Pope Benedict XVI – Blog Roundup

Bill Hobbs: Meet the New Pope cokeribbon.gifThere was Pope Classic. Now there is New Pope. I’m not Catholic, nor do I believe the papal system has any basis in the Bible.

Smash: We Have a Pope — WHITE SMOKE billowed out from a stovepipe on the roof of the Sistine Chapel and bells pealed across…

Wizbang – As soon as I saw the white smoke -and well before the new pope was announced- I predicted it would take some moron 2 hours to whine about the choice of pope. and

Wizbang – The white smoke has flowed and the bells have rung. German cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was selected as the 265th holy father on the second day of the conclave. He will be known as Pope Benedict XVI. [The 16th]

Outside The Beltway – God’s Rottweiler” arises from the white smoke:

Professor Bainbridge –  Reuters’ “gracious” announcement reads: German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the strict defender of Catholic orthodoxy for the past 23 years, was elected Pope on Tuesday despite a widespread assumption he was too old and divisive to win election. Widespread among whom? The left-liberal elites that Reuters reporters hang out with?

The Anchoress – Yesterday, Cardinal Ratzinger closed his very Christ-centered homily thusly: We live out our ministry in this way, as a gift of Christ to humanity! But at this time, above all, we pray with insistence to the Lord, so that after the great gift of Pope John Paul II, he again gives us a pastor according to his own heart, a pastor who guides us to knowledge in Christ, to his love and to true joy. Amen.

Jeff Jarvis – Cardinal Ratzinger issued his attack against “relativism” as the cardinals went into their conclave. Of course, one can easily turn that around and say that he was merely defending orthodoxy — his orthodoxy: “We are moving toward a dictatorship of relativism that has at its highest goal one’s own ego and one’s own desires,” Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger told his fellow electors….

Michelle Malkin – Go see her , she has a good round up of sites.

 

Posted April 19, 2005 by
Bloggers, General, Personal | 2 comments

So You Haven’t Registered For BlogNashville Yet.

Well, hurry up, because they have just added a sweetener to the event. Mr. Roboto has arranged for those attending to attend a kick off party at….

Blognashville

Wolfy’s Den at the Gaylord Entertainment Center

From Thursday Night Fever:

The event kicks off at 7:30pm with an appetizer meet and greet, followed by the BlogNashville Welcome and Convocation at 8pm.   Then, once the suits leave the stage and head back to the bar area to talk html and sitemeters, the rest of us will be shaking it to live music by Nashville’s renowned Tall Paul (with Who You Talkin’ At’s MMMikey) until closing time (i.e. when people stop putting money into the tip jar). And not to exaggerate, but a private Tall Paul appearance is an event unto itself (ask Captain T). This is big.

BlogNashville and party sponsor RexBlog (aka Hammock Publishing) will have more information over the next few days, but, as a host, I’m inviting you all to attend and show the out-of-towners how Nashville folks kick it. And you don’t have to be a BlogNashville attendee to come, as long as you blog, like blogs, are an attractive female, or just enjoy drinking and great music.

So if you are not doing anything the weekend of May 6th – 8th, sign up at blognashville.org and come have a great time!

Posted April 19, 2005 by
Bloggers, Fun, General, Personal | one comment

POPE BENEDICT XVI, Habemus Papam (We Have a New Pope)

We have a Pope. White plumes of smoke in the air and bells are ringing. UPDATE : THE NEW POPE IS POPE BENEDICT XVI , FORMERLY CARDINAL JOSEPH RATZINGER

 

H/T Michelle Malkin: Pictures from Smoke cam

UPDATE: Video of the Papal announcement via Jackson’s Junction and Pope Benedict’s first appearance at the Vatican balcony.

More on Pope Benedict XVI:

AP

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany, a hard-line guardian of conservative doctrine, was elected the new pope Tuesday evening in the first conclave of the new millennium. He chose the name Pope Benedict XVI and called himself “a simple, humble worker.”

