Cardinals' meetings begin with business, then look toward choosing
pope
By Cindy WoodenCatholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The
world's cardinals were to begin meetings at the Vatican March 4, and while
onlookers are focused on who may be the next pope, the cardinals have business
to deal with.
Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa
said the general congregations begin with the actual business of running the
church during the extraordinary period when there is no pope.
While the
cardinals do not have to plan and set a budget for a funeral and burial -- which
past general congregations have had to do after the death of a pope -- there
still is a "sede vacante" budget to approve and the formal authorizing of sede
vacante stamps and coins.
In the general congregation, the cardinals set
the date for the beginning of the conclave, but the Vatican spokesman said that
is unlikely to happen on the first day.
The cardinals also begin
examining together and in depth the rules for the conclave and for electing a
new pope, Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga told Catholic News Service March 1. They invite experts in
canon law to join them and give advice if some points are unclear or in
dispute.
Only after they deal with practical business, he said, will they
begin discussing the main challenges facing the church.
In 2005, he said,
they had broad discussions, then broke up into small groups, according to
continent, "so we could define better the challenges" particular to their
region. "I believe we will do the same" this time, the cardinal
said.
Asked if there also are secret meetings in backrooms and
restaurants before the conclave, he said: "These are stories. I never had those
kinds of meetings during the last conclave. It's a different thing trying to
elect a pope than vote for a candidate of a (political) party. We, instead of
thinking of candidates, we think of the main challenges, the main problems, and
then try to think, in prayer, who can be the best-suited person for facing those
challenges and trying to help the church."
As soon as Pope Benedict
announced his resignation, the cardinal said, every Mass in the Tegucigalpa
Archdiocese began with a prayer for the election of the new pope. "And, of
course, my prayer has been directed to the Holy Spirit, asking for light and
wisdom" as he prepares for the conclave.
Once inside the conclave, he
said, "there will be many names" that come out on the first ballot. "But then
time goes by. We try to focus, especially, on the main challenges of the church
and who can be the person to answer those challenges."
Cardinal Rodriguez
Maradiaga, 70, said it's necessary for the cardinals to consider the age of the
candidates, but that does not mean it will be the determining factor "because
knowing now there is a precedence of resignation means the next pope will not be
tied to going until death; it is possible to serve for a certain number of years
and then retire. Why not?"
The cardinal said it is possible that his
brother electors will decide to look outside Europe for the next pope, "but it's
not a matter of nationality or where you were born. It's a matter of the main
problems of the church and the person who could answer, no matter where he was
born."
"But, of course, the church is growing in the American continent.
We have the majority of Catholics in the world, which is a very interesting
factor to take into consideration," he said. "Asia is the big challenge and the
big horizon because it has more than one-third of the population of the whole
world and the least number of Catholics, so for the missionary aspect, it will
be important. Africa is flourishing in hope and growing in numbers of
Catholics."
All of those regional issues are part of the universal
ministry that will belong to the next pope, he said.
The church, he said,
is a transcendent, divine and spiritual institution that is made up of human
beings and lives in the world, which means "the main problem of the church is
how to announce the message of God," especially in modern cultures that try to
exclude or deny God's existence.
All of the other problems facing the
church and humanity flow from that problem, he said. When people deny God's
existence, "how can you preach ethical principles?"
Cardinal Rodriguez
Maradiaga said that, from personal experience and his expertise in human
psychology, he knows that attempts to use the political labels "liberal" and
"conservative" to define and divide the cardinals are inaccurate and say more
about the person doing the labeling than about the cardinals
themselves.
The cardinal said he has been accused by some people of being
a liberation theologian, while others say he is too conservative.
"The
most important thing is how is the faith" of the cardinal. "Faith is the most
important" factor in the life of a cardinal and, of course, of a potential pope,
he said.
In electing a new pope, the Honduran cardinal said he will look
for "a person of faith, a person of love with a big heart to understand,
especially, the human sufferings of today and to understand we are only
servants, not kings."
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