Black smoke billows from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel during the cardinals' conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Wednesday, May 7, 2025.
Ishtartv.com - Associated Press
By NICOLE WINFIELD, 7 May, 2025
ATICAN CITY (AP) — Black smoke poured out of the Sistine Chapel chimney
on Wednesday, signalling that no pope had been elected as 133 cardinals opened
the secretive, centuries-old ritual to choose a new leader of the Catholic
Church.
The cardinals participating in the most geographically diverse
conclave in the faith’s 2,000-year history took just one round of voting
Wednesday evening. After failing to find a winner on the first ballot, they
retired for the night and will return to the Sistine Chapel on Thursday morning
to try to find a successor to Pope Francis.
They had opened the conclave Wednesday afternoon, participating in a
rite more theatrical than even Hollywood could create, a wash of red-robed
cardinals, Latin chants, incense and solemnity that underscored the seriousness
of the moment.
Outside in St. Peter’s Square, the scene was festive, as thousands of
people flocked to the piazza to watch the proceedings on giant video screens,
applauding when the Sistine Chapel’s doors slammed shut and the voting began.
They waited for hours, watching screens that showed just a skinny chimney and
occasional seagull. After the vote dragged on to dinnertime, some left in
frustration, but those who stayed cheered when the smoke finally billowed out.
“My hope is that cardinals will choose a man who can be a peacemaker and
could reunify the church,” said Gabriel Capry, a 27-year-old from London.
A diverse group of cardinals
Hailing from 70 countries, the cardinals were sequestered Wednesday
from the outside world, their cellphones surrendered and airwaves around the
Vatican jammed to prevent all communications until they find a new pope.
Francis named 108 of the 133 “princes of the church,” choosing many
pastors in his image from far-flung countries like Mongolia, Sweden and Tonga
that had never had a cardinal before.
His decision to surpass the usual limit of 120 cardinal electors and
include younger ones from the “global south” — often marginalized countries
with lower economic clout — has injected an unusual degree of uncertainty in
a process that is always full of mystery and suspense.
Many cardinals hadn’t met until last week and lamented they needed more
time to get to know one another, raising questions about how long it might take
for one man to secure the two-thirds majority, or 89 ballots, necessary to
become the 267th pope.
“Wait and see, a little patience, wait and see,” said Cardinal Mario
Zenari, the Vatican’s ambassador to Syria.
The oath and “Extra omnes”
The cardinals had entered the Sistine Chapel in pairs, chanting the
meditative “Litany of the Saints” as Swiss Guards stood at attention. The hymn
implores the saints to help the cardinals find a leader of the 1.4
billion-strong church.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the 70-year-old secretary of state under
Francis and himself a leading contender to succeed him as pope, assumed the
leadership of the proceedings as the senior cardinal under age 80 eligible to
participate.
He stood before Michelangelo’s vision of heaven and hell, “The Last
Judgment,” and led the other cardinals in a lengthy oath. Each one followed,
placing his hand on the Gospel and promising in Latin to maintain utmost
secrecy.
Earlier in the day, the dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal
Giovanni Battista Re, presided over a morning Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica
urging the voters to set aside all personal interests and find a pope who
prizes unity. He prayed for a pope who could awaken the conscience of the
world.
He reminded the cardinals that the awesomeness of the Sistine Chapel’s
frescoes is meant to remind the cardinals of the weighty responsibility they
bear. In his regulations for the conclave, Re recalled, St. John Paul II wrote
that in the Sistine Chapel, “everything is conducive to an awareness of the
presence of God.”
After the cardinals took their oaths, the master of papal liturgical
ceremonies, Archbishop Diego Ravelli, called out “extra omnes,” Latin
for “all out” and anyone not eligible to vote left before the chapel doors
closed. An elderly cardinal remained to deliver a meditation, but after he
finished, he too, had to leave since he was too old to vote.
While cardinals this week said they expected a short conclave, it will
likely take at least a few rounds of voting. For much of the past century, it
has taken between three and 14 ballots to find a pope. John Paul I — the pope
who reigned for 33 days in 1978 — was elected on the fourth ballot. His
successor, John Paul II, needed eight. Francis was elected on the fifth in
2013.
Lobbying before the conclave
The cardinals are supposed to resist any “secular” influences in their
choice of pope, but such lobbying abounded in Rome in the days before the
conclave as various groups reminded cardinals of what ordinary Catholics want
in a leader.
Young Catholics penned an open letter reminding cardinals that there is
no church without young people, women and the laity. Conservative Catholic
media slipped cardinals copies of a glossy book containing their assessments of
contenders. Survivors of clergy sexual abuse warned cardinals that they would
be held accountable if they failed to find a leader who will crack down on
decades of abuse and cover-up.
Advocates for women’s ordination sent pink smoke signals Wednesday over
the Vatican to demand that women be allowed to be priests and participate in a
conclave.
Even the White House got involved, posting a photo of President
Donald Trump dressed as a pope. Trump said it was a joke, but the gesture
was denounced by former Italian Premier Romano Prodi as “indecent” political
interference in matters of faith that hark back to times when secular rulers
intervened in conclaves.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, said there was also
plenty of lobbying going on among cardinals themselves.
“You invite each other out,” Dolan said on SiriusXM’s The Catholic
Channel before the conclave began. “And you’re pretty blunt. Now, we’re not,
you know, we’re not horse trading here. We’re saying, ‘Tell me about this guy.
You’re from Latin America. Go through the list of bishops. Tell me some of
these fellas. Am I right to be enchanted by this guy?’”
Lisette Herrera, a 54-year-old tourist from the Dominican Republic, was
deeply moved to find herself by chance in Rome as the conclave began. She
decided Wednesday morning to skip the Spanish Steps and Trevi Fountain and pray
instead in St. Peter’s Square.
“I’m praying to the Holy Spirit for a young pope who would stay with us
for a long time,” she said. “I don’t believe in conclave politics, I just feel
that the Holy Spirit is here and that’s all we need to know.”
Challenges facing a new pope
Many challenges await the new pope and weigh on the cardinals
— above all whether to continue and consolidate Francis’ progressive legacy on
promoting women, LGBTQ+ acceptance, the environment and migrants, or roll it
back to try to unify a church that became more polarized during his
pontificate. The clergy sex abuse scandal hung over the pre-conclave
talks.
Since Francis chose 80% of the voters, continuity is likely, but the
form it might take is uncertain and identifying front-runners has been a
challenge.
But some names keep appearing on lists of “papabile,” or cardinals
having the qualities to be pope. In addition to Parolin, they include:
— Filipino Cardinal Luis Tagle, 67, a top candidate to be history’s
first Asian pope. He headed the Vatican’s evangelization office responsible for
the Catholic Church in much of the developing world.
— Hungarian Cardinal Peter Erdo, 72, the archbishop of Budapest, is a
leading candidate representing the more conservative wing of the church.
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