Vatican
City, 8 March 2013
(VIS) – The eighth General Congregation of the
College of Cardinals has decided that the Conclave will begin on
Tuesday, 12 March 2013. A “pro eligendo Romano Pontifice” Mass
will be celebrated in St. Peter’s Basilica that morning. In the
afternoon, the cardinals will enter into the Conclave.
Home - VIS Vatican - Receive VIS - Contact us - Calendar
The Vatican Information Service is a news service, founded in the Holy See Press Office, that provides information about the Magisterium and the pastoral activities of the Holy Father and the Roman Curia...[+]
The Vatican Information Service is a news service, founded in the Holy See Press Office, that provides information about the Magisterium and the pastoral activities of the Holy Father and the Roman Curia...[+]
Last 5 news
Friday, March 8, 2013
EIGHTH GENERAL CONGREGATION THIS EVENING WILL VOTE ON DATE OF CONCLAVE
Vatican
City, 8 March 2013
(VIS) - “The eighth General Congregation that will meet this
evening will vote on the date to begin the Conclave”, Fr. Federico
Lombardi, director of the Holy See Press Office, announced. “It is
likely,” he clarified, “that the Conclave will begin early next
week: perhaps Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. It definitely will not
be tomorrow or Sunday. Tomorrow a General Congregation will only take
place in the morning and on Sunday it is expected that the cardinals
will visit their titular churches in the city to pray. They are under
no obligation to do so, but it is likely that they will.”
Before
beginning the press conference, Fr. Lombardi noted that today is
International Women's Day and offered a bouquet of mimosas with a
rose to a female journalist in representation of all women in keeping
with the custom in the Vatican to give flowers to the women who work
in the Holy See today.
Continuing,
Fr. Lombardi reported on the sixth General Congregation, which took
place yesterday evening from 5:00pm until 7:00pm and was attended by
151 cardinals. Two newly arrived cardinals swore the oath: Cardinal
Jean-Baptiste Pham Minh Man, metropolitan archbishop of Ho Chi Minh
City, Vietnam (Cardinal elector) and Cardinal Adam Joseph Maida,
archbishop emeritus of Detroit, Michigan, USA (non elector). The
entire complement of 115 Cardinal electors who were expected has thus
arrived. During the course of the Congregation 16 interventions were
given.
In
the seventh General Congregation this morning, 153 cardinals were
present and, as there were no other new arrivals, no new oaths were
sworn. All 115 expected Cardinal electors were present. The first act
of the Congregation dealt with No. 38 of the Apostolic Constitution
“Universi Dominici Gregis”, which states that the College of
Cardinals must recognize the reasons for the absence of cardinals who
will not be participating in the Conclave. “In this case there are
two absences: Cardinal Julius Riyadi Darmaatmadja, S.J., archbishop
emeritus of Jakarta, Indonesia, for health reasons and Cardinal Keith
O’Brien, ex-archbishop of Edinburgh, Scotland, for personal
reasons. The College voted to accept the absences for the reasons
presented.”
The
next order of business was Cardinal Dean Angelo Sodano's presentation
of No. 37 of the Apostolic Constitution “Universi Dominici Gregis”,
recently modified by Benedict XVI's Motu Proprio, which now reads: “I
furthermore decree that, from the moment when the Apostolic See is
lawfully vacant, fifteen full days must elapse before the Conclave
begins, in order to await those who are absent; nonetheless, the
College of Cardinals is granted the faculty to move forward the start
of the Conclave if it is clear that all the Cardinal electors are
present; they can also defer, for serious reasons, the beginning of
the election for a few days more. But when a maximum of twenty days
have elapsed from the beginning of the vacancy of the See, all the
Cardinal electors present are obliged to proceed to the election.”
“Since
all the expected Cardinal electors are now present”, Fr. Lombardi
said, “the College can now prepare to decide the date of the
Conclave, including whether to move the date up from 15 days after
the beginning of the period of the Sede Vacante.”
“The
cardinals also commented on the Adopt-a-Cardinal prayer initiative
that is being promoted on the web, which over 220,000 people have
already subscribed to.” In signing up, participants are assigned,
at random, a cardinal for whom they can pray during these days.
During
this morning's seventh General Congregation, there were 18
interventions on issues including: interreligious dialogue,
contemporary culture, bioethics, justice in the world, the importance
of the Church proclaiming a positive message of love and mercy, and
collegiality. The role of women in the Church was also discussed.