Ratzinger, the first German pope since the 11th century, emerged onto the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica, where he waved to a wildly cheering crowd of tens of thousands and gave his first blessing as pope. Other cardinals clad in their crimson robes came out on other balconies to watch him.

Pope John Paul II, the cardinals have elected me — a simple, humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord,” he said. “I entrust myself to your prayers,” the pope said.

The crowd responded by chanting “Benedict! Benedict!”

Ratzinger served John Paul II since 1981 as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. In that position, he has disciplined church dissidents and upheld church policy against attempts by liberals for reforms. He turned 78 on Saturday.

The new pope had gone into the conclave with the most buzz among two dozen leading candidates. He had impressed many faithful with his stirring homily at the funeral of John Paul II, who died April 2 at age 84.

BBC Ratzinger is elected as new pope

st peter's
St Peter’s Square is now full of people eager to greet the new pope
 

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger has been elected as the pope – the head of the world’s 1.1 billion Roman Catholics.

Taking the name Pope Benedict XVI, the 78-year-old German has appeared on the balcony of the Vatican palace.

His arrival was greeted by cheers from the many thousands of pilgrims who had packed St Peter’s Square as news of his election spread.

He was chosen on the third round of votes by the 115 cardinals meeting to select Pope John Paul II’s successor.

More details soon.

CNN

VATICAN CITY (CNN) — Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany has been selected by the Roman Catholic church as the new pope.

Cardinal Jorge Arturo Medina Estevez of Chile made the announcement to a cheering crowd in St. Peter’s Square.

Ratzinger, who took the name Benedict XVI, appeared on the balcony of the Vatican Basilica to greet the people and deliver his first papal blessing.

Earlier, white smoke rose from a Sistine Chapel chimney and bells rang Tuesday, signaling the selection of a new pope.

The crowd clapped and waved flags as the smoke began to billow over Vatican City about 5:50 p.m. (11:50 a.m. ET).

Suspense built as the throng waited for the symbolic ringing of bells, at which point the crowd broke into a roar of jubilation.

The conclave of 115 cardinals had voted three times previously — once Monday night and twice Tuesday morning — before selecting the new pope.

The cardinals’ morning ballots were burned at about 11:50 a.m. (5:50 a.m. EDT).

Chemicals are added to the ballots to turn the smoke white or black.

Pope John Paul II, who died April 2 at age 84, had decreed that white smoke be accompanied by the ringing of bells, to avoid a repeat of the confusion after his election in 1978.

Ratzinger needed two-thirds of the votes to be selected.

Speculation rife

There has been a great deal of speculation about who may be chosen to succeed John Paul II, who died April 2 at the age of 84, but cardinals have been mum.

Some taking part in the conclave said they are looking for a leader who presents a hopeful vision, who can “generate some dynamism and some optimism within Catholicism,” CNN Vatican analyst John Allen said.

The first clues to the process of finding a successor were sought during the homily or sermon delivered by Ratzinger at Monday’s public Mass.

“Having a clear faith, based on the creed of the church, is often labeled today as a fundamentalism,” Ratzinger said.

Allen said Ratzinger delivered a “very blunt” message for the church to “stay true to itself.”

That was a strong indication that Ratzinger, 78, wants a “traditionalist” elected the next pope, Allen said.

John Paul was widely credited with extending the reach of the papacy. He spoke more than a dozen languages and set an unprecedented pattern of pastoral travel, drawing huge crowds all over the world.

He was also strictly traditional on issues of sexuality and the role of women in the church, which won him support among some Catholics but alienated others. Similar disagreement exists over the next pontiff’s stances on issues such as birth control, stem cell research and the ordination of female priests.

The Right Nation

Fumata bianca.

Eletto il nuovo Papa. Piazza San Pietro, invasa da fedeli (e non), aspetta di conoscere il nome del successore di Karol Wojtyla. UPDATE. E’ Ratzinger!!! UPDATE (2). Il nuovo Papa ha scelto il nome di Benedetto XVI. UPDATE (3). Breve biografia di Joseph Ratzinger. Lo speciale sul conclave di Rai.it.

