As he nears his own retirement, Cardinal Francis George will head to Rome
likely to play a powerful role in choosing Pope Benedict XVI's successor and
charting a course for the next chapter of the Roman Catholic Church.
Most recently focused on reaching a new generation and preserving
Catholic identity in an increasingly secularized world, George, the College of
Cardinals' elder statesman, is expected to encourage his colleagues to choose
a pontiff who will do the same.
"Cardinal George is a highly respected member of the College of Cardinals
and his views on the church's situation and the next pope will be carefully
considered by his brother cardinals," said conservative Catholic scholar
George Weigel, who recently wrote a book titled "Evangelical Catholicism."
Cardinal George's colleagues turn to him not just because he's the leader
in Chicago, where parishioners are as diverse as the global church. He's also
traveled widely in Africa and Latin America as the vicar general of the
Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate and lived and worked in Rome. Meanwhile,
in the U.S., he has served as president of the national bishops conference and
led the charge for a zero-tolerance policy on clergy sexual abuse.
"Everyone at the Vatican trusts him," said John Thavis, a longtime Rome
correspondent for the Catholic News Service and author of "The Vatican
Diaries: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Power, Personalities and Politics at
the Heart of the Catholic Church." "He has an excellent reputation as a person
who understands both Rome and the pastoral side of issues. He's a very
thoughtful person, yet he's not afraid to say what he believes. ... The
cardinals appreciate that."
George said Monday that he will head into his second conclave of
cardinals with a clear set of priorities and a strategy for selecting
Benedict's successor. Because of Pope John Paul II's 27-year papacy, most
cardinals faced a steep learning curve in the days leading up to and during
the 2005 conclave, the top-secret closed-door process to select the next pope.
The next conclave likely will begin 15 to 20 days after Benedict's
resignation becomes effective Feb. 28. At that time, the College of Cardinals
will govern the church collectively and informal discussions will begin.
George said he will use that time more wisely, asking better questions and
figuring out "how to move beyond impressions to find out really what people
are going to say about another cardinal."
"I'd like to make better use of the time before the voting begins," he
said.
Once the doors of the Sistine Chapel close, the activities inside are
carefully choreographed, George said. Cardinals are seated in order of their
elevation. Prayers are recited in Latin, instructions are printed in Italian
and the participants speak a variety of languages. In April 2005, George sat
between the Viennese cardinal with whom he spoke German and the cardinal from
Mexico City, with whom he spoke Spanish.
"Until you take the first ballot, you really don't know who has strength
and who does not," George said. "It's a very serious moment. You stand there
with a ballot in your hand facing Michelangelo's fresco of the Last Judgment
and you say ... a pretty serious oath. You put your life and salvation on the
line. That first ballot tells you what people really think."
George said the challenge facing cardinals next month will be finding a
leader who can maintain a degree of continuity while moving the church in a
bold new direction.
"I have some sense of where we must both keep our attention focused and
also where we have to put some attention where perhaps we haven't been able to
do that yet," he said. "But I'd like to clarify that more in my own mind
before I say."
Nearly eight years ago, the sexual abuse scandal dominated headlines.
Within minutes of Benedict's election, George sought assurances from the
pope-elect that he would renew church rules that facilitated the permanent
removal from ministry of sexually abusive priests in the U.S. That experience
in dealing with a scandal that's now rippling across Europe gives George
additional credibility with his colleagues, experts say.
But his experience traveling as a missionary helps too. George confirmed
Monday that there are several Latin American cardinals who would make serious
contenders.
"If you look at where the church is strong in terms of population, in
terms of the faithful, it would be in Latin America or Africa," he said. Popes
historically hail from Europe.
"That would be an appropriate question: Should we look elsewhere?" George
said.
Thavis said he has never ruled out an American pope, but that's contrary
to conventional wisdom.
"The standard thinking is 'An American? Never. They already run the
world. They want to run the church too?'" Thavis said. "But I've never heard a
cardinal say that."
George, however, explained that cardinals place more weight on
personalities than geography.
"Who can govern the church? Who can teach? Who can sanctify?" he said.
"Who can function as a papacy?"
"It matters less where someone is from," George continued. "It's not a
representative office. ... It's an office that represents Christ."
The Rev. Donald Senior, president of Catholic Theological Union, said he
thinks this conclave could be the moment when cardinals give serious
consideration to a candidate from the Southern Hemisphere.
George is "going to represent a perspective that's looking away from
Europe and more an appreciation for the Southern Hemisphere, the Third World
and mission territories. That's been his life," Senior said.
"Some of the other cardinals will be coming from much more ethnocentric
types of experiences, not the kind of diversity that Chicago will offer and
that his background as vicar of a missionary order will have. I suspect his
sympathies align in that direction. I think they will be deliberating whether
to turn at this point to a pope not from a European context. The cardinal
would have a lot to say," he added.
___
Distributed by MCT Information Services
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News Column
Spotlight Turns to US Cardinals
Feb 12, 2013
Manya A. Brachear
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Source: (c) 2013 Chicago Tribune
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