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FaithNews
Carol Glatz - Catholic News Service
Some five hours after the opening Mass, the cardinals were to process into the Sistine Chapel, swear an oath to uphold the conclave rules, listen to a final reflection and—if they chose to do so—conduct the first ballot.
FaithNews Analysis
Ricardo da Silva, S.J.
Perhaps a revealing question is whether the church will continue the radical novelty Francis brought as a pope from a religious order—and whether this is the continuity needed now.
FaithFaith in Focus
Quang D. Tran
No one gathers Christians—Catholics and non-Catholics alike—throughout the world, however imperfectly, in the way the pope does. The world needs the pope.
FaithPodcasts
Inside the VaticanJesuitical
Who are the frontrunners entering the conclave, and how the voting could quickly confirm papabile lists or pivot to an unexpected candidate
FaithVatican Dispatch
Gerard O’Connell
Cardinal Frank Leo, the 53-year-old archbishop of Toronto, told Gerard O’Connell that he does not think age or nationality is an important factor in choosing the next pope. His top priority? A leader who listens.
FaithOf Many Things
Sam Sawyer, S.J.
The choice of method, more than any difference in underlying doctrine, is where Pope Francis departed most radically from his predecessors.