VATICAN CITY (AP) — A preferred saying in Vatican circles is that if you happen to “enter a conclave as pope, you permit as a cardinal.”
It implies the sacred and secretive course of is not any reputation contest or marketing campaign, however somewhat the divinely impressed election of Christ’s Vicar on Earth by the princes of the church.
Nonetheless, there are at all times front-runners, often known as “papabile,” who’ve at the very least a few of the qualities thought-about essential to be pope — very like these depicted in final yr’s Oscar-nominated movie “Conclave.”
Any baptized Catholic male is eligible, although solely cardinals have been chosen since 1378. The winner should obtain at the very least two-thirds of the vote from these cardinals underneath age 80 and thus eligible to take part. Pope Francis, who died on Easter Monday, appointed the overwhelming majority of electors, usually tapping males who share his pastoral priorities, which suggests continuity somewhat than rupture.
Anybody attempting to handicap the result ought to keep in mind that Jorge Mario Bergoglio was thought-about too previous to be elected pope in 2013 at age 76, and that Karol Wojtyla wasn’t on any front-runner lists going into the 1978 conclave that elected him Pope John Paul II.
Some doable candidates:
Cardinal Peter Erdo
Erdo, 72, the archbishop of Budapest and primate of Hungary, was twice elected head of the Council of European Episcopal Conferences, in 2005 and 2011, suggesting he enjoys the esteem of European cardinals who make up the most important voting bloc of electors. In that capability, Erdo bought to know many African cardinals as a result of the council hosts common periods with African bishops’ conferences. Erdo had much more publicity when he helped manage Francis’ 2014 and 2015 Vatican conferences on the household and delivered key speeches, in addition to throughout papal visits to Budapest in 2021 and 2023.
Cardinal Reinhard Marx
Marx, 71, the archbishop of Munich and Freising, was chosen by Francis as a key adviser in 2013. Marx later was named to go the council overseeing Vatican funds throughout reforms and belt-tightening. The previous president of the German bishops’ convention was a robust proponent of the controversial “synodal path” strategy of dialogue within the German church that started in 2020 as a response to the clergy sexual abuse scandal there. In consequence, he’s seen with skepticism by conservatives who thought-about the method a menace to church unity, given it concerned debating points similar to celibacy, homosexuality and ladies’s ordination. Marx made headlines in 2021 when he dramatically supplied to resign as archbishop to atone for the German church’s dreadful abuse document, however Francis rapidly rejected the resignation and informed him to remain.
Cardinal Marc Ouellet
Ouellet, 80, of Canada, led the Vatican’s influential bishops workplace for over a decade, overseeing the important thing clearinghouse for potential candidates to go dioceses all over the world. Francis stored Ouellet within the job till 2023, regardless that he was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI, and thus helped choose the extra doctrinaire bishops most well-liked by the German pontiff. Thought-about extra of a conservative than Francis, Ouellet nonetheless chosen pastorally minded bishops to mirror Francis’ perception that bishops ought to “odor just like the sheep” of their flock. Ouellet defended priestly celibacy for the Latin Ceremony church and upheld the ban on ladies’s ordination however referred to as for girls to have a better position in church governance. He has good contacts with the Latin American church, having headed the Vatican’s Pontifical Fee for Latin America for over a decade. Since 2019, his workplace has taken cost of investigating bishops accused of masking up for predator clergymen, a job that might have made him no mates amongst these sanctioned but additionally might have given him a lot of in any other case confidential and presumably compromising details about fellow cardinals.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin
Parolin, 70, of Italy, has been Francis’ secretary of state since 2014 and is taken into account one of many foremost contenders to be pope, given his prominence within the Catholic hierarchy. The veteran diplomat oversaw the Holy See’s controversial take care of China over bishop nominations and was concerned — however not charged — within the Vatican’s botched funding in a London actual property enterprise that led to a 2021 trial of one other cardinal and 9 others. A former ambassador to Venezuela, Parolin is aware of the Latin American church properly. He could be seen as somebody who would proceed in Francis’ custom however as a extra sober and timid diplomatic insider, returning an Italian to the papacy after three successive outsiders: St. John Paul II (Poland); Benedict (Germany) and Francis (Argentina). However whereas Parolin has managed the Vatican forms, he has no actual pastoral expertise. His ties to the London scandal, wherein his workplace misplaced tens of thousands and thousands of {dollars} to unhealthy offers and shady businessmen, might rely towards him.
