Pope Francis announced on
Sunday he has chosen 14 men to be the newest cardinals in the church, among
them his chief aide for helping Rome’s homeless and poor, as well as prelates
based in Iraq and Pakistan, where Christians are a vulnerable minority.
Francis said, in remarks to
pilgrims and tourists in St. Peter’s Square, “I am happy to announce that on
June 29, I will hold a consistory (ceremony) to make 14 new cardinals. The
countries of provenance express the universality of the church, which continues
to announce the merciful love of God to all men on Earth.
Then he revealed his picks
to be the latest “princes of the church,” including from Africa, elsewhere in
Asia, and South America, as he continues to make the College of Cardinals less
European than it had been in centuries past. Among the new cardinals is Louis
Raphael I Sako, the Baghdad-based patriarch of Babylonia of the Chaldeans. Also
to be made cardinal is Joseph Coutts, archbishop of Karachi, Pakistan.
Two top Vatican officials
will also receive the honor of joining churchmen who vote for new popes in
secret conclaves. They are Spanish Monsignor Luis Ladaria, who heads the Holy
See’s powerful office in charge of ensuring doctrinal orthodoxy, and, like the
pope, is a Jesuit; and Italian Monsignor Giovanni Angelo Becciu, the No. 2 in
the influential secretariat of state office. Becciu is also special delegate to
the recently troubled Sovereign Military Order of Malta.
Another Italian to be made
cardinal is a Rome vicar general, Monsignor Angelo De Donatis. The pope, while
leader of the entire Roman Catholic church, also serves as Rome’s top bishop.
Others tapped to be
cardinals include: Monsignor Antonio dos Santos Marto, bishop of Fatima,
Portugal; Monsignor Pedro Barreto, archbishop of Huancayo, Peru; Monsignor
Desire Tsarahazana, archbishop of Toamasina, Madagascar; Monsignor Thomas
Aquinas Manyo, archbishop of Osaka, Japan; and Monsignor Giuseppe Petrocchi,
archbishop of L’Aquila, the Italian mountain town still struggling to recover
from an earthquake in 2009.
Francis cited three other
churchmen he said he chose because “they have distinguished themselves for
their service to the church.” They are Emeritus Archbishop of Xalapa, Mexico,
Sergio Obeso Rivera; Monsignor Toribio Ticona Porco, a prelate from Corocoro,
Bolivia; and a Spanish priest, Aquilino Bocos Merino. The three are all over
80, so will not be eligible to vote for the next pope.
From USA today

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