The recent papal interregnum and conclave underscored the importance of re-forming, and reforming, the College of Cardinals.
As configured on Feb. 28, 2013 (when Benedict XVI’s abdication took
effect), the College was a somewhat strange electorate, albeit one that
produced a striking result. Almost 20 percent of its members were
retired.
Only eight cardinal-electors were under 65 (and half of the
youngsters were Americans — Cardinals Burke, DiNardo, Dolan and Harvey).
Neither the Dean nor Vice-Dean of the College was eligible to vote, the
Dean being 85 and the Vice-Dean being 90; yet the 85-year-old Dean
presided over the daily General Congregations of cardinals that assessed
the state of the world Church before the conclave was enclosed.
There were other curiosities.
India had more cardinal-electors than
France (5-4) or Great Britain (5-nil, as they’d say in the Barclays
Premier League).
Cardinal Lubomyr Husar, emeritus major-archbishop of
the largest of the Eastern Catholic Churches, the Ukrainian Greek
Catholic Church, missed the conclave by two days, having turned 80 on
Feb. 26; the retired president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity, Walter Kasper, got in under the wire, for he turned 85
days after Benedict’s abdication took effect.
And while no one imagines that the College of Cardinals should
“represent” the world Church the way the U.S. House of Representatives
“represents” the population of the United States, it did seem odd that
Latin America, where over half the world’s Catholics live, sent 19
cardinal-electors into the Sistine Chapel, while Italy, where Catholic
practice is not exactly robust these days among 4 percent of the global
Catholic population, had 28 electors.
What to do about these anomalies? Some practical suggestions, several
drawn from my new book, “Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the
21st-Century Church” (Basic Books):
1) Eliminate “automatic” red hats for archdioceses where the practice
of the faith is moribund. If 7 percent of the local Catholic population
is attending Mass on Sunday, as is sadly the case in some ancient
European sees, why should the bishop or archbishop of that see be
guaranteed membership in the College of Cardinals? Let the bishops in
these dead zones show that they can re-evangelize Catholic wastelands;
then return the red hat to those locales.
2) Amend the relevant apostolic constitution so that most of the
“pontifical councils” in the Roman Curia become in-house research
institutes led, not by cardinals, but by qualified priests, religious or
laity.
3) Change the custom by which the heads of various Vatican
administrative offices — the Government of Vatican City State, the
Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, the Prefecture for
the Economic Affairs of the Holy See — are automatically cardinals: a
reform that would also speak to Pope Francis’s strictures against
clerical careerism.
4) Use the “slots” in the papal electorate made possible by these
reforms to reorganize the College geographically and demographically.
I would also consider expanding the College to a maximum of 144
cardinal-electors (a nice biblical number: 12 Tribes x 12 Apostles),
while changing the conclave rules so that all cardinals lose their vote
on retirement from daily diocesan or curial service, not when they turn
80.
There is wisdom in age; but an electorate in which almost one in
five voters is a pensioner is not a well-designed electorate.
Neither the Dean nor the Vice-Dean of the College should be a
cardinal-without-a-vote; it makes little sense for the man who presides
over the cardinals’ meetings during a papal interregnum (in which all
cardinals participate, irrespective of age), or the man who would fill
that leadership role in an emergency, to be someone who will not have
the responsibility of casting a ballot.
And since the Church cannot
count on humility to impel the Dean and Vice-Dean to retire when each
loses his vote, the interregnum rules should be changed.
Finally, the cardinal-electors should meet regularly — perhaps once
every 18 months, for a global review of the New Evangelization — so that
they can get to know each other better, and thus be a more
well-informed electorate.