Cardinal Robert Prevost
The thought of an American pope has lengthy been taboo, given the geopolitical energy already wielded by the USA. However the Chicago-born Prevost, 69, might be a primary. He has in depth expertise in Peru, first as a missionary after which an archbishop, and he’s presently prefect of the Vatican’s highly effective dicastery for bishops, answerable for vetting nominations for bishops all over the world. Francis clearly had a watch on him for years and despatched him to run the diocese of Chiclayo, Peru, in 2014. He held that place till 2023, when Francis introduced him to Rome for his present position. Prevost can also be president of the Pontifical Fee for Latin America, a job that retains him in common contact with the Catholic hierarchy within the a part of the world that also counts essentially the most Catholics. Along with his nationality, Prevost’s comparative youth might rely towards him if his brother cardinals don’t wish to decide to a pope who would possibly reign for an additional 20 years.
Cardinal Robert Sarah
Sarah, 79, of Guinea, the retired head of the Vatican’s liturgy workplace, was lengthy thought-about one of the best hope for an African pope. Beloved by conservatives, Sarah would sign a return to the doctrinaire and liturgically minded papacies of John Paul II and Benedict. Sarah, who had beforehand headed the Vatican’s charity workplace Cor Unum, clashed on a number of events with Francis, none extra significantly than when he and Benedict co-authored a ebook advocating the “necessity” of continued celibacy for Latin Ceremony clergymen. The ebook got here out as Francis was weighing whether or not to permit married clergymen within the Amazon to deal with a priest scarcity there. The implication was that Sarah had manipulated Benedict into lending his identify and ethical authority to a ebook that had all of the appearances of being a counterweight to Francis’ personal instructing. Francis dismissed Benedict’s secretary and several other months later retired Sarah after he turned 75. Even Sarah’s supporters lamented the episode harm his papal probabilities.
Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn
Schoenborn, 80, the archbishop of Vienna, Austria, was a pupil of Benedict’s, and thus on paper appears to have the doctrinaire tutorial chops to attraction to conservatives. Nonetheless, he grew to become related to one in all Francis’ most controversial strikes by defending his outreach to divorced and civilly remarried Catholics as an “natural growth of doctrine,” not the rupture that some conservatives contended. Schoenborn’s mother and father divorced when he was a teen, so the problem is private. He additionally took warmth from the Vatican when he criticized its previous refusal to sanction high-ranking sexual abusers, together with his predecessor as archbishop of Vienna. Schoenborn has expressed help for civil unions and ladies as deacons, and was instrumental in modifying the 1992 replace of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the handbook of the church’s instructing that Benedict had spearheaded when he headed the Vatican’s doctrine workplace.
Cardinal Luis Tagle
Tagle, 67, of the Philippines, would seem like Francis’ decide for the primary Asian pope. Francis introduced the favored archbishop of Manila to Rome to go the Vatican’s missionary evangelization workplace, which serves the wants of the Catholic Church in a lot of Asia and Africa. His position took on better weight when Francis reformed the Vatican forms and raised the significance of his evangelization workplace. Tagle usually cites his Chinese language lineage – his maternal grandmother was a part of a Chinese language household that moved to the Philippines — and he’s identified for turning into emotional when discussing his childhood. Although he has pastoral, Vatican and administration expertise — he headed the Vatican’s Caritas Internationalis federation of charity teams earlier than coming to Rome completely — Tagle could be on the younger aspect to be elected pope for all times, with cardinals maybe preferring an older candidate whose papacy could be extra restricted.
Cardinal Matteo Zuppi
Zuppi, 69, the archbishop of Bologna and president of the Italian bishops convention, elected in 2022, is carefully affiliated with the Sant’Egidio Group, a Rome-based Catholic charity that was influential underneath Francis, notably in interfaith dialogue. Zuppi was a part of Sant’Egidio’s workforce that helped negotiate the top of Mozambique’s civil warfare within the Nineties and was named Francis’ peace envoy for Russia’s warfare in Ukraine. Francis made him a cardinal in 2019 and later made clear he wished him answerable for Italy’s bishops, an indication of his admiration for the prelate who, like Francis, is called a “avenue priest.” In one other signal of his progressive leanings and closeness to Francis, Zuppi wrote the introduction to the Italian version of “Constructing a Bridge,” by the Rev. James Martin, an American Jesuit, concerning the church’s want to enhance its outreach to the LGBTQ+ group. Zuppi could be a candidate in Francis’ custom of ministering to these on the margins, though his relative youth would rely towards him for cardinals searching for a brief papacy. His household had robust institutional ties: Zuppi’s father labored for the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, and his mom was the niece of Cardinal Carlo Confalonieri, dean of the School of Cardinals within the Nineteen Sixties and Seventies.
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