Human and Divine dimensions of Papal transition: Card Collins
March 5, 2013: The general congregations are an essential part of preparing to elect
a Pope, particularly for Cardinals from local Churches, but what’s equally important
for the men called to vote in Conclave is prayer and the spiritual support of the
Universal Church and this, according to Cardinal Thomas Christopher Collins, Archbishop
of Toronto, Canada, is a point often lost on secular media in the race - “understandable”
as it is - to single out ‘contenders’.
Last week, ahead of his first experience
in a Conclave, Cardinal Collins to Vatican Radio about what he sees as the dual dimension
of the papal transition: the human dimension and the Divine dimension.
“I
have had constant contact from people who are saying ‘we are praying for you and the
other cardinals’. This is a great consolation and I think it’s something people don’t
realize. In the whole process there is a great deal that is very human. It’s part
of the rule of the Conclave you must have time to discuss things. But at the same
time its Divine. There is the praying for the guidance of the Holy Spirit as we make
this choice. There are these two dimensions which go together, like faith and reason,
that’s the way God made us, grace builds on nature. So we need to be attentive to
both dimensions. It is something that people thinking in terms of who are the contenders,
miss.”
Another point that has many confused are the purpose of the general
congregations. These are the meetings of the entire College of Cardinals, electors
(under 80 ) and non-electors, that precede the Conclave. There is no fixed number
and, once they have all gathered together, the cardinals decide how long they will
last and when to begin the Conclave. For Cardinal Collins these pre-Conclave ‘summits’
are essential, especially for the vast majority of voting Cardinals who are not members
of the Roman Curia (over 70):
“The Cardinals who are working together with
the Holy Father in Rome, they meet one another all the time and so are very familiar
with the different issues they are dealing with. The Cardinals who, like myself, are
responsible for dioceses around the world, which is the majority of the voting cardinals,
we are not in Rome that often, but most of our responsibilities is to care for the
people entrusted to our care in our own dioceses. So although we are always very conscious
as cardinals, I think one of our chief responsibilities is to be very conscious of
the needs of the Universal Church and also to get to know the other cardinals, we
don’t always have an opportunity to do that and so these days before the Conclave
but after the See is vacant is a tremendous opportunity for all the cardinals to discuss
the issues with one another, to get to know one another better and therefore to be
better prepared for the moment when those who are cardinal electors enter into the
Conclave”
When asked about what concerns he would raise with his fellow cardinals.
He said: “I think that my concern will be to listen to the cardinals from around
the world. I will also probably express my own sense of some of the issues . I think
that in the Western part of the world, the issue of secularism is very important,
of individualism. But in other parts of the world they are not so important, there
are other issues, persecution, social justice issues, many others…so I think as each
cardinal speaks from his own perspective all of us will begin to get a broader picture
of the whole concern that people have. Because the Holy Father has to be responsible
for the whole world, it’s important to get the whole picture and I think that’s what
we’ll do.