Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, who just lately retired as Archbishop of Boston, will attend Pope Francis’s funeral at the Vatican however won’t vote for the following pope.
O’Malley, who turns 81 in June, misplaced his coveted voting rights as soon as he turned 80, an aide near O’Malley tells the Herald.
“He will not be in the Sistine Chapel to vote” with the opposite cardinals, the aide mentioned, however he can be amongst his fellow cardinals as discussions over a predecessor start.
Any baptized Roman Catholic male might be elected pope, and that features O’Malley and Boston’s present Archbishop Richard Henning, however it’s as much as the School of Cardinals to decide on a alternative for Pope Francis.
O’Malley has lengthy been revered within the Roman Catholic Church, and even talked about by church watchers as a potential candidate for pope previously. He additionally stays the president of the Pontifical Fee for the Safety of Minors.
However pope this time round?
Ray Flynn, the previous U.S. Ambassador to the Vatican and onetime mayor of Boston, advised the Herald Monday morning, “You never know what’s going to happen.”
Flynn mentioned the cardinals will collect within the Vatican the place most will see one another for the primary time. There at the moment are 252 cardinals within the Catholic Church, with 135 underneath 80 with voting rights.
“There’s a lot of change taking place in the church,” Flynn mentioned, including that younger parishioners are filling the pews. “It’s amazing to think that it’s not just older people. It’s good for the church. And that’s what matters. Francis brought people back to the faith. It’s about Jesus Christ and he’s going to show the way.”
Flynn, who known as Pope Francis a “friend,” cautioned that it’s “very hard to predict” what’s going to go on contained in the hallowed partitions of the Sistine Chapel.
Archbishop Henning mentioned in an announcement round daybreak that he was “deeply saddened by the news of the passing of Pope Francis.”
He added that Francis “challenged us to turn away from selfish impulses and towards communion with others and respect for God’s creation. … may he rest in peace.”
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