VATICAN CITY (AP) - The preliminaries
over, Catholic cardinals are ready to get down to the real business of
choosing a pope. And even without a front-runner, there are indications
they will go into the conclave Tuesday with a good idea of their top
picks.
Then it will be just a matter of agreeing on one man to lead the church and tackle its many problems.
The
conclave date was set Friday during a vote by the College of Cardinals,
who have been meeting all week to discuss the church's problems and
priorities, and the qualities the successor to Pope Benedict XVI must
possess.
That said, there doesn't appear to be
a front-runner, and the past week of deliberations has exposed sharp
divisions among cardinals about some of the pressing problems facing the
church, including governance within the Holy See itself.
The
Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the pre-conclave
meetings had given the cardinals a chance to discuss the "profile,
characteristics, qualities and talents" a future pope must have.
Those
closed-door deliberations, he said, provided an opportunity for
discussion and information-gathering so the cardinals could go into the
conclave ready to cast their ballots. "The preparation is absolutely
fundamental," Lombardi said.
Cardinal Sean O'Malley, archbishop of Boston, agreed, noting that without this week's meetings the conclave "could drag on."
"The
preference is to have enough discussions previous so that when people
go to the conclave, they already have a particular idea of who they're
going to vote for," he told reporters at a briefing earlier this week.
Then
it's a matter of consensus-building in order to reach the two-thirds
majority needed to elect a pope - a process that for the past century
has taken no more than a few days.
Benedict
himself was elected on the fourth round of voting in 2005, a day after
the conclave began - one of the fastest papal elections in recent times.
His predecessor, John Paul II, was chosen following eight ballots over
three days in 1978.
In the past 100 years, no conclave has lasted longer than five days.
On
Tuesday, the conclave will begin with a morning Mass in St. Peter's
Basilica, followed by a procession into the Sistine Chapel and the first
round of secret balloting in the afternoon.
If
black smoke is sent snaking out of the chapel chimney to indicate there
is no victor, the cardinals will retire for the day. They return
Wednesday for two rounds of balloting in the morning and two rounds in
the afternoon, a process repeated each day, with occasional breaks for
reflection, until a pope emerges.
U.S.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan, considered a papal contender, said in a blog
post Friday that this week's preliminary discussions covered preaching
and teaching the Catholic faith, tending to Catholic schools and
hospitals, protecting families and the unborn, supporting priests "and
getting more of them!"
"Those are the `big
issues,'" he wrote. "You may find that hard to believe, since the `word
on the street' is that all we talk about is corruption in the Vatican,
sexual abuse, money. Do these topics come up? Yes! Do they dominate?
No!"
The Americans had pressed this week for
time to get to the bottom of the dysfunction and corruption in the Holy
See's governance that were exposed by the leak of papal documents last
year. Vatican-based cardinals had been angling for a speedy end to the
discussions, perhaps to limit the amount of dirty laundry being aired.
But
by Thursday afternoon, Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles tweeted
that the discussions were "reaching a conclusion" and that a mood of
"excitement" was taking hold.
A Tuesday
conclave start date could be read as something of a compromise. Monday
had been seen as an obvious choice, to ensure a pope would be elected
and installed well ahead of the busy Holy Week that precedes Easter,
beginning with Palm Sunday on March 24.
According
to Vatican analysts, the list of papabili, or those considered to have
the stuff to be pope, remains relatively unchanged since the 85-year-old
Benedict first announced he would resign on Feb. 28, kick-starting the
papal transition.
But some Italian media have
speculated that with governance such a key issue, the cardinals might
also be considering an informal pope-Vatican secretary of state
"ticket." The secretary of state - who is primarily responsible for
running the Holy See - is not an elected position but a papal
appointment.
Also Friday, the cardinals
formally agreed to exempt two of their voting-age colleagues from the
conclave: Cardinal Julius Darmaatjadja, the emeritus archbishop of
Jakarta, who is ill, and Scottish Cardinal Keith O'Brien, who resigned
last week after admitting to sexual misconduct.
That
formality brings the number of cardinal electors to 115, two-thirds of
whom - or 77 - must vote for the victor. Benedict in 2007 changed the
conclave rules to keep the two-thirds requirement; Pope John Paul II had
decreed that only a simple majority would be needed following 12 days
of inconclusive balloting.
By reverting back
to a two-thirds vote, Benedict was apparently aiming to ensure a
consensus candidate emerges quickly, and to rule out the possibility
that cardinals might hold out until the simple majority kicks in to push
through their candidate. The decision may prove prescient, given the
apparent lack of a front-runner in this conclave.
Lombardi
said a few items of business remain outstanding, including drawing lots
for rooms at the Vatican's Santa Marta hotel, where the cardinals will
be sequestered once the conclave begins.
On
Friday, he showed a video of the room where the new pope will spend his
first night as pontiff: It features a bed with a dark wood headboard and
a carved image of Christ's face, as well as a sitting area and a study.
The
pope is expected to stay there for a few weeks until the papal
apartment in the Apostolic Palace can be renovated. The apartment was
sealed Feb. 28, just after Benedict resigned, and cannot be reopened
until the new pope formally takes possession.
(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)