Thursday, February 23, 2006

What does a cardinal do?



The cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church have two key jobs, advising the current pope and electing a new pope.

The cardinals as a body offer their advice to the pope in two ways:

-- Through their membership in Vatican congregations or other departments of the Roman Curia, the church's central administrative offices.

-- Through their membership in the College of Cardinals, which the pope can convoke to discuss substantive questions facing the church.

Cardinals who are resident in Rome meet more frequently to discuss the major decisions the pope is facing.

The College of Cardinals has three ranks:

-- Cardinal bishops, a group that includes only six Latin-rite cardinals, one of whom is elected dean of the College of Cardinals. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the current Pope Benedict XVI, was the dean at the time of his election. He was succeeded by Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Vatican secretary of state.

-- Cardinal priests, most of whom are diocesan bishops, although some senior curial officials also hold the rank.

-- Cardinal deacons, most of whom are curial officials.

Cardinals wear a distinctive orange-tinged red cassock and biretta in solemn ceremonies. During ordinary liturgical rites they wear a red skullcap.

Pope Paul VI decreed that the College of Cardinals would have a maximum of 120 active members. Since 1970, those over 80 have not been counted as active.

Although the retired cardinals are not eligible to vote in a conclave to elect a new pope, they still are considered advisers to the pope, and they are invited to participate in the meetings of the College of Cardinals in preparation for a conclave.

From Catholic News Service.

2 comments:

p8 said...

Some cardinal trivia: Every cardinal, no matter where he resides, has a church in Rome of which he is titular head. Part of the consistory process involves him "taking possession" of that church. When he visits Rome (if not there already), he will say Mass there and use it as a kind of headquarters.

The reason for this: The Bishop of Rome (the Supreme Pontiff) was originally chosen by the parish priests of the Diocese of Rome. As the Church expanded, this became less desirable and part of the role of cardinals became choosing the pope. Giving the cardinals titular churches in Rome allowed for the Bishop of Rome to still be chosen by his parish priests symbolically, if not literally.

Unknown said...

Awesome! Thanks for the trivia Frank!