The Papal election will be delayed for two days due to a scheduling conflict of three
members of its selection committee who are also Constituent Assembly
members.
Bishop Paul of Tanta, Judge Edward Ghaleb, and lawyer Monsef Suleiman
who are the church’s representatives in the Constituent Assembly, had
assembly commitments on Tuesday and Wednesday that prevented them from
joining the papal election committee.
The delay is not expected to
affect later stages of the process.
The Papal election committee, made of both clergy and laypeople,
traveled to the Monastery of Saint Bishoy in Wadi El Natroun, where the
late Pope Shenouda III is buried, to select the papal candidates that
will move on to the next stage.
During the two week retreat, the
committee will consider the various qualifications of the 17 nominees
and examine the appeals lodged against them.
Following the retreat, the
committee will announce between five and seven candidates that it deems
most qualified for the post of the 118th Pope of the Coptic Orthodox
Church of Alexandria.
In late November, roughly 2,500 Coptic voters from all over the world
will choose from the candidates nominated by the committee, narrowing
the field to three.
On 2 December, the church will hold a liturgy at St Mark’s Cathedral
in Abaseyya, in which a blindfolded child will randomly select one of
the three candidates, who will then be named pope.
A pending lawsuit against the Church is calling for the suspension of
papal elections, claiming the current voter list is not a fair
representation of the Coptic congregation, demanding that the list be
expanded to include more voters.
Lawyer Naguib Gabriel dismissed the
possibility that the case would result in concrete action, claiming that
a civil case would not have legitimate authority over internal canon
law.
The Church held a three day community-wide fast preceding the retreat
to the monastery, concluded by a service at the cathedral in which it
honoured the families of the Maspero massacre victims, almost one year
after the army responded to a predominantly Christian protest with brute
force.