 
 
 

Benedetto XVI saluta la folla dei fedeli
LA FUMATA BIANCA ALLE 17.50
Dopo un niente di fatto nelle due tornate di voto mattutine, à ¨ stato il voto pomeridiano che ha portato all’elezione del nuovo pontefice. Il camino della Sistina ha preso a fumare alle 17.50 e questa volta il fumo era inequivocabilmente bianco. Il nuovo papa à ¨ stato dunque eletto dopo cinque scrutini. Il suono delle campane ha confermato l’elezione
 
 
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – A new pope was elected by Roman Catholic cardinals on Tuesday to succeed John Paul II. The election of the 265th pontiff on only the second day of a conclave in the Vatican’s frescoed Sistine Chapel was signaled by white smoke from the chapel chimney and the tolling of the bells of St. Peter’s Basilica.

But there were many minutes of confusion over the color of the smoke, which initially seemed gray, before the bells began tolling to signal the successful election.

Even Vatican Radio had initially said the color of the smoke was unclear. Black smoke indicates an inconclusive vote.

Tens of thousands of people in the square cheered when the vote was confirmed.

It was only the third time in a century that a pope had been chosen on the second day of a conclave. The name of the new leader of 1.1 billion Roman Catholics was to be announced shortly.

He was to appear on the main balcony of the basilica to deliver his first public address.

The 115 red-robed cardinals from 52 countries who were eligible to elect a new pontiff started their secret meeting on Monday. Three earlier votes had been inconclusive.

A candidate required a two-thirds majority or at least 77 votes to become pope.

Pope John Paul II died on April 2 after serving as pontiff for 26 years — the third longest papacy in Church history.

NEW POPE FACES DAUNTING CHALLENGES

The new pope will face the daunting task of following one of the most dynamic papacies in history but also one that divided the Church between conservatives and moderates.

The election came more quickly than most Vatican experts had predicted. They expected the new pope to emerge on Wednesday or Thursday. The front-runner going into the conclave was German cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, standard-bearer for the conservative heirs of John Paul and the late pope’s doctrinal watchdog.

But earlier on Tuesday both experts and bookmakers had said Ratzinger’s candidacy was weakening.

The 20th century’s eight conclaves lasted from two to five days, with the average just over three days.

Some 15 cardinals have been touted as potential popes, among them Italy’s Dionigi Tettamanzi, Honduran Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga, India’s Ivan Dias and Austria’s Christoph Schoenborn.

Before the conclave door shut on Monday, Ratzinger made a final appeal to his fellow electors to protect traditional teachings and to shun the “dictatorship of relativism.”

Ratzinger made no mention of the challenges that other cardinals and ordinary Catholics say should top the agenda such as poverty, Islam, science, sexual morality and Church reform.

(Additional reporting by Clara Ferreira-Marques, Phil Stewart and Jane Barrett in Vatican City)

 

The Courier Mail , Brisbane Australia

NEW POPE ELECTED

CARDINALS have elected a new leader of the world’s 1.1 billion Catholics, sending white smoke billowing from the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel after a conclave lasting little more than 24 hours.

As bells rang there was no immediate indication of the identity of the 265th pontiff.

A cardinal is expected to appear on the balcony over St Peter’s Square within 45 minutes of the announcement to reveal the new pope’s identity and introduce him to thousands of pilgrims massing on the square. More to follow.

 

NDTV (India)cardinal joseph ratzinger elected new pope - news india

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger from Germany has been elected as the new Pope.

The new Pope will be known as Benedict XVI.

The name of the 78-year-old Ratzinger was announced by Cardinal Jorge Medina Estevez of Chile, the senior cardinal deacon, from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica.

The new Pope appeared on the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica to a huge ovation from some 100,000 people filling the square.

Ratzinger is the first Germanic pope in roughly 1,000 years. There were at least three German Popes in the 11th century.

White smoke

Earlier, white smoke billowed from the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican City, signaling the election of a new Pope.

