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Article_New cardinals shed light on Church's minorities

New cardinals shed light on Church's minorities

Feature News | Monday, January 05, 2015

New cardinals shed light on Church's minorities

Pope Francis picks 15 bishops from 14 countries, every continent

October 24, 2012

Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Mass in St. Peter's Basilica with cardinals from around the world, the day after he created 22 new cardinals at a February 2012 consistory. On Jan. 4, Pope Francis named his second group of cardinals - a total of 15 from 14 countries - for a consistory set for Feb. 14.

Photographer: ALAN HOLDREN | Catholic News Agency

October 24, 2012 Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Mass in St. Peter's Basilica with cardinals from around the world, the day after he created 22 new cardinals at a February 2012 consistory. On Jan. 4, Pope Francis named his second group of cardinals - a total of 15 from 14 countries - for a consistory set for Feb. 14.


Vatican City (CNA/EWTN News) | In his Sunday Angelus address, Pope Francis announced the names of the 15 bishops to be created cardinals in February, many of whom hail from small dioceses which have never before had a cardinal.

“As was already announced, next Feb. 14 I will have the joy of holding a consistory, during which I will name 15 new cardinals who manifest the indissoluble links between the Church of Rome and the particular Churches present in the world,” the pope said Jan. 4.

Speaking to the thousands of pilgrims present in St. Peter’s Square after his recitation of the traditional Marian prayer, the pope revealed that the 15 new cardinals to be created come from 14 countries and from every continent.

Announced in the fall, the consistory will take place on Feb. 14. Pope Francis has also called a Feb. 12-13 meeting with the entire college of cardinals ahead of the consistory to reflect on current proposals for the ongoing reformation of the Roman Curia.

The day following the consistory, the Bishop of Rome and the 15 new cardinals will concelebrate a solemn Mass together in St. Peter's Basilica.

Among the new cardinals under the age of 80 and therefore eligible to vote in the next conclave are five European bishops, three from the continent of Asia, three from Latin America, including Mexico, two from Africa and two from Oceania.

Cape Verde, Myanmar and Tonga are three of the countries represented by the new cardinals. Characterized by small ecclesial communities or as representing a minority presence, none of the dioceses has had a cardinal until now.

In a Jan. 4 statement to journalists regarding the announcement of the new cardinals, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi drew attention to the fact that Pope Francis selected bishops from these, as well as other small, minority populations, rather than larger dioceses which traditionally have a cardinal.

Calling the move “noteworthy,” the spokesman pointed out that the pope's selections represent the universality of the Catholic Church, and are not bound to the traditional appointment of cardinals from “Cardinalatial Sees,” in which for “historical reasons�the Cardinalate was considered almost ‘automatically’ connected to such sees.”

The appointment of a cardinal from the diocese of Morelia, Mexico, was also recognized by the spokesman, who noted how the diocese is currently enmeshed in a state of ongoing violence.

The names of the new cardinals coming from Europe are:

  • Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura;
  • Archbishop Edoardo Menichelli of Ancona-Osimo (Italy);
  • Archbishop Francesco Montenegro of Agrigento (Italy);
  • Archbishop Ricardo Blázquez Pérez of Vallodolid (Spain) and
  • Archbishiop Manuel José Macario do Nascimento Clemente, Patriarch of Lisbon (Portugal).

New cardinals representing Latin America and Mexico are:

  • Archbishop Alberto Su�rez Inda of Morelia (Mexico);
  • Archbishop Daniel Fernando Sturla Berhouet, S.D.B., of Montevideo (Uruguay) and
  • Bishop José Luis Lacunza Maestrojuán, O.A.R., of David (Panamá).

Others, including from Africa and Asia, are:

  • Archbishop Berhaneyesus Demerew Souraphiel, C.M., of Addis Abeba (Ethiopia);
  • Archbishop Pierre Nguy�n Van Nhon of H� N�i (Vi�t Nam);
  • Archbishop Charles Maung Bo, S.D.B., of Yangon (Myanmar);
  • Archbishop Francis Xavier Kriengsak Kovithavanij of Bangkok (Thailand); 
  • Bishop Arlindo Gomes Furtado, of Santiago de Cabo Verde (Archipelago of Cape Verde);
  • Bishop Soane Patita Paini Mafi of Tonga (Island of Tonga) and
  • Archbishop John Atcherley Dew of Wellington (New Zealand).

In addition to the 15 cardinal electors, Pope Francis named five other bishops over the age of 80 who will be elevated due to their “pastoral charity in the service of the Holy See and of the Church.”

The names of the new non-elector cardinals are:

  • José de Jesús Pimiento Rodriguez, Archbishop Emeritus of Manizales (Colombia);
  • Archbishop Luigi De Magistris, Major Pro-Penitentiary Emeritus (Italy);
  • Archbishop Karl-Joseph Rauber, Apostolic Nuncio (Germany);
  • Luis Héctor Villaba, Archbishop Emeritus of Tucumán (Argentina) and
  • Júlio Duarte Langa, Bishop Emeritus of Xai-Xai (Mozambique).

“They represent so many bishops who, with the same pastoral solicitude, have given witness of love for Christ and for the people of God in particular Churches, in the Roman Curia, and in the Diplomatic Service of the Holy See,” the pope said.

He encouraged those present in St. Peter’s Square to pray for all of the newly appointed cardinals, asking that “they might be witnesses of His Gospel in the City of Rome and in the world, and with their pastoral experience they might support me more intensely in my apostolic service.”

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