Pope Benedict XVI, sitting on the throne at center right, attends a meeting of Vatican cardinals, at the Vatican on Feb. 11, 2013.
USA TODAY
(USA TODAY) -- Three expert Vatican watchers list some of their leading papabile - Italian for cardinals who might be elected as the next pope. In alphabetical order:
Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco,
Archbishop of Genoa, made headlines last year for a ripping attack on
then-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and other Italian leaders as
unethical role models.
He's "fairly savvy about both secular politics and the media," writes National Catholic Reporter Vatican specialist John Allen.
Church
historian Matthew Bunson, calls Bagnasco, 69, former professor of
metaphysics and contemporary atheism "an intellectual heavyweight" who
speaks multiple languages, and takes strong stands on doctrine.
But
the biggest boost may come from Bagnasco's role as two-time president
of the Italian bishops conference. Italians hold about a fourth of the
seats in the College of Cardinals that will choose the next pope.
INTERACTIVE: Pope Benedict XVI's papacy
Cardinal Marc Ouellet,
the Canadian-born former Archbishop of Quebec, now heads the powerful
Congregation of Bishops, a "great spot for making friends and
influencing people," by choosing the global leadership of the church,
says Allen. He describes Ouellet, 68, as a veteran in dealing with the
secularized West, someone smart and intellectual with "a cosmopolitan
résumé," says Allen.
Ouellet is close to Benedict in theological
thinking and someone who could bring a strong hand to the curia (the
Vatican bureaucracy).
"The electors could get a traditional pick
and still say, 'Hey, we're innovators. We went to North America!' He's
the eye-popping choice," says David Gibson, author of several books on
the Catholic Church including a biography of Pope Benedict XVI.
Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, elevated to cardinal in 2010 and
head of the Pontifical Council for Culture, is so smart, says Allen, "if
you were picking a quiz bowl team in the College of Cardinals, most
people would start with Ravasi."
Allen calls him "a master
communicator who could take the world by storm. He can ignite rich,
solid commitment to Catholic orthodoxy without ever coming off as a
scold."
The Italian-born biblical scholar has the advantage of
being based in Rome. Cardinals in the curia, the church's governing
bureaucracy, get to meet many of the electors that cardinals in
far-flung posts scarcely know.
Still, Allen sees hurdles for
Ravasi, who, at age 69 has never been a diocesan bishop. "Some would
wonder if there were substance beneath the charm. He spends a lot more
time talking to the outside world than within the church. Some see him
as trying too hard. That's off-putting."
Cardinal Leonardo Sandri,
70, the head of the Vatican's office for the Eastern Catholics and a
longtime Vatican diplomat, would be the first pope from South America,
the center of global Catholicism today, if he were chosen.
"He's
prayerful, well-liked around the world and very much aware, because of
his diplomatic experience, of the global dimensions of the Church," says
church historian Matthew Bunson.
He may be best known in his role
as No. 2 in the Vatican Secretary of State's office. Sandri was the
person who read the public announcement that Pope John Paul II had died
in April 2005.
However, Sandri's lifelong background in the church bureaucracy and his reserved demeanor may work against him, says Bunson.
Cardinal Angelo Scola,
Archbishop of Milan, leads Bunson's list as "an Italian with the
intellectual chops for the job" who would bring Benedict's enthusiasm
for "recapturing Catholic excitement in Europe."
Benedict moved
him from another high-profile post, Venice, in July 2011, thereby giving
this Vatican insider a perch at Europe's largest diocese. Milan and
Venice together have produced five popes in the last 100 years.
A
top scholar on Islam and Christian-Muslim dialog, Scola, 70, is "well
positioned for dealing with the challenges of secularism and materialism
in the West," says Bunson.
Scola once said: "Our job now has to
be to help people to remember God. People suffer from a kind of amnesia
about God and we have to remind them to reawaken God in their hearts and
in their minds."
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