VATICAN CITY — After the consistory to create new cardinals
in early October, Pope Francis will have chosen more than half of the men who
will enter the Sistine Chapel to elect his successor.
And despite what critics of Pope Francis filled social media
with Sept. 1 about him setting up the college to elect a successor just like
him, it should be remembered that then-Archbishop Jorge Mario Bergoglio was
created a cardinal by St. John Paul. And he was elected pope in 2013 in a
conclave where 42 percent of the cardinal electors were created cardinals by
St. John Paul and the remaining 58 percent of the voters were named by Pope
Benedict.
Personal opinions about the needs of the church at any given
moment and about who would be the best person to lead obviously are at play in
a conclave. But the cardinals also invoke the inspiration of the Holy Spirit
and make a very solemn oath in casting their ballots: "I call as my
witness Christ the Lord, who will be my judge, that my vote is given to the one
who before God I think should be elected."
After arriving late for the midday recitation of the Angelus
prayer Sept. 1 because he was stuck in an elevator for 25 minutes, Pope Francis
announced he would create 13 new cardinals Oct. 5.
Ten of the prelates he chose are under the age of 80 and,
therefore, would be eligible to vote in a conclave to elect a pope. A cardinal
who has turned 80 before the papacy is vacant participates in pre-conclave
meetings to discuss the needs of the church but does not process into the
Sistine Chapel and does not cast ballots for a new pope.
Barring any deaths or resignations, once the new cardinals
receive their red hats in early October, the College of Cardinals will have 128
members eligible to vote in a conclave. Within 10 days of the consistory, four
cardinals will celebrate their 80th birthdays, leaving 124 electors.
Of those 124, Pope Francis will have made 66 of them
cardinals, which is 53 percent of the electors. The other electors will include
16 cardinals created by St. John Paul II and 42 made cardinals by now-retired
Pope Benedict XVI.
While a majority in the next conclave will have Pope Francis
to thank for their red hats and new responsibilities, to be elected pope a
candidate must receive two-thirds of the votes.
Announcing the new cardinals, Pope Francis said they
illustrate "the missionary vocation of the church that continues to
proclaim the merciful love of God to all men and women of the earth."
A commitment to the poor, to caring for migrants and
refugees and to engaging in dialogue with all people are characteristics many
in the group of 13 share.
Among the over-80 cardinals is Lithuanian Archbishop Sigitas
Tamkevicius, who, a year ago, joined Pope Francis on a prayerful tour of the
former KGB headquarters in Vilnius.
The archbishop had been imprisoned from 1983 to 1988 for
"anti-Soviet propaganda." As a Jesuit priest, in 1972 he began
publishing the Chronicle of the Catholic Church in Lithuania, an underground
newsletter documenting communist repression of the church. Despite repeated
questioning by the KGB, he managed to publish and distribute the chronicle for
more than 10 years and, once he was arrested, others continued his work.
One of the new cardinal electors will be Guatemalan Bishop
Alvaro Ramazzini Imeri of Huehuetenango, a human rights defender whose support
for environmental activists has earned him death threats.
Two Roman Curia officials tapped to become cardinals hold
positions that would have been considered automatic red-hat posts before Pope
Francis came on the scene: Spanish Bishop Miguel Angel Ayuso Guixot, 67,
president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue; and Portuguese
Archbishop Jose Tolentino Calaca de Mendonca, 53, Vatican archivist and
librarian.
The surprising Curia pick was Jesuit Father Michael Czerny,
one of two undersecretaries for migrants and refugees in the Dicastery for
Promoting Integral Human Development. Cardinal-designate Czerny, who was born
in 1949 in what was Czechoslovakia and who migrated with his family to Canada
when he was 2, worked in a variety of social justice ministries in Canada,
Central America and Africa before coming to the Vatican.
According to canon law, he will need to be ordained a bishop
before receiving his red hat Oct. 5, although he could request a dispensation.
He did not respond Sept. 1 to a question about his possible ordination.
Pope Francis' choices continue to pay little attention to
the large archdioceses traditionally led by cardinals, such as Milan and
Venice. But he will give a red hat to Archbishop Matteo Zuppi of Bologna,
Italy, where all but one of the archbishops in the last 400 years had been a
cardinal. The only exception was Archbishop Enrico Manfredini, who led the
archdiocese for only eight months in 1983 before he died at the age of 61.
In selecting cardinals, Pope Francis has made it a point to
increase the geographical profile of the College of Cardinals. The conclave
that elected him included participants from 48 nations; the 128 electors in the
expanded college will include prelates from 68 countries.