http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1446336,00.html

http://tinyurl.com/5j4gb

Next pope is set to be another conservative 

Traditionalists close ranks to ensure their grip on church will endure 

Jamie Doward, religious affairs correspondent
Sunday March 27, 2005
The Observer 

It is a question being asked with ever greater urgency in the upper echelons of 
the Roman Catholic hierarchy: to what extent will Pope John Paul II's legacy to 
the church be a clone of himself? 

As the world watches the pain-racked pontiff's superhuman attempts to remain as 
spiritual head of more than a billion Christians, his most loyal lieutenants 
are closing ranks to ensure that his conservative philosophy continues to hold 
sway. A cabal of aides, some of whom have been with him since his earliest 
days, guard access to the Pope's apartment and disseminate the line that the 
pointiff is still very much in charge. A handful of spiritual allies fulfil his 
duties during Easter week and help stage-manage his brief appearances. 

The pontiff's inability to attend any of the Holy Week events has given them an 
added poignancy that has invited comparisons with the suffering of Christ. 
'It's obvious that the Pope is carrying a very heavy cross indeed, and he is 
giving a marvellous example of patience in the face of suffering,' said US 
Archbishop John Foley. 

But the Pope's suffering has prompted speculation over the direction in which 
his successor will take the church. As pressure mounts for a modernising Pope - 
prepared to brook discussion on female priests, celibacy and contraception - 
conservatives are battling to keep their authority. They want to preserve the 
centralised structure established by John Paul II. 

The conservatives know they have statistics on their side. The fact that 97 per 
cent of the 120 cardinals who will be eligible to vote for the pontiff's 
successor were appointed by John Paul II himself makes it almost inconceivable 
that a moderniser will become the next Pope. 

They were also reassured by the Pope's recent decision to entrust the German 
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, a hardline conservative, with composing this year's 
Good Friday meditation. Ratzinger is head of the Congregation for the Doctrine 
of the Faith, the church's chief think tank, which has dominated discussions on 
sexual morality and birth control, and prevented liberals from gaining ground. 

'Christ suffers in his own church,' Ratzinger wrote in the meditations, which 
were approved by John Paul II. Ratzinger used the meditations to describe the 
'falling of many Christians away from Christ into a godless secularism', which 
some have taken as a reference to the church's need to emphasise its 
conservative values in a modern age. 

Ratzinger, 78, is one of the few members of John Paul II's inner circle 
considered 'papabile' - a cardinal who could become the next Pope - but he is 
viewed as a long shot. 

Claims about who will succeed should be treated with caution. In 1978, the year 
John Paul II was elected, a book entitled Which Pope? came out, listing the 
favourites with no mention of John Paul II. 

Nevertheless, the smart money is going on the College of Cardinals appointing 
the first 'third-world Pope', chiefly as a response to shifting demographics 
within the church. Since John Paul II became Pope, the church in the northern 
hemisphere has lost followers while the south has gained. Today nearly 65 per 
cent of Catholics live in Africa, Asia and Latin America. 

With the college's inherent bias firmly stacked in favour of cardinals from the 
southern hemisphere, Vatican watchers believe the most likely candidate will be 
Cardinal Francis Arinze, 72, of Nigeria. He would be the first black African 
pontiff since Gelasius I (492-496). Arinze is said to take a hardline position 
on abortion and contraception and denounces homosexuality. Other third world 
favourites are Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez, 62, from Honduras, who teamed up with 
Bono to campaign against third world debt, and Cardinal Claudio Hummes of 
Brazil. 

However, some senior members of the hierarchy fear that, with Christianity's 
influence on the wane in the West, there is a powerful need for a European Pope 
to be appointed to arrest decline. 

One name mentioned is 71-year-old Cardinal Godfried Danneels of Brussels, but 
he is thought too liberal. Meanwhile, the more conservative members of the 
European camp admire 58-year-old Cardinal Christoph Schonborn of Vienna. 
Schonborn, though, suffers from his relative youth. John Paul II has served 
more than double the length of time of the average papacy, and the cardinals 
believe the next Pope should not be in the role for so long. The present Pope's 
longevity has meant he has been able to shore up his power base by surrounding 
himself with the like-minded. 

It has meant that, even when his health has been ravaged by Parkinson's and 
related breathing problems, the Pope's position has been unassailable, his 
invisible hold over the church, if anything, strengthened by his suffering. 

'What's important in my mind is to see that the church functions. Nothing has 
stopped,' said André Vingt-Trois, the Archbishop of Paris, emphasising that the 
Pope is still very much in charge. Indeed he is. Regardless of who succeeds 
him, long after John Paul II has died, his influence will linger.





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