Updated
May 8,
2025, 1:37 p.m. ET15 minutes ago
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/05/08/world/pope-conclave-news
Jason
Horowitz Motoko Rich and Elizabeth Dias Reporting from Vatican City
Here’s
the latest.
Robert
Francis Prevost
was elected the 267th pope of the Roman Catholic Church on Thursday and took
the name Pope Leo XIV, becoming the first pope from the United States and
defying the conventional wisdom before the conclave that any American would be
a long shot to become pontiff.
A puff of
white smoke from a chimney above the Sistine Chapel signaled that the cardinals
sequestered inside for two days had elected a new leader the world’s 1.4
billion Roman Catholics. As pope, Leo XIV will confront difficult decisions
about the church’s direction, chiefly whether to continue the agenda of his
predecessor, Pope Francis, who championed greater inclusion and openness to
change until his death last month, or forge a different path.
The
cardinals reached their decision after being in conclave for a little more than
24 hours, and after several rounds of voting. The group of 133 cardinals, the
most ever to gather in a conclave, included many who were appointed by Francis
and some who did not know one another. That had made reaching a quick consensus
a serious challenge, given the broad group of contenders and the splits among
them about the future of the church.
Despite
his American roots, Cardinal Prevost, a 69-year-old, Chicago-born polyglot, is
viewed as a churchman who transcends borders. He served for two decades in
Peru, where he became a bishop and a naturalized citizen, then rose to lead his
international religious order. Until the death of Francis, he held one of the
most influential Vatican posts, running the office that selects and manages
bishops globally.
A member
of the Order of St. Augustine, he resembles Francis in his commitment to the
poor and migrants and to meeting people where they are. He told the Vatican’s
official news website last year that “the bishop is not supposed to be a little
prince sitting in his kingdom.”
He has
spent much of his life outside the United States. Ordained in 1982 at age 27,
he received a doctorate in canon law at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas
Aquinas in Rome. In Peru, he was a missionary, parish priest, teacher and
bishop. As the Augustinians’ leader, he visited orders around the world, and
speaks Spanish and Italian.
Often
described as reserved and discreet, he would depart stylistically from Francis
as pope. Supporters believe he will most likely continue the consultative
process started by Francis to invite lay people to meet with bishops.
It is
unclear whether he will be as open to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
Catholics as Francis was. Although he has not said much recently, in a 2012
address to bishops, he lamented that Western news media and popular culture
fostered “sympathy for beliefs and practices that are at odds with the Gospel.”
He cited the “homosexual lifestyle” and “alternative families comprised of
same-sex partners and their adopted children.”
He, like
many other cardinals, has drawn criticism over his dealings with priests
accused of sexual abuse.
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