At 55, Cardinal Luis Tagle of
Manila, Philippines, is one of the youngest and newest members of the
College of Cardinals, but he is also one of the cardinals most
frequently mentioned as a possible pope.
His youthful energy, his pastoral experience, his theological training
and his communications skills impressed cardinals and bishops from
around the world even before Pope Benedict XVI inducted him into the
College of Cardinals last November.
In 1997, Blessed John Paul II named him a member of the International
Theological Commission, an advisory body to the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, which was then headed by Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict.
Cardinal Tagle's speeches at the 2005, 2008 and 2012 synods of bishops
drew attention, as did his presentation in February 2012 at a
Vatican-sponsored conference on handling the clerical sexual abuse
crisis, particularly in countries and regions where very few accusations
have become public.
At the conference, he said the church in Asia cannot wait for a crisis
to erupt before it begins to address the scandal of abuse and put into
place measures to ensure that victims come first in the church's
concern.
"We do not need to wait for a bomb to explode. Preventing it from exploding is the best response," he said.
The cardinal led discussions about how Asian bishops should prepare
their child protection policies, particularly given cultural customs and
behaviors that could make it difficult to define inappropriate touching
and that work to keep abuse secret.
In his speech to the world Synod of Bishops on the new evangelization in
October, then-Archbishop Tagle focused on the humility that must mark
the church's interaction with the world, a theme that recurs in his
writings and homilies.
Being humble means recognizing when the church does not have all the
answers, and therefore being willing to remain silent, he told the
synod, adding that "a church at home with silence will make the
voiceless believe they are not alone."
In his homily during the Mass for his installation as archbishop of Manila in 2011, he promised to remain humble.
"I tell myself as though it were the Lord telling me, 'Chito, do not
think you have become great because of your new position. Be great
rather in being a beloved and loving disciple of the Lord,'" he said,
referring to himself by his nickname.
He also told Catholics the church must trust Jesus like the disciples did.
"We know that the Lord guards his church," he said. "He keeps watch with
us on those long nights of confusion and helplessness in mission."
"When, in spite of our good intentions and efforts there are still
multitudes of hungry people we cannot feed, homeless people we cannot
shelter, battered women and children we cannot protect, cases of
corruption and injustice that we cannot remedy," he said, "the long
night of the disciples in the middle of the sea continues in us." But
the experience makes the church "grow in compassion toward our neighbors
whose lives seem to be a never-ending dark night."
In December, after both the Philippine House and Senate passed versions
of a Reproductive Health Bill that the nation's bishops opposed because
it would fund contraceptives for the poor, Cardinal Tagle said the
legislature's action was "unfortunate and tragic. But we do not take it
as a defeat of truth -- for truth shall prevail, especially the truth
about human life, marriage and the family."
In response, he said, the Manila Archdiocese would " work harder to
promote the sanctity of human life and of the human person," including
by educating youth in Catholic values, offering concrete assistance to
the poor and working to preserve the true meaning of marriage.
In an interview filmed last summer with Canada's Salt and Light TV,
then-Archbishop Tagle was asked if he thought there ever would be a pope
from Asia.
"I don't know," he said, "maybe we should ask the Holy Spirit."
"It's not so much the nationality, but it's the person" that counts, he
said. The next pope could come "from any part of the world, but if this
person embodies for the church at this particular time the grace that
the Lord wants the church to experience in its supreme pastor, then we
will welcome anyone."
Born June 21, 1957, in Manila, he studied at San Jose Seminary and
Ateneo de Manila University, earning degrees in philosophy and theology.
He earned his doctorate in sacred theology from The Catholic University
of America, Washington, with a thesis on episcopal collegiality in the
doctrine and practice of Pope Paul VI.
He was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Imus Feb. 27, 1982, and
served in various parishes and as spiritual director of the Imus
seminary before becoming rector. He also taught philosophy and theology
at the Divine Word Seminary and San Carlos Seminary.
In the mid-1990s, he was part of the editorial committee working on a
history of the Second Vatican Council for the Institute for Religious
Studies in Bologna, Italy. The history has been described in some
quarters as being too progressive and as presenting Vatican II as a
"rupture" with church tradition rather than a reform in continuity with
tradition.
Blessed John Paul named him bishop of Imus in 2001. He has served as
president of the Philippine bishops' doctrinal committee and as
president of the office for theological questions of the Federation of
Asian Bishops' Conferences.
Since 2008, he has appeared on a weekly television program, "The Word
Exposed," in which he offers reflections on the Sunday Mass readings.