The smoke was accompanied by ringing of bells after the cardinals finished yet another round of voting at the conclave. The 115 cardinals voted thrice to elect the new Pope.

Several thousand pilgrims and tourists celebrated with cheers in St. Peter’s Square, where they had gathered to stare at the slender stovepipe jutting from the Sistine Chapel’s brown tiled rooftop.

The suspense had been building among the world’s 1.1 billion Roman Catholics.

They had been waiting and praying for the white smoke and pealing bells, which announced the 265th pontiff to succeed John Paul, who died on April 2 at the age of 84. (With AP inputs)

Expatica, Netherlands

19 April 2005

VATICAN CITY – German cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected pope on Tuesday by a conclave of cardinals held at the Vatican.

The new supreme leader of the world’s 1.1 billion Roman Catholics succeeds John Paul II, who died on 2 April at the age of 84. Ratzinger is the eighth German to be elected pope.

Ratzinger chose Benedict XVI as the name he will be calling himself as the new pope.

The last pope to choose such a name was Benedict XV, Italian-born Giacomo della Chiesa, who ruled the church between 1914 and 1922.

In choosing Ratzinger as the new Pope Benedict XVI, the church is seeking continuity, said a German Catholic Priest.

“The church is

Applause and cheers from crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square greeted the news that a new pope was elected as supreme leader of the world’s 1.1 billion Roman Catholics by cardinals meeting for a secret conclave at the Vatican.

The election was signalled by white smoke billowing out of a chimney atop the Sistine Chapel and was confirmed minutes later by the peal of bells from St. Peter’s Basilica.

The identity of the successor of the late John Paul II was made public shortly afterwards.

The papal election came during the third round of voting, making the conclave one of the shortest in history.

The cardinals had failed to reach a two-thirds majority on a single candidate during the previous two rounds.

A total of 115 ‘princes’ of the church from 52 different countries took part in the election process, which began on Monday afternoon.

Uncertainty reigned in the square as the colour of the smoke puffing out from the chapel containing Michelangelo frescoes was unclear for several minutes.

To avoid confusion, the Vatican ordered church bells to ring in unison with white smoke to signal that a pope had indeed been elected

Text from Pope Benedict XVI Blessing

Text of the speech delivered by Joseph Ratzinger, elected pope Tuesday, from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica. He chose the name of Benedict XVI.

“Dear brothers and sisters, after the great Pope John Paul II, the cardinals have elected me – a simple, humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord.

“The fact that the Lord can work and act even with insufficient means consoles me, and above all I entrust myself to your prayers.

“In the joy of the risen Lord, trusting in his permanent help, we go forward. The Lord will help us and Mary his very holy mother stands by us.”

UPDATE: (AP) Ratzinger’s hometown cheer his Papacy election

Students at the seminary where Joseph Ratzinger studied for the priesthood as a teenager in the 1940s erupted in cheers Tuesday at the news that he had become the leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

Students at St. Michael’s seminary in Traunstein pumped their hands in the air, and the schools director was in tears.

“I’m completely overwhelmed. I can’t fathom what happened,” Rev. Thomas Frauenlob said. “He eats with us. I can’t grasp it. I know he’s going to do a really good job.”

The class then joyfully ran together into church for Mass, joined by a few people from the town before church’s ornate gold altar. Frauenlob, who officiated, said, “We’re celebrating our Bavarian pope, and we are thankful.”

“It’s fantastic that it’s Cardinal Ratzinger. I met him when he was here before and I found him really nice,” said Lorenz Gradl, 16, who was confirmed by Ratzinger in 2003.

Michael Winichner, the school’s prefect who has had dinner with Ratzinger at Christmas time, said there was “a great feeling of celebration.”

“He’s a very nice man,” he said. “He comes off a little bit shy.”

One reason the students were excited was the possibility of a trip to Rome to meet the pope. Winichner was hesitant: “I imagine he has a rather full appointment calendar.”

