USA TODAY
VATICAN CITY (USA TODAY) -- Pope Francis could have been excused for sleeping in
Thursday, a day after shocking the world with a series of pontiff
firsts: a Jesuit from Latin America who chose a name honoring St.
Francis of Assisi.
But the newly elected leader of the world's 1.2
billion Catholics had a quick dinner with his fellow 114
cardinal-electors Wednesday night in order to rise early Thursday and
pray for 30 minutes at Rome's Santa Maria Maggiore church. Outside, a
crowd of around 150 faithful cheered.
Vatican officials confirmed
Thursday that Pope Francis' official installation Mass will take place
Tuesday at St. Peter's Square.
At a Vatican press conference,
details also emerged about the new pope's humble approach to his new
position. After appearing on the balcony, Francis declined to use a
private car with the license plate SCV1 - Vatican City 1 - to return to
the cardinals' dormitory. "He said, 'I'll take the bus (that shuttled
the cardinals to the Sistine Chapel), since that's the way I came
here,'" said spokesman Rev. Thomas Rosica.
Pope Francis then
went to pay pick up his belongings and pay his bill at the clerical
hotel he stayed at before the conclave, "because he wanted to be sure to
give a positive example to his fellow cardinals," Rosica said.
"We'll
get used to a new way of doing things," said Rosica, referring to the
casual style with which the new pope buzzed around Rome, greeting
well-wishers at each stop. "The security forces are here to work with
the style of whoever is the new pope. Remember John Paul II, and how
many rules he broke doing things his way with his own style."
Later
Thursday, the pope will celebrate Mass inside the Sistine Chapel with
the 114 other cardinals who participated in the conclave.
Francis
will stay on for a few days at a VIP apartment in the same Casa Santa
Marta residence that hosted all the cardinals during the conclave. "It
features a number of rooms (as compared to the simple one he stayed in
as cardinal), which he will need for papal audiences," Rosica said.
Pope
Francis also will go to the official residence and take off the papal
seals on the doors - which prevented anyone from entering after Pope
Benedict XVI left the premises - so work can officially begin on
refurbishing it for the new pope.
Another significant item on the
pope's to-do list is a visit with Benedict, the first pope emeritus in
600 years, who has been staying at the Vatican's fabled summer retreat,
Castel Gandolfo, since his historic resignation last month.
Rosica said Francis will visit with the man he succeeded "some time
in the coming days," and not Thursday as had originally been suggested.
The two men did speak Wednesday night by phone after the election.
On
Wednesday, throngs jamming St. Peter's Square roared with joy as
Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, archbishop of Buenos Aires,
stepped onto the balcony as the new pope.
"Brothers and sisters,
good evening," he said to wild cheers. "You know that the work of the
conclave is to give a bishop to Rome. It seems as if my brother
cardinals went to find him from the end of the earth. Thank you for the
welcome."
The crowd grew silent as Francis, 76, recited the Lord's
Prayer and a Hail Mary. He asked the crowd to pray for him before he
blessed them.
"Let us pray for the whole world," he said.
Moments
later, the official Twitter account for the pope tweeted: "Habemus
Papam Franciscum" - We have Pope Francis. It was retweeted more than
55,000 times in less than two hours.
Hours later, the Vatican
updated the Holy See website with the first official portrait of the new
pontiff and the Latin phrase announcing his selection. Besides English
and Latin, the site is available in Spanish, Italian, French, Portuguese
and German.
Francis'
papacy is one of firsts: He is the first Jesuit, the first non-European
in modern times and first Latin American pope. He also is the first to
take the name Francis, for the saint devoted to the poor.
The
Vatican's lead spokesman, Rev. Federico Lombardi, who like Pope Francis
is a Jesuit, expressed surprise at Wednesday's choice.
"We're
(Jesuits) not used to seeking office like this, so I was stunned at what
happened yesterday as I saw my brother come out on the loggia," said
Lombardi. "It's a great calling, but a calling none of us aspired to.
It's a call of extreme service. The idea of a Jesuit priest is very
strange, I wasn't prepared psychologically. We are used to serving, not
being the ones in charge. But I see it as a special compliment."
Bergoglio
reportedly received the second-most votes after Joseph Ratzinger - Pope
Benedict XVI - in the 2005 papal election. Despite being Argentina's
top church official, Bergoglio never lived in the ornate church mansion
in Buenos Aires, preferring a simple bed in a downtown room heated by a
small stove. For years, he took public transportation around the city
and cooked his own meals.
It's been widely reported that he had a lung removed as a teen,
but Vatican spokesman Rosica said Pope Francis "did not have a lung
removed," but had an operation as a young man due to an infection.
The cardinals took five ballots over two days to reach their decision by the required two-thirds majority. The
first vote took place late Tuesday. Two morning votes Wednesday brought
similar results - black smoke from the Sistine Chapel's chimney that
meant no decision on a new pope had been reached. Late Wednesday, the
smoke was finally white and Vatican bells pealed.
President Obama offered "warm wishes" to the new pope.
"As a
champion of the poor and the most vulnerable among us, he carries forth
the message of love and compassion that has inspired the world for more
than two thousand years - that in each other we see the face of God,"
Obama said in a statement.
James O'Rourke, a management professor
at the University of Notre Dame, a Roman Catholic school in South Bend,
Ind., said Francis will need a strategic vision, team-building and
financial skills and what he calls "charismatic empathy."
Many
North American Catholics want a greater role for women in the church,
O'Rourke said, while many Europeans oppose such a move. Catholics in
Latin America want more vibrant parishes and the fast-growing Catholic
population in Africa needs more priests, he said.
Fittingly,
Bergoglio's new namesake, St. Francis, is famous for his vision of a
talking crucifix telling him, "Francis, rebuild my church."