The Most Rev Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster and leader of
Catholics in England and Wales, said “much” had been made of who will be
present at the conclave, including complaints about the absence of a
representative from Britain.
But he said all Catholics could
contribute by praying for the cardinals taking part in the conclave at a
“crucial” moment in the history of the Roman Catholic Church.
“We
pray for each and every cardinal in his decision taking,” Archbishop
Nichols said in a letter distributed to Roman Catholic parishes and
schools.
“They are striving to be, first of all, instruments of
God, in some ways like pens in the hand of the Lord. We pray for them
that they will respond freely and sensitively to the hand that moves
them, the mind that directs them.”
Cardinal Cormac
Murphy-O’Connor, the retired Archbishop of Westminster, speaking in
Rome, said: “It’s not only the cardinals who will be praying, we should
pray with them.
“I hope all of you – especially those of you in
England and Wales – will be praying for the cardinal electors and the
Church at this time.”
Both clerics were speaking as 115 Roman
Catholic cardinals from around the world were due to be locked into the
Sistine Chapel from tomorrow afternoon for the start of the conclave,
with the first balloting due soon afterwards.
No clear
frontrunner has emerged to replace 85-year-old Pope Benedict XVI, who
stepped down at the end of last month, the first pope to do so for
nearly 600 years.
The conclave is thought to be facing a choice
as to whether to elect a pope from the developing world – either Africa,
Asia, or Latin America, or whether to revert to an Italian pope after
the reigns of John Paul II, a Pole, and German-born Benedict XVI.
Cardinals
frequently mentioned as “papabile” or possible candidates, include
Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Vatican’s Pontifical
Council for Culture, Cardinal Odilo Scherer, Archbishop of Sao Paolo in
Brazil, and Cardinal Angelo Scola, Archbishop of Milan.
Pre-conclave
meetings, or general congregations, held last week have exposed sharp
divisions amongst cardinals about the problems facing the Church,
according to reports, including the governance of the Roman Catholic
curia, the departments which control the 1.2 billion global Catholic
Church.
Britain has no representative in the conclave as Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor, at 80 years old, is ineligible to cast a vote.
Cardinal
Keith O’Brien, the former leader of Catholics in Scotland, will not be
attending the conclave after stepping down last month as Archbishop of
St Andrews and Edinburgh amid allegations of inappropriate behaviour
towards fellow priests.