USA TODAY
Pope Benedict XVI began Christmas Eve ceremonies by lighting the Christmas candle, symbolizing the light of Christ, in the window of his Vatican apartment on Monday, Dec. 24, 2012.
(USA TODAY) -- Roman Catholic Church law requires cardinals, the pope's chief
advisers, to elect his successor. There are 208 cardinals from 68
nations but only those under age 80 are eligible to vote.
How many
cardinals enter the Sistine Chapel to choose the next pope depends on
how quickly the conclave is called. Currently 118 are eligible but by
the time of the pope's resignation, Feb. 28, Cardinal Lubomyr Husar of
the Ukrainian Catholic Church will have turned 80. Crossing the line
very quickly after that are Cardinal Walter Kasper of Germany, whose
80th birthday is March 5, and Cardinal Severino Poleto of Italy, whose
birthday is March 18.
Of the current 118 electors, most (67) were named by Benedict XVI and the rest (51) by Pope John Paul II.
Although
the USA has only 6% of the 1.2 billion global Catholic population, it
has 19 cardinals including 11 electors, about 10% of the total electors.
INTERACTIVE: Pope Benedict XVI's papacy
Electors by region:
Europe, 62
North America, 17
South America, 13
Africa, 11
Asia, 11
Central America, 3
Oceania, 1
Countries with the most cardinal-electors:
Italy: 28
United States: 11
Germany: 6
Brazil, India, Spain: 5 each
France, Poland: 4 each
U.S. electors (year named)
Raymond Burke, (2010) archbishop emeritus of St. Louis, now head of the Vatican's high court, the Apostolic Signatura
Daniel DiNardo, (2007) archbishop of Galveston-Houston
Timothy Dolan, (2012) archbishop of New York, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
Francis George, (1998) archbishop of Chicago
James Harvey, (2012) of Milwaukee, former head of the papal household and now archpriest of a major basilica in Rome
William
Levada, (2006) archbishop emeritus of San Francisco, retired after
heading the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Roger Mahony, (1991) archbishop emeritus of Los Angeles
Edwin O'Brien, (2012) archbishop of Baltimore
Sean O'Malley, (2006) archbishop of Boston
Justin Rigali, (2003) archbishop emeritus of Philadelphia
Donald Wuerl, (2010) archbishop of Washington, D.C.
U.S. cardinals too old to vote:
William Baum, Major Penitentiary emeritus
Edward Egan, archbishop emeritus of New York
William Keeler, archbishop emeritus of Baltimore
Bernard Law, archbishop emeritus of Boston
Theodore McCarrick, archbishop emeritus of Washington
Adam Maida, archbishop emeritus of Detroit
James Stafford, Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary
Edmund Szoka, governor emeritus of the Vatican City State
SOURCE:The Catholic Almanac
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