Recalling that Christ's mission
transcends "all ethnic, national and religious particularities," Pope
Benedict XVI created six new cardinals from four different continents,
representing the Latin rite of the Catholic Church as well as two
Eastern Catholic Churches.
The churchmen who joined the College of Cardinals Nov. 24 were U.S.
Archbishop James M. Harvey, 63, former prefect of the papal household;
Lebanon's Maronite Patriarch Bechara Rai, 72; Indian Archbishop Baselio
Cleemis Thottunkal, 53, head of the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church;
Nigerian Archbishop John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan , 68, of Abuja; Colombian
Archbishop Ruben Salazar Gomez, 70, of Bogota; and Philippine Archbishop
Luis Tagle, 55, of Manila.
"I want to highlight in particular the fact that the church is the
church of all peoples, so she speaks in the various cultures of the
different continents," the pope said during the hour-long service in St.
Peter's Basilica. "Amid the polyphony of the various voices, she raises
a single harmonious song to the living God."
The six new cardinals later stepped up to the pope, who was seated
before the basilica's main altar, to receive symbols of their office: a
ring, the "zucchetto" skull cap and the three-cornered hat called a
biretta. The headwear was colored scarlet, like the cardinals' robes, to
symbolize the blood they risk shedding in service to the church.
The new Eastern Catholic cardinals received modified versions of the
biretta, consistent with the distinctive clerical garb of their
churches. Cardinal Rai received the turban-like Maronite tabieh, and
Cardinal Cleemis a head covering in a shape reminiscent of an onion
dome.
Pope Benedict also assigned each of the new cardinals a "titular church"
in Rome, making them full members of the Rome clergy and closer
collaborators of the pope in governing the universal church.
Cardinal Harvey's titular church is the Church of Saint Pius V a Villa
Carpegna, a post-war church about a mile southwest of Vatican City. The
pope has also named Cardinal Harvey to serve as archpriest of the
Basilica of St. Paul's Outside the Walls, one of Rome's four major papal
basilicas.
The Nov. 24 ceremony was a much quieter affair than the last consistory
in February, when Pope Benedict created 22 cardinals, including three
from the United States and Canada.
This time, there was no overflow
crowd in St. Peter's Square, and only 99 of the 211 members of the
College of Cardinals were in attendance.
Yet the congregation was spirited, with pilgrims applauding
enthusiastically as the new cardinals' names were called. Cardinal Tagle
seemed especially moved as he knelt before the pope, and afterwards was
seen wiping a tear from his eye.
At the end of the ceremony, the College of Cardinals had 211 members,
120 of whom were under the age of 80 and thus eligible to vote in a
conclave to elect a new pope.
The new consistory raises the percentage of Asian electors from 7
percent to 9 percent. Catholics in Asia account for just over 10 percent
of the worldwide Catholic population.
At the same time, the percentage of European electors dropped slightly,
to just over 51 percent.
But the continent remains statistically
overrepresented, since the Vatican reports that fewer than 24 percent of
the world's Catholics live in Europe.