Pope Names 19 New Cardinals, Focusing on the Poor Including one from Haiti

By FRANCES D’EMILIO Associated Press

Pope Francis named his first batch of cardinals on Sunday, choosing 19 men from Asia, Africa, Latin America and elsewhere, including the developing nations of Haiti and Burkina Faso, in line with his belief that the church must pay more attention to the poor.

Francis made the announcement as he spoke from his studio window to a crowd in St. Peter’s Square.

Sixteen of the appointees are younger than 80, meaning they are currently eligible to elect the next pope, which is a cardinal’s most important task. The ceremony to formally install them as cardinals will be held Feb. 22 at the Vatican.

Since his election in March as the first pontiff from Latin America, the pope has broken tradition after tradition in terms of protocol and style at the Vatican. But in Sunday’s list Francis stuck to the church’s rule of having no more than 120 cardinals eligible to elect the next pontiff.

The College of Cardinals is currently 13 shy of that 120-mark among eligible-to-vote members. In addition, three cardinals will turn 80 by May. That means Francis chose the exact number of new cardinals needed to bring the voting ranks up to 120 during the next few months.

Some appointments were expected, including that of his new secretary of state, the Italian archbishop Pietro Parolin, and the German head of the Vatican’s watchdog office for doctrinal orthodoxy, Gerhard Ludwig Mueller. Two others named Sunday also come from the curia, as the Holy See’s Rome-based bureaucracy is known.

But some names were surprising.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the pope’s selection of churchmen from Haiti and Burkina Faso reflects Francis’ attention to the destitute as a core part of the church’s mission.

Also chosen to become a “prince of the church,” as the cardinals are known, was Mario Aurelio Poli, the archbishop of Buenos Aires, a post Francis left when he was elected as the first Latin American pope in March. Poli had impressed Francis by earning a degree in social work from the public university of Buenos Aires.

In the case of the archbishop of Rio de Janeiro, the selection of Orani Joao Tempesta was widely hoped for back home as a kind of reward for Monsignor Orani Joao Tempesta’s work in organizing Francis’ wildly popular visit to that city in July.

Whether one continent or country has a large contingent of cardinals is heavily watched when it comes time to pick the next pope because churchmen could vote as a geographic bloc in hope of furthering the interests of their flock back home.

Not counting the four picks from the curia, who no longer represent the church in their homelands, the others new voting cardinals include two from Europe, three from North and Central America, three from South America, and two apiece from Africa and Asia.

Vincent Nichols, the archbishop of Westminster, in Britain, called his appointment a “humbling moment” of service to the church.

The youngest new cardinal chosen by Francis is the 55-year-old Monsignor Chibly Langlois from Haiti.

In reading out the names, Francis said the new cardinals, coming from “every part of the world represent the deep church ecclesial relationship between the church of Rome and the other churches scattered throughout the world.”

Francis has stressed that the church hierarchy must not view itself as an elite aloof from its flock but instead serve its flock, especially for the poor, others on the edges of society and disillusioned faithful.

Once again on Sunday, a pope has passed over a prominent churchman in predominantly Catholic Ireland as a potential cardinal: Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. He has irritated some in the Vatican by strongly criticizing how the hierarchy handled the worldwide clerical sex abuse scandal.

In a sentimental touch in Sunday’s selections, the three men chosen as cardinals who are too old to vote for the next pope include 98-year-old Monsignor Loris Francesco Capovilla, who had served as personal secretary to Pope John XXIII. That late pontiff will be made a saint along with John Paul II in a ceremony at the Vatican in April.

———

Marco Sibaja contributed to this report from Brazil.

Share:

Author: `

1 thought on “Pope Names 19 New Cardinals, Focusing on the Poor Including one from Haiti

  1. Efilante18@aol.com

    Le Pape Francois nomme l’eveque des Cayes le premier Cardinal Haitien, Chibly Langlois il est originaire de la Vallee de Jacmel

    Le Pape rend public les noms des 16 prochains nouveaux cardinaux

    (RV) Le Pape François, au terme de l’Angélus de ce dimanche, a rendu public les noms des 16 prochains nouveaux cardinaux, qui seront créés lors du Consistoire du 22 février prochain. Ils nous viennent de 12 pays différents, et de tous les continents « pour représenter le profond rapport ecclésial entre l’Eglise de Rome et les autres Eglises disséminées de par le monde. » Le 23 février, a annoncé le Pape, « je présiderai une messe solennelle avec les nouveaux cardinaux, alors que le 20 et le 21 février, je tiendrai un Concistoire avec tous les Cardinaux pour réfléchir sur le thème de la famille ».
    Le Pape a alors cité un par un les 16 nouveaux cardinaux :
    1 – Mgr Pietro Parolin, Secrétaire d’Etat .
    2 – Mgr Lorenzo Baldisseri, Secrétaire Général du Synode des Evêques.
    3 – Mgr Gerhard Ludwig Müller, Préfet de la Congrégation pour la Doctrine de la Foi.
    4 – Mgr Beniamino Stella, Préfet de la Congrégation pour le Clergé.
    5 – Mgr Vincent Nichols, Archevêque de Westminster (Grande-Bretagne).
    6 – Mgr Leopoldo José Brenes Solórzano, Archevêque de Managua (Nicaragua)
    7 – Mgr Gérald Cyprien Lacroix, Archevêque de Québec (Canada).
    8 – Mgr Jean-Pierre Kutwa, Archevêque d’Abidjan (Côte d’Ivoire )
    9 – Mgr Orani João Tempesta, Archevêque de Rio de Janeiro (Brésil).
    10 – Mgr Gualtiero Bassetti, Archevêque de Perugia-Città della Pieve (Italie).
    11 – Mgr Mario Aurelio Poli, Archevêque de Buenos Aires (Argentine).
    12 – Mgr Andrew Yeom Soo jung, Archevêque de Séoul (Corée).
    13 – Mgr Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, Archevêque de Santiago du Chili (Chili).
    14 – Mgr Philippe Nakellentuba Ouédraogo, Archevêque de Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso).
    15 – Mgr Orlando B. Quevedo, Archevêque de Cotabato (Philippines).
    16 – Mgr Chibly Langlois, Evêque de Les Cayes (Haïti).

    Le Pape François a décidé d’unir au Membres du Collège Cardinalice 3 archevêques émérites, qui se sont distingués par leur service au Saint-Siège et à l’Eglise.
    1 – Mgr Loris Francesco Capovilla, Archevêque titulaire de Mesembria.
    2 – Mgr Fernando Sebastián Aguilar, Archevêque émérite de Pampelune.
    3 – Mgr Kelvin Edward Felix, Archevêque émérite de Castries.
    « Prions pour les nouveaux cardinaux, a ajouté le Pape, afin que revêtus des vertus et des sentiments du Seigneur Jésus, le Bon Pasteur, ils puissent aider plus efficacement l’Evêque de Rome dans son service à l’Eglise Universelle.»

Comments are closed.