Ratzinger was born in the town of Marktl Am Inn, but the family moved often because of his father’s job as a police officer, and he wrote in his memoirs that he considered Traunstein his hometown. He visits the town often, and stays in an apartment at the seminary, which now functions as a high school and no longer focuses on preparing young men for the priesthood.

People in Traunstein say they’ve seen Ratzinger’s softer side, despite his reputation as a theological hard-liner. Frauenlob said he has come home to confirm teenagers and had spent time ministering to the old and sick.

Traunstein was where Ratzinger returned after deserting the German army in 1945, and it was the place where he was taken prisoner by U.S. troops. He was released from a U.S. POW camp in June of that year and hitched a ride home on a milk truck.

Posted April 19, 2005 by
Fun, Personal | 2 comments

Eliot Spitzer’s Lust for Power

The lust for recognition and power has made Eliot Spitzer a loose cannon, and harming the economic future of the country. He has used his position to create publicity for himself by his aggressive public charges in the media. This in turn has created the publicity needed for his run for Governor.

The Wall Street Journal (on the free side) has an editorial by William J. Holstein, Editor in Chief of Chief Executive Magazine outlining the behavior and calling for his resignation.

When New York state’s Attorney General Eliot Spitzer started prosecuting excesses in the financial markets, he was tough-minded but fair. But over time, it has become less clear that he is pursuing justice.

His treatment of AIG’s Maurice R. Greenberg, coming on the heels of the forced ouster of Mr. Greenberg’s son, Jeffrey, from Marsh & McLennan, is a case in point. Once again, Mr. Spitzer has charged in and discovered a pattern of practices he doesn’t like. He is applying a new set of values to reinsurance practices that had been in place for years.

Although Mr. Greenberg was Chief Executive magazine’s CEO of the Year in 2003, we are not defending him. Rather we want to ask whether CEOs have a right to due process. Reflecting their dismay at the high-handed conduct of King George, the Founding Fathers created a judicial system with a stringent set of procedural safeguards to protect against overzealous or arbitrary prosecution. Yet in the atmosphere that Mr. Spitzer has helped create, the presumption is that CEOs are guilty–if Eliot Spitzer says they’re guilty.

That is scary enough, and he has used this practice to shake down many of the leading financial companies to fill New York States coffers.

But this is the scariest part:

So the New York attorney general both charges and convicts in the court of public opinion. This pattern of overcriminalization is of deep concern to many chief executives. The proper process is for judges or juries to convict defendants only after convincing themselves that a charge has been proven “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Too much publicity can be deemed prejudicial.

At the same time, Mr. Spitzer’s political ambitions are increasingly clear. He wants to use his record to become governor of New York. Mr. Spitzer’s campaign office even paid Google to link a search for “AIG” to a Web site promoting his campaign before it was quickly taken down. In the same television show where he discussed the AIG case, Mr. Spitzer said he was “very close” to presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton and didn’t rule out a run for the vice presidency or presidency.

Taking out Google Ads for the term AIG to to promote your governors campaign. At this point, he has gone beyond the pale and shown that he is in it for the governors seat, not protecting the rights of the citizens of the state of New York.

I agree, it is time for Mr. Spitzer to go.

Hat Tip Instapundit

Posted April 19, 2005 by
Business, Politics | no comments

Al-Jazeera; You Know Its Bad When …

You know its bad when Al-Jazeera is asked to cease all operations in Iran. According to AP, Iran suspended the nationwide operations of Arab TV broadcaster Al-Jazeera on Monday, accusing it of inflaming violent protests by the Arab minority in its southwest, state-run TV reported. So, you mean Arab countries have issues with Al-Jazeera also? I thought they just kept such actions only for Westerners.

In what must be one of the most puzzling if not humorous questions of the day,

Tehran on Monday ordered the station to cease operations until the network explained the motives behind its coverage, which Tehran believes inflamed the violence

Al-Jazeera promote or inflame violence. Say it isn’t so. NEVER.

More can be found at the Khaleej Times

Posted April 19, 2005 by
General, Politics | one comment

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