Pope
Wanted. Must Possess Magnetic Charm. And Grit.
ROME — No candidate for pope can have it all. But the cardinals who will elect the next pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church seem to be looking for someone who combines the charisma of Pope John Paul II with the grit of what one Vatican analyst called, only slightly tongue in cheek, “Pope Rambo I.”
ROME — No candidate for pope can have it all. But the cardinals who will elect the next pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church seem to be looking for someone who combines the charisma of Pope John Paul II with the grit of what one Vatican analyst called, only slightly tongue in cheek, “Pope Rambo I.”
Hints about
the traits sought in a future pontiff can be discerned from the comments of the
cardinals who have spent the past week in meetings at the Vatican. Among those
traits: the charisma of Pope John Paul II, and the toughness to tackle Vatican
disarray.
While it is
too early to talk of front-runners, hints to the characteristics sought in a
future pontiff can be discerned from the utterances of the cardinals who have
spent the past week in meetings at the Vatican. Before Wednesday, when they
stopped giving interviews, the cardinals frequently cited attributes the church
now needs: a compelling communicator who wins souls through both his words and
his holy bearing, and a fearless sheriff who can tackle the disarray and
scandal in the Vatican.
Their focus
on communication and good governance is in many ways an acknowledgment of the
deficiencies of Pope Benedict XVI, who flew off in a helicopter to an
unexpected retirement last week after a rocky eight-year tenure. But it is also
a sign of the nostalgia for Benedict’s predecessor, John Paul II, a magnetic
presence who commanded the spotlight on trips around the world and even as he
lay dying.
On
Benedict’s watch, the church lost sway in Europe, the United States and even
Latin America. The central bureaucracy in Rome, the Curia, fell more deeply
into dysfunction and even corruption. Cardinals from several countries
commented this week that they were seriously troubled by recent reports in the
Italian news media about a secret dossier that was given to the departing
Benedict and was said to contain explosive evidence of sexual and financial
blackmail. The confidential dossier is supposed to be shown to the next pope.
Few
candidates come with the whole package of talents, and the Italian news media
have even floated the notion that the cardinals are considering “tickets” that
would pair a pastoral pope with a tough, savvy secretary of state who could act
as an administrator and, if need be, enforcer.
The next
pontiff may not need to execute a crackdown on Vatican infighting and misdeeds,
but he must at least have the executive smarts to appoint a deputy fearless
enough to confront the entrenched Vatican bureaucracy.
“The first
thing he has to do is put greater order in the central administration of the
Curia,” said Cardinal Edward Egan, the retired archbishop of New York. “He has
to be willing to take criticism.”
And at the
same time, “He has to be a man who understands the faith and can announce it in
an attractive and uncomplicated way,” said Cardinal Egan, who voted in the
conclave that elected Benedict, but is now just beyond the voting age limit of
80.
As of
Thursday, all of the 115 cardinals eligible to vote and expected to come had
arrived in Rome. But exactly when they will be locked into the Sistine Chapel
to vote for the next pope remained uncertain. The cardinals have been meeting
behind closed doors in the Vatican’s Paul VI hall every day this week,
listening to one another speak about the challenges facing the church.
For those
whose names have been circulated as “papabile,” or candidates for pope, the
speeches serve in part as auditions.
The lag in
scheduling the conclave indicated that the cardinals were still at the stage of
assessing one another’s personalities, records and ideas, said the Rev.
Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, in a news media briefing on Thursday.
Any serious
papal candidate has to be prayerful, theologically sound and fluent in Italian,
the language of the Vatican and of Rome, which is, after all, the pope’s own
diocese.
Several
cardinals have also said that the next pope must have had experience as bishop
of a diocese. That description would exclude some cardinals who have served
most of their years in the Curia and those with little pastoral experience,
like Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, the erudite Italian whom Benedict gave the
honor of preaching at the Vatican’s recent Lenten retreat.
Cardinal
Donald Wuerl, archbishop of Washington, said in an interview, “Being a shepherd
of a local church, I think, would be a very important factor if you’re going to
be engaged in this idea of renewing the church spiritually.”
Several
cardinals have also emphasized that a pope must be able to reach out to other
faiths, improve relations with bishops around the world and forcefully present
Catholic teaching.
Many of
those mentioned as papabile are said to have proven talents as administrators,
either in their archdioceses or in the Roman Curia, or both. These include
Cardinals Angelo Scola, archbishop of Milan; Odilo Pedro Scherer, archbishop of
São Paulo, Brazil; Peter Erdo, archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest and primate of
Hungary; Leonardo Sandri, an Argentine with long experience in the Roman Curia;
and Marc Ouellet, a Canadian who heads the Vatican’s powerful Congregation for
Bishops.
But several
of those prelates are known to be short on charisma or presence. Cardinals Erdo
and Ouellet are said by associates and former students to be more comfortable
reading from a prepared text than speaking spontaneously in front of crowds or
giving interviews.
Other
cardinals, meanwhile, have had their reputations climb with a proven ability to
communicate with mass audiences, notably Cardinal Luis Antonio G. Tagle of the
Philippines. But his age, just 55, works against him. He is the second-youngest
cardinal, after Baselios Thottunkal of India.
Age is an
important criterion, especially after the resignation of Benedict, who is 85.
Many cardinals agree that the future pope would ideally be in his 60s, and
Cardinal Wilfrid F. Napier of South Africa narrowed the age to the early 60s.
He suggested in an interview that it was time for a longer papacy, to carry
forward efforts to strengthen the church.
“You need
more time to build on those foundations,” Cardinal Napier said. “I think we
need a longer papacy to generate the energy and keep the momentum going.” He
added, “From informal conversations, some of the other cardinals would be
looking in that direction as well.”
In the
past, it would have been unthinkable to have a serious papal contender from the
United States, an economic and political superpower, but Vatican watchers say
that for the first time ever, there is enthusiasm for two Americans who have
both charisma and administrative strengths: Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York,
a garrulous presence, and Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley of Boston, a
Franciscan friar.
While it
remains unlikely that either will become pope, largely because the United
States is still perceived as a global superpower whose interests do not always
dovetail so smoothly with those of the Catholic Church, this conclave is the
first to break the taboo.
“For the
first time Americans are even being considered — that’s the news,” said Marco
Politi, a veteran Vatican watcher in Italy.
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