Pope Francis announced plans to create five new cardinals from five different countries at a special ceremony on June 28. The elevation of the five clergymen came as a surprise announcement.
Advertisement
The new cardinals - from El Salvador, Laos, Mali, Spain and Sweden - will form part of the elite group within the church that is charged with electing the pope.
"On Wednesday, June 28, I will hold a consistory to appoint five new cardinals. Their provenance from different parts of the world expresses the spread of Catholicism across the globe," Francis told crowds in St Peter's Square Sunday.
The new cardinals were named as 73-year-old Archbishop Jean Sevo from Mali, 71-year-old Archbishop Juan Jose Omella from Spain, 67-year-old Bishop Anders Arborelius from Sweden, 73-year-old Vicar Apostolic Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanekhoun from Laos, and 74-year-old Auxiliary Archbishop Gregorio Rosa Chavez from El Salvador.
Senior position in the church
Known as the "princes" of the Catholic Church, the main purpose of cardinals is to elect popes or to be elected pope.
The five appointees were all born in the 1940s, fulfilling a key age requirement to qualify for voting for the next pontiff. Cardinals over the age of 80 are not able to take part in the conclaves that elect new popes. Francis had already named 17 new cardinals last year, in a bid to bring more diversity to the most senior ranks of the church.
Everything you probably didn't know about former Pope Benedict XVI as he turns 90
He was regarded as aloof and conservative - as a "transitional pope." Indeed, his eight-year papacy, which ended with his resignation, was relatively short. Here are little known sides of the German pope.
Image: Reuters
Surprisingly warm-hearted
Joseph Ratzinger was often described as conservative, aloof and shy. So how could the modest theologian ever conquer the hearts of Catholics around the world and lead the Church? After his appointment, the professor continued to prefer quiet study to the media hoopla. But by the time he addressed the crowd at World Youth Day in Cologne in 2005, he had learned how to inspire the masses.
Image: Reuters
Double holiness
There had never been two popes in a photo. And not since 1415 had a pope resigned. In 2013, Benedict XVI announced that he was not going to remain in office until his last breath. It was a disputed decision. His successor, however, said it was a courageous step. Pope Francis I appreciates his colleague as an "outstanding theologian" and a "man who really believes."
Image: Reuters/Handout/Osservatore Romano
A reticent media star
Benedict XVI's predecessor, John Paul II, held the papacy for 26 years. There was scarcely a country whose soil he had not kissed. But although the German pope had a very different nature, he soon traveled to 24 countries - and made a surprisingly good impression. In Latin America, he even inspired Fidel Castro and brother Raul - Good Friday has since been a public holiday in socialist Cuba.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Guzman
Heavenly music
"As soon as the first notes resounded from Mozart's 'Coronation Mass,' the heavens practically opened and you experienced, very deeply, the Lord's presence," said an enthused Benedict XVI, a great lover of classical music and himself a passionate pianist. Mozart remains his favorite composer. "Mozart is beautiful as God's creation is beautiful."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/O. Romano
Blessed shoes
Red shoes have long been part of the pope's official attire, a tradition stretching back to the Roman Empire. The red is a reminder of Christ's blood on the cross. Like his predecessor John Paul II, Benedict XVI's footwear was handmade by an Italian shoemaker. He also ordered a pair red of red hiking boots.
Image: Photoshot/picture-alliance
A godly brew
The pope might himself have drunk a small beer at the most. However, after he was elected to the papacy, Benedict XVI's Bavarian origins inspired an ingenuous brewery to serve up the first papal beer.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Gebert
Brotherly love
The brothers Josef and Georg Ratzinger were both ordained into the priesthood in 1951. Josef became a theology professor, Georg the director of the Regensburg Cathedral Choir. Despite the former's papal office, the intimate relationship between the brothers remained. They are said to have phoned each other at least once a week - and now also go on holiday together.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Vatican Pool
Bestselling author
There is hardly a job that is more demanding than the highest office in the Catholic church: addressing audiences, a permanent media presence, traveling abroad. During the little free time, one might suspect the pontiff rests and relaxes. Not so for Benedict XVI. In his spare moments, the pope wrote a theological trilogy about Jesus that ended up on worldwide bestseller lists.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Haid
Favorite saint
It was not like him to prefer a particular saint. In his sermons, however, a few more frequently appear, such as St. Augustine, before whose remains he once prayed. Speaking to a general audience, Benedict XVI said, "St Augustine was a man who never lived superficially; his thirst - his restless and constant thirst - for the truth is one of the basic characteristics of his existence."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Rellandini
'Grazie Buonaotte!'
"Thank you and good night": these were Benedict XVI's last official words on February 28, 2013. The day before, he and thousands of believers took part in large ceremonies. There were tears, calls of Pope "Benedetto," and the waving of flags from all over the world. Now "Papa emeritus" lives in the Vatican monastery, Mater Ecclesiae, fulfilling his wish to continue to serve God in constant prayer.