As the cardinals of the Roman Catholic church meet to determine who
will be the next pope, they must realize that "it is a time of thirst"
for the church, Cardinal Christoph Schönborn said Tuesday.
Schönborn spoke to NCR after a memorial service for
Hungarian martyr Maria Restituta at a Roman parish that is a shrine to
20th-century martyrs, such as El Salvador Bishop Oscar Romero.
Asked
what issues the conclave faces, Schönborn replied, "This is the kind of
events that shows what is really important."
Schönborn's comments came as the church's cardinals are meeting in
general congregations this week in preparation for the conclave.
Some see Schönborn, a 68-year-old member of the Dominican order known
for both for his quick response to sexual abuse issues and personnel
clashes with his archdiocesan staff, as a possible moderate fall-back
candidate should the cardinals find themselves deadlocked.
He studied under then-Fr. Joseph Ratzinger in Regensburg, Germany, in
the 1970s but is also seen as a gregarious man, able to greet people
openly.
At the prayer ceremony Tuesday, he made himself available to faithful
who wished to greet him and insisted during the ceremony that an
American woman who briefly knew Restituta address the congregation about
her experience. He kissed the woman on the cheek when she was finished
speaking.
The Nazis martyred Restituta, a Catholic sister and nurse at an
Austrian hospital during World War II, when she refused to take down
crucifixes from her hospital's walls.
The ceremony to recognize the beatified sister took place at the
ornate Roman Basilica of St. Bartholomew on the Island, which was
dedicated by Pope John Paul II in 2000 to the martyrs of the 20th and
21st centuries and contains relics of items that belonged to dozens of
them, including Romero, the Austrian layman Franz Jägerstätter and the
Italian priest Andrea Santoro, killed in Turkey in 2006.
Like many of Rome's churches, St. Bartholomew's is a cardinal parish,
meaning it is formally entrusted to the care of one the church's
cardinals. Chicago Cardinal Francis George is its cardinal priest.
Cardinal Miloslav Vlk, a former archbishop of Prague who attended the
event Tuesday with the city's current archbishop, Cardinal Dominik
Duka, said the ceremony gave "symbolic proof of the suffering" of
martyrs during World War II.
Asked to compare the event to the cardinals' continued deliberations
over the next pope, Vlk said Restituta's witness "confirms the role of
the church."
"The church has to be brave enough to evangelize in every situation,"
said Vlk, who served as Prague's archbishop from 1991 to 2010. Ordained
in 1968, the communist state revoked his authorization to work as a
priest in 1978. He spent the next decade as a window-cleaner in Prague.
The Community of Sant'Egidio, an intentional Catholic community that claims about 50,000 members, hosted the prayer ceremony.