The work to elect a successor to retired Pope Benedict XVI begins in earnest Tuesday, when the cardinals charged with the task gather in Vatican City for the papal conclave.
The service -- open to
the public -- is the last public event featuring the 115 cardinals who
will choose the new spiritual leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman
Catholics.
They processed
ceremonially into St. Peter's, dressed in scarlet robes, for a service
in which they will pray for guidance in choosing the next pontiff.
In the afternoon, the
cardinal-electors -- those aged under 80 who are eligible to vote - will
go to the Pauline Chapel for further prayers.
They will then walk to the Sistine Chapel, chanting prayers as they go, to begin the secret election called the conclave.
The doors will be locked
behind them and, after that, the only clue the world will have of what
is happening inside will be periodic puffs of smoke from a copper
chimney installed over the weekend in the Sistine Chapel.
Black smoke, no pope. White smoke, success.
Rome is abuzz
Rome was abuzz Monday
with preparations for the conclave, from the 5,600 journalists the
Vatican said had been accredited to cover the event to the red curtains
unfurled from the central balcony at St. Peter's, the spot where the
world will meet the new pope once he is elected.
Tailors have also completed sets of clothes for the new pope to wear as soon as he is elected, in three different sizes.
Video released by the
Vatican over the weekend showed the installation of a pair of stoves
inside the chapel. One is used to burn the cardinals' ballots after they
are cast and the other to send up the smoke signal -- the one that
alerts the world that a vote has been taken and whether there's a new
pope.
Workers could be seen scaling the roof of the chapel Saturday to install the chimneys.
When we'll see the first smoke is anyone's guess.
An electronic shield has
been put in place to stop the cardinal-electors communicating with the
outside world using mobile phones or other devices.
Cardinal Roger Mahony,
the retired Archbishop of Los Angeles, tweeted early Tuesday: "Last
tweet before moving to Casa Santa Martha, and Mass to Elect a Pope.
First Conclave meeting late Tuesday afternoon. Prayers needed."
The cardinals will probably vote Tuesday, but they don't have to, Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Monday.
If they do, it's likely the first smoke might be seen around 8 p.m. (3 p.m. ET), he said.
When cardinals elected
Benedict in 2005, the white smoke signaling the decision came about six
hours after an earlier, inconclusive vote, he said.
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It took another 50 minutes for Benedict to dress, pray and finally appear on the balcony of St. Peter's, he said.
The longest conclave held since the turn of the 20th century lasted five days.
On Monday, cardinals
held the last of several days of meetings, known as General
Congregations, to discuss church affairs and get acquainted. Lombardi
said 152 cardinals were on hand for the final meeting.
Church rules prevent
cardinals over the age of 80 from participating in the conclave but
allow them to attend the meetings that precede the vote.
Who will win?
Meanwhile, the Italian
press is full of speculation about which cardinal may win enough support
from his counterparts to be elected, and what regional alliances are
being formed.
"Many would say it's all about politics at this point," Monsignor Rick Hilgartner, head of U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Secretariat on Divine Worship, saids,
"but I think it's important to remember that they also recognize that
this is a very spiritual moment." Once the doors close and conclave
begins, he says it's less about politicking and "more about prayer as
they each in silence write their votes."
Italy potentially wields
the most power with 28 of the 115 votes, making it the largest bloc in
the College of Cardinals. The United States is second with 11.
Altogether 48 countries are represented among the cardinal- electors.
Sixty-seven of their
number were appointed by Benedict, who stepped down at the end of last
month, becoming the first pontiff to do so in six centuries.
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