Dean to cardinals: Pray for ‘new
pope according to God’s heart’
Cardinal Re presided at Mass in St.
Peter’s Basilica ahead of the conclave.
May 07, 2025
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re
urged cardinals Wednesday to pray that the Holy Spirit “will give us a new pope
according to God’s heart for the good of the Church and of humanity.”
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of
Cardinals, censes the altar at the Mass for the Election of the Roman Pontiff
in St. Peter’s Basilica on May 7, 2025. Screenshot from @VaticanNews YouTube
channel.
At a May 7 Mass in
St. Peter’s Basilica ahead of the conclave to elect Pope Francis’ successor,
the dean of the College of Cardinals reflected on the onerous task facing the
133 cardinal-electors.
“We are here to invoke the help
of the Holy Spirit, to implore his light and strength so that the Pope elected
may be he whom the Church and humanity need at this difficult and complex
turning point in history,” Re said in his homily at
the Mass pro eligendo Pontifice (for the election of the Roman
Pontiff).
“To pray, by invoking the Holy
Spirit, is the only right and proper attitude to take as the cardinal-electors
prepare to undertake an act of the highest human and ecclesial responsibility
and to make a choice of exceptional importance.”
“This is a human act for which
every personal consideration must be set aside, keeping in mind and heart only
the God of Jesus Christ and the good of the Church and of humanity.”
Mass for the Election of the Roman Pontiff in St. Peter’s
Basilica on May 7, 2025. Screenshot from @VaticanNews YouTube channel.
The cardinals — some looking
tense and highly focused — sat in a semi-circle around the Altar of the
Confession, above the tomb of the first pope, St. Peter.
Also present at the Mass were
figures who held senior Vatican posts until the death of Pope Francis, when
most roles lapsed.
They included Sr. Raffaella Petrini, appointed president of the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State in March, and Paolo Ruffini, the prefect of
the Dicastery for Communication since 2018.
Crowds outside of St. Peter’s Basilica watch the Mass for
the Election of the Roman Pontiff on May 7, 2025. Credit: JD Flynn/Pillar
Media.
The Sistine Chapel Choir sang
throughout the Mass, accompanied by the organ of St. Peter’s Basilica.
In his homily, Cardinal Re
referred to the Gospel reading, from John 15, in which Jesus tells
the disciples that his commandment is to “love one another as I have loved
you.”
The cardinal, who will not vote
in the conclave because he is over 80, said: “The love that Jesus reveals knows
no limits and must characterize the thoughts and actions of all his disciples,
who must always show authentic love in their behavior and commit themselves to
building a new civilization, what Paul VI called the ‘civilization of love.’
Love is the only force capable of changing the world.”
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re presides at the Mass for
the Election of the Roman Pontiff. Screenshot from @VaticanNews YouTube
channel.
Re said that the Mass readings —
including Isaiah 61,
describing the mission of the Lord’s anointed to bring good news to the poor —
contained a message of fraternity, a major
theme of Francis’ pontificate.
“The liturgical texts of this
Eucharistic celebration, then, invite us to fraternal love, to mutual help and
to commitment to ecclesial communion and universal human fraternity,” he said,
speaking with a firm voice.
“Among the tasks of every
successor of Peter is that of fostering communion: communion of all Christians
with Christ; communion of the bishops with the pope; communion of the bishops
among themselves.”
“This is not a self-referential
communion, but one that is entirely directed toward communion among persons,
peoples, and cultures, with a concern that the Church should always be a ‘home
and school of communion.’”
The 91-year-old cardinal
stressed the need to maintain Church unity, which he defined as “a firm and
profound communion in diversity.”
“Each pope continues to embody
Peter and his mission and thus represents Christ on earth; he is the rock on
which the Church is built,” Re said, alluding to Matthew 16:18.
“The election of the new pope is
not a simple succession of persons, yet it is always the Apostle Peter who
returns.”
Cardinals Matteo Zuppi, Leopoldo Brenes, and Vicente
Bokalic Iglic at the Mass for the Election of the Roman Pontiff. Screenshot
from @VaticanNews YouTube channel.
Re evoked the Sistine
Chapel, the conclave’s setting, which contains Michelangelo’s towering
painting of the Last Judgment.
Holding the pages of his homily
in his left hand, the bespectacled cardinal noted that in the poem “Roman
Triptych,” published in 2003, the Polish pope John Paul II meditated on the
painting’s significance for cardinal-electors.
“In his ‘Roman Triptych,’ Pope
John Paul II expressed the hope that during the hours of voting on this weighty
decision, Michelangelo’s looming image of Jesus the Judge would remind everyone
of the greatness of the responsibility of placing the ‘supreme keys’ in the
correct hands,” Re said, quoting the Italian poet Dante Alighieri.
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re delivers the homily at the
Mass for the Election of the Roman Pontiff. Screenshot from @VaticanNews
YouTube channel.
Stressing the words with thrusts
of right hand, the Italian cardinal continued: “Let us pray, then, that the
Holy Spirit, who in the last hundred years has given us a series of truly holy
and great pontiffs, will give us a new pope according to God’s heart for the
good of the Church and of humanity.”
“Let us pray that God will grant
the Church a pope who knows how best to awaken the consciences of all and the
moral and spiritual energies in today’s society, characterised by great
technological progress but which tends to forget God.”
“Today’s world expects much from
the Church regarding the safeguarding of those fundamental human and spiritual
values without which human coexistence will not be better nor bring good to
future generations.”
After the homily and the
recitation of the Creed, the Prayers of the Faithful were read in French,
Swahili, Portuguese, Malayalam (spoken in India), Chinese, and German,
highlighting the Catholic Church’s universality.
The Prayer of the Faithful is read in Chinese at the Mass
for the Election of the Roman Pontiff. Screenshot from @VaticanNews YouTube
channel.
Following the Mass, the
cardinals were due to have lunch, before gathering again in the afternoon at
the Vatican’s Pauline Chapel. From there, they will walk in procession into the
Sistine Chapel, where they will take an oath individually, promising to respect
the secrecy of the conclave in perpetuity.
After the last cardinal has taken
the oath, Archbishop Diego Ravelli, the Master of Papal Liturgical
Celebrations, will proclaim: “Extra omnes” (“Everyone else out.”) Those
who are not directly involved in the conclave will leave the chapel.
With Ravelli still present,
Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa, Preacher Emeritus of the Papal Household, will
offer a meditation on the task awaiting electors.
When the meditation ends,
Cantalamessa (who at 91 is too old to vote) and Ravelli (who is not a cardinal)
will leave the Sistine Chapel. The doors will be closed and guards will take up
their places at the chapel’s entrances.
The cardinal-electors will then
begin the elaborate
voting procedure. One vote is expected to take place May 7. Following the
vote, the ballots will be burned and smoke emitted from a temporary chimney
attached to the Sistine Chapel.
If the smoke is black, it will
indicate that no pope has been elected. If the smoke is white, it will signal
that a new pope has been chosen.
Concluding his homily, Cardinal
Re said: “May the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, intercede with her
maternal intercession, so that the Holy Spirit will enlighten the minds of the
cardinal-electors and help them agree on the pope that our time needs.”
https://www.pillarcatholic.com/p/dean-to-cardinals-pray-for-new-pope
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