As the Vatican personnel take a secret oath for 2025 conclave, some controversial problems await the new Pope

As the Vatican personnel take a secret oath for 2025 conclave, some controversial problems await the new Pope

/ News themezone

Conclave that will meet to choose the next Pope

Concentimimo choosing the next pope, with important problems that face faith 02:29

Vatican City – All Vatican personnel who will be involved in the 2025 conclave Choosing the successor of the deceased Pope Francis, from the cleaners to the chefs and custodians, has lent oath of secret. The punishment for filtering information about the ancient ritual of the Catholic Church is immediate excommunication.

The 133 cardinal voters in charge of Choose the next pontiff He will make his own oath on Wednesday, within the Sistine Chapel, as the conclave is launched.

Everyone has arrived at the Vatican for the meeting, and they have seen this week entering and leaving the meetings every day, where they discuss the merits of men among their own ranks, any of which could be chosen as the next Pope.

As of Wednesday, the cardinal voters will meet in the chapel, under the famous fresco of Miguel Ángel’s trial, to decide who should lead the 1,400 million Catholics in the world.

Among the problems that differentiate the alleged floors For work are some extremely controversial issues for Catholics, including exactly how far the Church should open its doors, if they do, people like Andrea Rubera, her husband and three children.

Vatican realizations for the conconclave of May 7
Conclave officials sign the oath of confidentiality in the Apostolic Palace, on May 6, 2025, in the city of the Vatican, before the 2025 papal conclave to select the successor of Pope Francis. Simone Resoluti/Getty

Rubera, who has been in his relationship between people of the same sex for years, told News themezone that “when Pope Francis died, I cried.”

A decade ago, Rubera and her husband were fighting in case they could raise their Catholic children. Then he received a phone call.

“So I replied, and it was: ‘Mr. Rubera, are you occupied at this time, because I see that you are not responding to my calls, and this is Pope Francis'”.

He remembered his surprise when the late Pontiff asked him if he could have time to speak. He did it, and Francis encouraged the couple to behave like any other Catholic family. Rubera told him that the next Pope is not so anxious to welcome him and his family to the Church.

“My personal fear is that our lives, our families, our rights, can be … canceled,” he said.

Another big problem facing the next Pope will be the role of women in the church. There has been a fierce debate within the Catholic community for years about whether women should become deacons, and eventually even priests. That door, even during the relatively progressive reign of Pope Francis, remained firmly closed.

But Kate Mcelwee, executive director of the Women’s Planning Conference, told News themezone that “about this question, women are not going to wait for much more.”

“Certainly, there is a turning point that we face,” he said, predicting that if the Catholic Church does not offer new opportunities soon, “I think women will vote with their feet, they will no longer go and participate in the life of the Church.”

When the new Pope is chosen Behind the closed doors of the conclave, he will adopt his chosen papal name and will then be taken to a antechamber in the Sistine Chapel to put on his papal white robes.

That adjustment room is called “the Stanza Delle Lacrime”, or, in English, “The room of tears”, for all the potatoes that have cried there throughout the centuries as the severity of his call sinks.

    In:

  • Women
  • Pope Francis
  • Vatican City
  • Same sex marriage
  • papal conclave
  • LGBTQ+
  • Dad
  • Catholic church

Chris Livesay

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Chris Livesay is a foreign correspondent for News themezone based in Rome.

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