z humour is always comedy gold. When the adult is the spiritual leader of millions? It’s next level.
The internet’s reaction: ‘The pope has cultural range’Social media went berserk as soon as the clip hit. Memes took over X and TikTok; some said the Vatican had officially entered its “chronically online era.” Others thought Leo XIV looked chill and pretty approachable with the kids.
One popular comment dubbed him “a pope with cultural range.” Another joked, “Vatican social media team definitely wasn’t ready for this.” Some compared the moment to a substitute teacher nailing internet slang and instantly becoming a hit with students.
People even pointed out that younger audiences just connect more with authenticity and spontaneity. The pope letting kids teach him something silly and laughing along made him feel genuinely relatable.
Even folks who don’t usually pay attention to Catholic news admitted they enjoyed the clip.
In the end, it was just a wholesome scene: kids showing a grown man a ridiculous trend, and him jumping in without making it weird.
Who is Pope Leo XIV?For the unversed, this guy is Robert Prevost from Chicago, now Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, chosen almost a year ago. Since day one, he’s been way more relaxed and conversational in public than most expected.
Past popes have sometimes dabbled with modern media. Leo XIV, though, has already racked up some unexpectedly viral moments. Whether joking in English, talking about AI, or casually tackling digital ethics, he gets that the Church has to live in an internet world now.
However, despite building such a joyous and friendly reputation, nobody really expected him to hop into a TikTok meme cycle this quick, which indicates a bigger change in the rigid religious “scene”. Global leaders, even religious ones, are starting to realize how humour, memes, and digital references shape how people connect.
Maybe that’s why the Vatican clip really hit home.
The Vatican is ancient, steeped in ritual and formality, while TikTok trends run on pure chaos. But there’s something innately human about seeing authority figures lighten up around kids. It reminded everyone that, deep down, even the pope’s just a guy reacting to something funny as it happens. For a few seconds in St. Peter’s Square, an ancient institution stopped worrying about understanding the new generation and just laughed with them.
In a world full of doomscrolling, outrage, and endless arguments, everybody just paused to enjoy something harmless and silly: an elderly pope learning a nonsense hand gesture from a bunch of kids.
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