They troop each day into a hall just a few minutes’ walk from St.
Peter’s Square, passing through a doorway flanked by Swiss Guards in
black berets and their distinctive red, yellow, and blue striped
uniforms.
Around 150 cardinals from around the world are engaged in intensive
talks this week about who they will elect as the successor to Pope
Emeritus Benedict XVI, who resigned last week and is now living out his
retirement in a 16th-century castle on a hill outside Rome.
The
cardinals, wearing red sashes and black cassocks, are sworn to secrecy
about the details of their discussions, most notably about who they
consider papabile or the most likely papal contenders.
At
their first session on Monday, each of them placed his hands on the
Bible and pledged “rigorous secrecy” over the proceedings " on pain of
excommunication. But in the past few days they have been at liberty to
discuss the broader problems facing the Roman Catholic Church, and the sort of man who will be needed to steer it out of the troubled waters of the last few years.
For a start, many cardinals would like to see a relatively young man
appointed pope " Benedict was the ripe old age of 78 when he was chosen
as the successor to John Paul II in 2005.
Eight
years later, he said he no longer had the mental or physical strength
to continue, becoming the first pontiff in nearly 600 years to abdicate.
Cardinal George Pell, 71, the Archbishop of Sydney, said age would be a “significant factor” when cardinals gather, probably next week, in the Sistine Chapel for the conclave " the secret process by which the new pope will be elected.
“I
think it’s unlikely that we will choose somebody who’s 77 or 78. I
think it’s also unlikely that we will choose somebody who is too young,
however you define that, because I think there’s virtue in the papacy
changing every 10, 15, or 20 years,” he told La Stampa newspaper this week.
Also wanted: polyglot administrator
The new pontiff would need to be an accomplished linguist and strategist with a proven capacity to administer.