Inside, a “college” of 47 people, including the five other Welsh diocesan bishops, will nominate and vote on candidates for the new Bishop of St Asaph for up to three days.
Once a decision is made, the Archbishop of Wales, Dr Barry Morgan, will unlock and open the west door of the Cathedral and announce the name of the Bishop-Elect from the doorstep.
The election follows the retirement of the Rt Rev John Davies in December, who served as Bishop of the diocese from 1999.
The new bishop will be the 76th Bishop of St Asaph, an area covering the north-east corner of Wales - the counties of Conwy and Flintshire, Wrexham county borough, the eastern part of Merioneth in Gwynedd and part of northern Powys.
The Electoral College is made up of representatives from all six Welsh dioceses.
The “home” diocese is represented by six lay people and six clergy, and the other five dioceses by three lay people and three clergy each, plus the five remaining Bishops.
Its discussions are confidential. Candidates for election are nominated at the meeting, discussed and voted on by ballot.
Any candidate receiving two-thirds of the votes of those present is declared Bishop-Elect.
Otherwise, the College returns to the nomination stage and the cycle starts afresh.
The College may meet for up to three consecutive days in order to reach a decision; if it is unable to do so within this deadline the decision passes to the Bench of Bishops.
Once a bishop is elected, he will have up to 28 days to accept the position.
The meeting began with a celebration of the Holy Eucharist at the Cathedral. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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(Source: CT)