Posted on 03/10/2013 3:01:07 PM PDT by NYer
“I’m anxious to get started. There was a sense of peace once we decided to start the conclave on Tuesday. … God willing, I’ll be home before Palm Sunday,” he said as he went into his titular parish on March 10.
The action in Rome shifted today from the Vatican to the various churches throughout the city that the cardinals received when they were elevated. Many of the cardinals celebrated Mass at these parishes to spend time with the people of God before they enter into the conclave on Tuesday afternoon.
CNA had personnel at several of the churches and the amount of buzz surrounding the different potential Popes was observable by the size of the media pack that held vigil at their Masses.
At Our Lady of Guadalupe parish, Cardinal Dolan made his way into the packed church, greeting members of the press and the congregation with his trademark charm.
After greeting the pastor, his brother priests and the faithful, Cardinal Dolan began his homily by saying, “Listen, this is our secret, after Saint Patrick’s cathedral in New York City, this is my favorite church,” which was met with a round of applause.
He also urged the parishioners to pray for “we cardinals rely on the prayers of all the People of God.”
At Our Lady of Victory parish in the heart of Rome, Cardinal Séan P. O’Malley was also greeted by a large media presence, and interestingly, there were many Italian outlets on site.
Cardinal O’Malley delivered his homily in Italian and then offered some brief remarks in English. He called upon the Holy Spirit to descend on the cardinals as they choose a new Pope.
The cardinals will hold one final general meeting on Monday morning, giving the last people on the list a chance to speak. Later that evening, the sound technicians who will assist the conclave will take their oath of secrecy.
On Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. all of the cardinals will gather in St. Peter’s Basilica to celebrate Mass for the Election of a New Pope.
At around 5:00 p.m. the cardinals will enter into the conclave and take another oath of secrecy that is specific to that process.
The first vote for the successor to Benedict XVI will take place that evening and the first chance to see smoke will be around 7:00 p.m.
My pastor’s Laetare Sunday vestments are hot-pinker than Cdl. Dolan’s!
I'll bet his birth certificate doesn't say that.
Not pink, but rose.....supposedly. But many say pink.
Laetare Sunday — Lent
Gaudete Sunday — Advent
The rose chausible is worn only two times during the entire year.
Oh, I know it’s “rose,” but a pink by any other name ...
I think our retired Fr. Hawker took his shrieking-fuschia set back to Boston with him, because the current shade is subdued by comparison.
Get a life. Please go to a Protestant or Baptist thread. This is HIS NAME NOW....deal with it.
I have a feeling that Benedict will pass very soon.
I just learned today that Pope John Paul II died on Divine Mercy Sunday. Wow!
Also Elen’s birthday, and she took John Paul for her Confirmation name. Mine is Helena, which was Sister Faustina’s birth name, just to keep it all thematic.
So it's like the witness protection program?
I just learned today that Pope John Paul II died on Divine Mercy Sunday. Wow!Here's some more info:
Pope Dies on Vigil of Divine Mercy Sunday
Feast Establish by John Paul II
VATICAN CITY, APRIL 2, 2005 (Zenit.org).- John Paul II's final days coincided with the Church's preparation to celebrate the feast he described as flowing from Christ's "most profound mercy," and which he himself established. John Paul II designated the second Sunday of Easter to be Divine Mercy Sunday in a surprise announcement at the canonization of Sister Faustina Kowalska (1905-1938). The Polish nun, beatified in 1993, and canonized in 2000, on the second Sunday of Easter, began the spiritual movement of Divine Mercy.
The feast, said the Holy Father, "is a perpetual invitation to the Christian world to address, with trust in divine benevolence, the difficulties and trials that await the human race in the coming years."
The essence of St. Faustina's mission was to proclaim God's mercy toward every human being. Her spiritual legacy to the Church is devotion to Divine Mercy, inspired by a vision in which Jesus himself asked that a painting be made of his image with the invocation "Jesus, I trust in you" appearing below. She commissioned the painting in 1935.
Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, then Archbishop of Krakow, began Sister Faustina's process of beatification.
On Aug. 17, 2003, John Paul II entrusted the world to Divine Mercy when he dedicated the new shrine of Lagiewniki, a suburb of Krakow, located next to the convent where St. Faustina Kowalska lived and died. --http://www.ewtn.com/johnpaul2/_mourning/news/index2.asp
Chaput, Chaput, Chaput!!!
I'm with you. I like Chaput! (oops, didn't mean that to rhyme) Hopefully our new pope will make him a cardinal.
God willing, Ill be home before Palm Sunday...
Palm Sunday?! This is my first conclave as a Catholic. How many days of inaugural (wrong word, I'm sure) masses will there be for the new pope? And will there be anything done to tone it down (in a festive sense) in keeping with the lenten season?
I'm a lifelong Catholic and I happen to agree with humblegunner that its silly to use the title "Cardinal" between the person's first and last name, as if it was their middle name or something.
It makes no logical sense to put a title in the middle and it's not used for any other Catholic clergical titles, let alone secular titles. Nobody says "Thomas Reverend Smith", "Ed Deacon Jones", "Fulton Bishop J. Sheen", "John Pope Paul II", etc.
So I'm going to be consistent with ALL the other titles on the planet and say "Cardinal Timothy Dolan", not "Timothy Cardinal Dolan". The Catholic Church says it's perfectable acceptable to say Cardinal first.
Deal with it.
I find the “Firstname CARDINAL Lastname” thing kind of goofy, too, although I understand it has some history, like “George Gordon LORD Byron” and “Alfred LORD Tennyson.”
I’ve always figured one is safe calling them all “Sir,” just as with all the military officers, in various states of intoxication, who populated my early life.
I usually go with sir unless they have a bird or some stars on their collars. Then I have to think about their actual ranks and it’s more confusing and alarming.
Last time I met an admiral it was with my entire chain of command there breathing down my neck so that was nice. I managed to carry on a 3 or 4 minute conversation without looking like an idiot. Still quite proud of myself.
I’m proud of you, too. They’re all just like your brothers, under the eagles and brass ... only older.
I was getting that feeling too, after at first being glad for the guy that he could get a break from the strains.
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