Robert Cohen St. Louis Post Dispatch Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York, right, confers with St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson last month. Dolan has been mentioned as a possible candidate to succeed Pope Benedict XV1.

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Papal candidates quietly emerge

Published: Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013 - 12:00 am | Page 13A

There is no formal nominating process for choosing the man to succeed Pope Benedict XVI, and campaigning for oneself is counterproductive.

But the cardinals who will file into the Sistine Chapel next month to elect a new leader of the Roman Catholic Church have been quietly sizing up potential candidates for years.

They were impressed when the young soon-to-be-cardinal of Manila, Luis Antonio Tagle, told bishops gathered for a momentous synod in Rome last October that the church should listen more and admit its mistakes. They took note a year ago when Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan of New York delivered a winning address on evangelization to the College of Cardinals, the day before the pope gave him the red hat of a cardinal.

They deemed Cardinal Marc Ouellet a gracious host on their visits to the Vatican, where he guides the selection of bishops, but some said he practically put the crowd to sleep during his talk at the International Eucharistic Congress last June in Dublin.

These impressions, collected from interviews with a variety of church officials and experts, may influence the very intuitive, often unpredictable process the cardinals will use to decide who should lead the world's largest church.

The cardinals will gather March 1, one day after Benedict steps down and departs for Castel Gandolfo, the papal summer home in the hills outside Rome. The cardinals will meet every morning to discuss where the church is headed and, over lunches and dinners, take the measure of one another's characters, talents and experiences, based on personal relationships and observations. But undoubtedly they will also consider geography, doctrinal approach and style.

By the time the 117 cardinal electors enter the conclave to choose the next pope, they must be ready to vote.

According to church rules, the conclave could begin March 15, but the Vatican spokesman said Saturday it might start even earlier. The cardinals, eager to finish the process by Palm Sunday on March 24, could reinterpret the mandatory 15-day waiting period, the spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said.

The waiting period was intended to allow time for cardinals to gather after the death of a pope, but because Benedict's resignation has already been announced, the cardinals have advance notice and, in fact, many have already begun discussions by phone and email.

"People are reluctant to speak about themselves," said Cardinal Francis George of Chicago. "So you go to a friend and say, 'Can you tell me about cardinal so-and-so?' The questions are usually about the qualities you want to see in a pope. … Can he govern? Is he deeply concerned about the poor?" George said in a telephone interview. "It matters far less where he happens to be living or where he's from."

The auditions begin in earnest today when Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, an Italian who is president of the Pontifical Council for Culture, is scheduled to preach the weeklong papal Lenten retreat, attended by Benedict and many of the cardinals and bishops who work in the Vatican. Preaching the Lenten retreat is a high honor, one bestowed on Karol Wojtyla and Joseph Ratzinger before they became Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, respectively.

"It's not only going to be seen as a sign of papal favor, but it will give him a platform," said John Thavis, the retired Rome bureau chief for Catholic News Service, a church-affiliated news agency, and author of "The Vatican Diaries."

"The way candidates come to the fore is generally not by what they're doing in their local archdioceses, which is what matters most to their own people," he said. "It's what they do at the center of the universal church."

The case of Ravasi exemplifies the way the cardinals will sift and weigh a candidate's attributes against the church's needs. Church leaders now say their greatest challenge is to confront a rising wave of secularism in Europe, the United States and even Latin America. Ravasi has engaged nonbelievers across Europe with high-profile events in cities such as Stockholm; Paris; Tirana, Albania; and Bucharest, Romania.

At a time when many prelates say the church must learn to use social media to evangelize, he has more than 35,000 followers on Twitter.

However, to the cardinals and bishops in the Vatican, according to Sandro Magister, a Vatican expert at the magazine L'Espresso, "Ravasi is considered very ambitious and much too inclined to chase the applause of the public."

The other Italians who are more solid candidates, Magister said, are Cardinal Angelo Scola, the archbishop of Milan and a theologian, and Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, the archbishop of Genoa.

Personality may be pre-eminent, but geography has increasingly been a factor.

With the church shrinking in Europe, and the majority of Catholics now living in Africa, Asia and Latin America, many Catholics are calling for the cardinals to turn the reins over to a leader from the global south. The church has never had a non-European pope in the modern era. The last, according to Vatican records, was Gregory III, a Syrian, who served until 741.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Read more articles by Laurie Goodstein



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