WITH Pope Benedict XVI
now officially in retirement, Catholic cardinals from around the world began,
on Friday, the process of picking the next leader of the world’s largest
church.
Some details are still not clear, owing to Benedict’s
break with the tradition that papacies end with a pope’s death, so these
“princes of the Church” will first hold an informal session before traditional
rounds of talks begin on Monday.
No front-runner stands out among the 115 cardinal electors,
those aged under 80 due to enter the Sistine Chapel for the conclave that picks
the new pope, so discreetly sizing up potential candidates will be high on the
cardinals’ agenda.
They will also use the general congregations, the closed-door
consultations preceding a conclave, to discuss future challenges such as better
Vatican management, the need for improved communication and the continuing
sexual abuse crisis.
Benedict ended his eight-year reign on Thursday, pledging
unconditional obedience to whoever succeeds him to lead the world’s 1.2 billion
Catholics at one of the most problematic periods in the Church’s 2,000-year
history.
“The discussion we have in the congregations will be most
important for the intellectual preparation” for choosing a pope, said Boston’s
Cardinal, Sean O’Malley, adding that the electors were already preparing
spiritually for the vote by intense prayer.
“I would imagine each of us has some kind of list of primary
candidates, and others secondary,” said Cardinal Francis George of Chicago, at
a media briefing with O’Malley and another American cardinal, Daniel DiNardo of
Galveston-Houston.
Conclaves are among the world’s most secretive elections, with
no declared candidates, no open campaigning and electors who often do not know
more than a few dozen men in the room.
Electors are sworn to secrecy about the actual voting itself.
George said cardinals consulted other electors before the
conclave to learn more about possible choices, asking, “what do you know about
this candidate” or “what kind of person is he?”
O’Malley, at his first conclave and already being mentioned in
Italian media as a potential candidate, said he had been “using the Internet a
lot” to read up on other cardinals.
Conclaves traditionally begin 15 days after the seat of St.
Peter, as the papal office is called, becomes vacant. But that includes time
for mourning and funeral ceremonies for a dead pope, so Benedict issued a
decree allowing an earlier start.
From Monday, the cardinals will discuss how long they want to
hold general congregations before going into the conclave; its name comes from
the Latin term “cum clave” with a key to show they are locked away until a pope
is chosen.
Cardinals over 80 cannot join them in the voting, but they are
allowed to attend the general congregations and discuss the challenges to the
Church with the electors.
Nothing is set yet, but the Vatican seems to be aiming for an
election by mid-March so the new pope can be installed in office before Palm
Sunday on March 24 and be in office to lead the Holy Week services culminating
in Easter the following Sunday.
The cardinals will not see a top secret report prepared for Pope
Benedict on mismanagement and infighting in the Curia, the Church’s bureaucracy,
but its three cardinal authors will be in the general congregations to advise
electors on its findings.
“Since we don’t really know what’s in the report, I think we’ll
depend on the cardinals in the congregations to share with us what they think
will be valuable for us to know to make the right decision for the future,”
O’Malley said.
In an emotional farewell to cardinals on Thursday morning in the
Vatican’s frescoed Sala Clementina, Benedict appeared to send a strong message
to the cardinals and the faithful to unite behind his successor, whoever he
turns out to be.
The appeal was significant because for the first time in
history, there will be a reigning pope in the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace and
his retired predecessor living in a small monastery in the Vatican Gardens not
far away.
Benedict left the Vatican by helicopter for the papal summer
residence of Castel Gandolfo south of Rome to be far from the conclave and not
influence it.
He will move into the monastery when refurbishing is finished in
about two months.
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