Pope creating 14 new cardinals on
June 28
Pope Francis placing the red hat on a new cardinal during the Consistory of June 28, 2017. |
During the Consistory, Thursday evening in Rome’s St.
Peter’s Square, the Pope will create 14 new cardinals from 11 countries.
By Robin Gomes
Pope Francis will create 14 new cardinal from 11 countries
during the Ordinary Public Consistory in Rome’s St. Peter’s Basilica Thursday
evening, June 28.
The Pope first announced the names of the new cardinals on
Sunday, May 20, following his midday “Regina Coeli” prayer and blessing in St.
Peter’s Square.
The cardinals-designate are from Bolivia, Iraq, Italy, Japan,
Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Peru, Madagascar, Mexico and Spain. The Pope
explained that the places from where the new cardinals come “expresses the
universality of the Church, which continues to announce the merciful love of
God to all men and women on earth”. He said their nominations
“manifest the unbreakable bond between the See of Peter and the local Churches
throughout the world”.
The new Cardinals are:
- His
Beatitude Louis Raphaël I Sako – Chaldean Catholic Patriarch of Babylon
(Iraq)
- Archbishop
Luis Ladaria –Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
(Spain)
- Archbishop
Angelo De Donatis – Vicar General of Rome (Italy)
- Archbishop
Giovanni Angelo Becciu – Substitute of the Vatican Secretary of State and
Special Delegate for the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (Italy)
- Archbishop
Konrad Krajewski – Almoner of the Office of Papal Charities (Poland)
- Archbishop
Joseph Coutts of Karachi (Pakistan)
- Bishop
António dos Santos Marto of Leiria-Fátima (Portugal)
- Archbishop
Pedro Barreto of Huancayo (Peru)
- Archbishop
Desiré Tsarahazana of Toamasina (Madagascar)
- Archbishop
Giuseppe Petrocchi of L’Aquila (Italy)
- Archbishop
Thomas Aquinas Manyo of Osaka (Japan)
- Emeritus
Archbishop Sergio Obeso Rivera of Xalapa (Mexico)
- Emeritus
Bishop Toribio Ticona Porco of the Territorial Prelature of Corocoro
(Bolivia)
- Father
Aquilino Bocos Merino of the Claretian order (Spain)
The Pope said he chose the last three for their
distinguished service to the Church.
What is a consistory?
The consistory is not a Holy Mass but an assembly of
cardinals with or without the pope to deal with important Church matters, such
as fixing the dates of beatification and canonization and the creation of new
cardinals such as of June 28.
During the Middle Ages, popes used to convoke consistories
to decide on important issues. The cardinals are the closest advisers and
collaborators of the Pope in the government of the worldwide Catholic Church.
Blessed Paul VI used to convoke a consistory every time he
came back from an international trip, to share his impressions and exchange
opinions on the trip with the cardinals.
Pope Benedict XVI announced his historic resignation on Feb.
11, 2013, during a Consistory for the Canonization of the Martyrs of Otranto.
The consistory of Feb. 22, 2014 by Pope Francis was preceded
by an extraordinary consistory on the issues of the family.
Ceremony of creation of new cardinals
Thursday’s Consistory is a ceremony during which Pope
Francis will create the new cardinals and induct them as members of the
worldwide body of cardinals known as the College of Cardinals.
Dressed in their red robes, the cardinals-designate will
profess the Creed and then approach Pope Francis one by one who will place the
red biretta (hat) on each one of them and give them the cardinal’s ring.
Each cardinal will be assigned a titular church of Rome.
This is symbolic of the cardinals being part of the Diocese of Rome, whose
bishop is the Pope, successor of the first Bishop of Rome, St. Peter.
Reforms
Blessed Paul VI reformed the rite of the consistory for the
creation of new cardinal in 1969, giving it a liturgical outlook, though the
event had not previously been seen as a liturgical event. The rite
included prayers with the imposition of the red biretta and the ring,
emphasizing the spiritual bond between the cardinals and the pope.
Pope Benedict XVI further reformed and simplified the rite
of the creation of new cardinals in 2012, maintaining Pope Paul VI’s vision of
a liturgical framework.
The Code of Canon Law speaks about two types of consistory:
ordinary and extraordinary. An extraordinary consistory is called in particular
cases, and all the cardinals are called to take part in it. An ordinary
consistory takes place when the Pope needs the cardinals’ counsel on some
important, though normal, issue, or to give solemnity to the Pope’s decision,
such as the approval of the canonization of saints.
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