Saturday, November 08, 2008

Now for a black pope

The election of a black Pope is "certainly possible", African-American Archbishop Wilton Gregory said, after describing US President elect Barack Obama's victory as a "great step forward for humanity".

"If Obama at the White House is like the first time man (stepped on) the moon, then it can certainly happen at the threshold of St Peter's," Atlanta Achbishop Gregory said in an interview published on Thursday in an Italian newspaper.

The election of a black man as successor to Pope Benedict is "certainly possible," Archbishop Gregory, who is the first African-American to serve as president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, told La Stampa.

"Through the wisdom of the cardinals guided by the Holy Spirit, this could happen at the next conclave," Gregory said, referring to the assembly of top prelates that elects popes.

Not wanting to seem to wish ill health for Benedict, he quickly added: "We all hope this will take place as far away in the future as possible."

Gregory pinpointed the efforts of several recent popes who, he said, gave the Roman Catholic Church and the Vatican hierarchy more of an international outlook.

Among these were Pope John XXIII (1958-1963), who paved the way for masses to be held in local languages, instead of Latin; Paul VI (1963-1978), the first modern era pontiff to undertake major journeys abroad; and the globetrotting John Paul II, the first non-Italian pontiff in over 400 years.

Gregory also gave credit to the German born Benedict, who before his 2005 election said that an election of an African as pontiff would be "a beautiful sign."

"For some time there's been a new mentality in the Church. It is no longer centred on the West but it is global, and this is expressed through its ecclesiastical mission," Archbishop Gregory said.
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(Source: CTHN)