Since most of the cardinals have only spoken once, over a hundred
cardinals have intervened and still others are signed up to address
the gathering in the coming Congregations.
Fr.
Lombardi also mentioned the Domus Santa Martha, which will be the
residence of the cardinals during the Conclave, explaining that the
cardinals' rooms are assigned by lot drawn during the Congregations.
“No cardinal chooses who will be his neighbour nor which room they
would prefer. He noted that the newly elected Pontiff will also
remain for a short period at the “Domus” while the papal
apartments in the Apostolic Palace are unsealed and renovated.
In
another vein, he commented that the Holy See “is vacant but does
not stop”, meaning that the Vatican's various dicasteries continue
with their normal activities under the direction of their various
department heads. He also provided the name of the preacher who will
give the following meditation to the College of Cardinals, Cardinal
Prospero Grech, O.S.A.
Responding
to previous questions regarding the preparations of the floor of the
Sistine Chapel for the Conclave, the director of the Holy See Press
Office clarified that “the elevation of the floor serves to render
a uniform working space, covering the uneven pavement and the steps”
that are around the altar and along the left wall of the chapel.
VATICAN PUBLISHES BOOK OF BENEDICT XVI'S FINAL ADDRESSES AFTER RENOUNCING PONTIFICATE
Vatican
City, 8 March 2013
(VIS) - “I have never felt alone.” These words, pronounced by
Benedict XVI during his last general audience as Pope on Wednesday,
27 February, form the title chosen by the Vatican Publishing House
(“Libreria Editrice Vaticana”, LEV) for the newly published book
containing Benedict XVI's final addresses. The front cover displays a
photograph of the Pope greeting the faithful who had gathered to bid
him farewell that day in St. Peter's Square. On the back appear the
words he spoke from Castel Gandolfo on 28 February: “I am simply a
pilgrim beginning the last leg of his pilgrimage on this earth.”
The
noted publishing house presents this book as a “small tribute”, a
“sign of the LEV's fidelity to the Holy Father” who, as expressed
in the book's introductory presentation, “we have accompanied from
the beginning to the end of his Pontificate”. It is a simply bound
volume that hopes to “be a sign of gratitude and appreciation”.
In
the same introduction, the LEV explains that the Vatican Publishing
House's “catalogue has focused on the magisteria and teachings of
Benedict XVI”. In this sense, the publishing house recalls that its
mission is to “always be an instrument for spreading the word of
God and the Magisterium”.
The
first text presented in the book is the declaration that Benedict XVI
made in the consistory of 11 February, renouncing his ministry as
Bishop of Rome. Following are his general audience catechesis on the
morning of Wednesday, 13 February, his homily at the Ash Wednesday
Mass that evening, and the greeting that the Pope received at the
conclusion of that celebration from the Cardinal Secretary of State
Tarcisio Bertone, S.D.B.
The
book also presents his meeting with the clergy of Rome on 14
February, the Angelus from 17 and 24 February, his reflection at the
end of the Curia's Lenten retreat on the morning of 23 February, the
text of his final general audience on the 27th, his greeting to the
cardinals present in Rome on the morning of the 28th, and the words
he addressed to the faithful of the Diocese of Albano who were
awaiting him in the square in front of the Apostolic Palace at Castel
Gandolfo in the early evening of that day.
The
book also contains the text of the Apostolic Letter with his Motu
Proprio “Normas Nonnullas”, which modified some of the norms
regulating the process of the election of the Roman Pontiff.
The
volume concludes with a brief biography of Benedict XVI. It is only
available in Italian.
NOTICE
Vatican
City, 8 March 2013
(VIS) – We inform our readers that, for the announcement of the
Conclave, the VIS will transmit a bulletin tomorrow morning, Saturday
9 March.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Copyright © VIS - Vatican Information Service
In accordance with international regulations on Intellectual Property and Author’s Rights, VIS authorises reproduction of news items issued by the Vatican Information Service, partially or in their entirety, on condition that the source (VIS – Vatican Information Service) is quoted.
In accordance with international regulations on Intellectual Property and Author’s Rights, VIS authorises reproduction of news items issued by the Vatican Information Service, partially or in their entirety, on condition that the source (VIS – Vatican Information Service) is quoted.