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How will the Pope’s Council choose the new pope after Pope Francis die

rule Pope Francis It’s over, the Catholic Church mourns His deathit is also looking to the future. Not long after Saturday funeral, Pope Conference Must be held Choosing his successor, the problem now turns to Which man – This will be a man, as it cannot be appointed as a woman in the Catholic Church – will appear and step onto the balcony of the Pope’s Thunder wine to greet the crowd in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.

Here is the look of the meeting process and step-by-step on the ceiling of Sistine Chapel in Vatican how to choose the next pope and plaster under Michelangelo’s iconic mural.

What exactly is the Pope’s conclusion?

The Pope Council is a close plan for cardinal voters (all under 80) to elect the next pope.

The exact numbers vary, but there are currently about 135 cardinal voters to be called in the Vaticans around the world to choose the successor of Pope Francis.

Among those eligible this time, the vast majority (108 of them) are Pope Francis During his 12 years of Pope. They come from 71 different countries; 10 from the United States.

The map shows the number of cardinal voters from different places who will vote at the Pope’s meeting of Pope Francis’ successor.

CBS News


When will the Pope Conference begin?

The Vatican has not yet announced the date of the commencement, but according to the church, it must be within 15 to 20 days of the death of the pope, in which case this will fall in the first or second week of May.

How does the Pope Conference work?

The assembly of how to choose the next pope is a process that goes back hundreds of years, a complex, well-organized ritual and voter parade.

On the first day of the Pope’s convention, the cardinal voters will close themselves from the outside world and start choosing major tasks (perhaps from their own ranks), and he will become the 267th bishop of Rome, the Pope.

On the first day, the Cardinal celebrated the morning mass at St. Peter’s Basilica. In the afternoon, they walked into the Sistine Church in a solemn procession, which will be subject to a security scan to check for any illegal recording equipment before arrival.

Cardinal voters were locked in the Sistine church for centuries until they elected a new pope and then stayed and slept under Michelangelo’s vivid Renaissance masterpiece. Today, they do want to rest and share meals at the Santa Marta House, a hotel in the Vatican City, where Francis owns his own personal apartment during his religious activities.

Once the Cardinal was all filed into the church, its great bronze door was sealed and sealed, and the first day of vote began.

Cardinal at the Pope Conference at Sistine Church in 2013

The Cardinal attended the meeting to elect the new pope at Sistine Chapel on March 12, 2013. The next day, they chose their choice: Pope Francis.

L’Ossservatore Romano/Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images


How does the vote for the new pope work?

The Cardinal will discuss the merits of each Pope’s prospects in the Vatican’s “General Congregation” days before the meeting, but now the vote begins. Choosing a new pope requires not only a majority, but also a two-thirds vote among cardinal voters to win the candidate. Pope Benedict XVI, before he led the church FrancisTwo days before his resignation, the bar was raised and two-thirds of the requirements were incorporated into church law.

Every cardinal must sworn absolutely confidential before voting. If they disclose any information from the scope of the conference, they will be deported by the church.

To vote, each cardinal wrote the name of the candidate they chose on the ballot, concealed his handwriting, and walked to the altar at the front of the church and placed the paper on the ritual board. He then tilted the ballot from the plate to the atmosphere.

When they are calculated and handwritten entries recorded by three cardinals on the altar (called the inspector), the ballots are stored in another urn.

The third is made of gold-plated bronze and silver and decorated with Christian images to use to ferry any cardinal ferry that is very sick to leave their sleeping areas for the church to count.

After the first vote was held on the first afternoon, the Cardinal’s vote was placed in one of two small ovens in Sistine’s church and burned. A pile of smoke flowed to the chimneys into the air on St. Peter’s Square, and the faithful media and the world’s media were eagerly watched.

If that round of votes does not produce winners, the smoke will be black, which suggests to the world that the Holy See is still vacant.

How long can a meeting last?

The voting process will repeat the next day, with the Cardinal making two votes in the morning and two votes in the afternoon. If the morning meeting is inconclusive, then black smoke will be seen again on the East Coast of the United States at lunch time (early morning).

If the afternoon vote still has no winner, more black smoke will flow into the evening Roman sky.

If there is no two-thirds of the majority in three days, the vote is suspended for one day to allow the senior cardinal to pray, discuss and “a brief spiritual counsel” in the order of deacons.

Then, the voting process resumes. A meeting will continue to be used until enough cardinal voters agree to the next pope’s choice.

How long did it take to choose a new pope in the past?

The longest meeting in history is a conclusion that brings Pope Gregory X to the Pope. It lasted for nearly three years from the beginning of the Cardinal’s first vote.

However, the recent conclusions lasted for several days. Pope John Paul II needed eight votes in two days to become Pope in 1978. His successor, Benedict XVI, was elected for the fourth vote two days later in 2005.

Francis only had five votes in 2013, and the vote took only 24 hours.

What will happen once the meeting selects the next pope?

When enough cardinals reached consensus on candidates and the vote reached more than two-thirds of the threshold, the selected man was asked whether he accepted the position. He will admit it by simply saying the word “I accept” in Latin: “accept.”

At that time, he became the new pope and would state the religious name of his choice before the gathered cardinal. The most common name for the pope is John, which has been used 21 times. Others, including Simplicius, Hilarius and Zosimus, have only been used once at a time. Pope Francis was also the first to choose his pope name.

The ballots were then burned in the stove, but this time, a chemical additive was left out to form the highly anticipated “Fumata Bianca”, white smoke.

In some past conclusions, people were confused about the color of smoke in churches, so the two conclusions were that in two conclusions in 2005, a new tradition began. Bell’s current tweets besides the white smoke, heralding news of a new leader in the Roman Catholic church.

The new pope then immediately enters a room adjacent to the Sistine Church, covered in the pope’s robe.

As the faithful and curious crowd enter St. Peter’s Square below, the Cardinal Deacon walked to the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica, introducing the new Pontiff with the famous phrase “Habemus Papa”, we have a pope.

Eventually, the new Catholic Church’s leaders flocked to his first blessing.

In 2013, the newly elected Pope Francis waves at St. Peter's Basilica

The newly elected Pope Francis appeared on the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican city on March 13, 2013.

Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis by Getty Images


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