The 80-year-old head of the Roman Catholic Church was clad in a gold embroidered cope or mantle from the 15th century and the mitre of his 19th-century predecessor Pius IX, underscoring his fondness for the liturgical splendours of the past. In his homily, Benedict singled out the elevation of the patriarch of Babylon for the Chaldeans, which he said reflected his wish to express his spiritual closeness and affection for the Iraqi people. "How can one not turn one's gaze with apprehension and affection, in this moment of joy, to the dear Christian communities in Iraq?" he asked, drawing loud applause from the prelates assembled in Saint Peter's Basilica. Emmanuel III Delly, the 80-year-old spiritual leader of Iraqi Christians, said Friday that the honour was for "all Iraqis."
The cardinals, their red robes overlaid with white surplices symbolising purity, then accepted their red birettas from the pope in the solemn ritual known as a consistory. In a brief salute to the pope on behalf of all the new cardinals, prelate Leonardo Sandri said: "We are ready to follow you when ... you teach that marriage and family are the original unit of society, that life extends from conception to its natural end." The freshmen are the second group of cardinals created by Benedict since his election in April 2005, having inducted 15 in March last year. Announced five weeks ago, the new influx does not alter the geographical balance of the College of Cardinals, which is heavily weighted in favour of Europe. Thirteen Europeans join two North Americans, four Latin Americans, two Africans and two Asians in the new group. Europe accounts for an ever-shrinking percentage of the overall Catholic population, while nearly half of the world's Catholics are in Latin America, which combined with Africa and Asia make up some two-thirds of the 1.1 billion-strong Church.
Vatican expert John Allen of the National Catholic Reporter noted after the nominations were announced last month: "Unconsciously (the pope) is perpetuating a situation in which the electoral college of the Church is increasingly unrepresentative of the people at the grassroots." Some three-quarters of the cardinals are the heads of the Church's largest archdioceses, while most of the rest head departments of the Vatican administration known as congregations. The new cardinals include seven Vatican prelates and 11 archbishops of key cities including Paris, Spain's Valencia and Barcelona, Sao Paulo in Brazil, Mumbai in India and Dakar in Senegal. From Africa there is also Nairobi Archbishop John Njue.
The new cardinals were to receive the gold ring of their high office during a mass on Sunday. On Friday, Benedict held a closed-door meeting with all the cardinals to discuss the Church's relations with other Christian faiths. The participants noted a "thaw" in ties with the Russian Orthodox Church but continuing difficulties with Protestant churches because of differences over "ethical questions," according to a Vatican communique. The cardinals hailed recent "encouraging signs" in the Holy See's relations with Islam, notably with an appeal for dialogue by 138 Muslim leaders, and Pope Benedict's meeting at the Vatican earlier this month with Saudi King Abdullah, the statement said.
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