Tag Archives: Pope

Watch Live: American Cardinal Robert Prevost chosen as new pope, Leo XIV, by Catholic cardinals

The cardinal electors of the Catholic Church elected an American from among their own ranks on Thursday to serve as the new pope. Chicago-born Cardinal Robert Prevost was elected and accepted his fate as the next Bishop of Rome, leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics. Prevost chose Leo XIV as his papal name.

The new pontiff’s identity was revealed about an hour after white smoke emerged from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican, signaling that a new pope has been chosen with a decisive vote by the cardinal electors gathered for the papal conclave. After about an hour, the declaration was made from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica: “Habemus papam.”

The crowd in St. Peter’s Square erupted in stunned applause again as it was announced that the Catholic Church, for the first time in its history, had chosen an American as its leader. 

Who is the new pope?

Overall, Prevost is considered a centrist, but on many social issues he’s seen as progressive, embracing marginalized groups like Francis, who championed migrants and the poor. Prevost opposes ordaining women as deacons, for instance, so he’s seen as conservative on church doctrine.

U.S. Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost attends the funeral of Pope Francis, in St. Peter’s Square, April 26, 2025, in Vatican City.

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How does the duration of the 2025 conclave compare to past conclaves?

The conclave to choose a successor to Pope Francis began on Wednesday afternoon, local time. The 133 cardinal electors taking part in the process prayed together and took a vow of secrecy before the doors closed and the first round of votes were cast. As night fell, black smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel’s chimney, indicating they had not yet agreed on a choice. 

On Thursday morning, the cardinals resumed the process for Day 2 and, yet again, before lunch time in Rome, black smoke signaled no decisive outcome from the morning’s round of two votes.

In recent history, conclaves have tended to only last a couple of days, and this year’s followed suit.

Some past conclaves, however, dragged on much longer. The longest one ever, in the 13th century, took almost three years to choose Pope Gregory X.

The shortest conclave on record, in 1503, took just 10 hours to choose Pope Pius III.

How long was the conclave that elected Pope Francis?

The conclave that elected Pope Francis began on March 12, 2013, and he was announced as pope the next day, after five ballots.

The conclave that elected his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, began on April 18, 2005. Benedict was announced as pope the next day after four ballots.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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What name will the new pope use? Here’s why pontiffs change their names and what they mean.

Now that the cardinal electors have selected a new pope, he will choose his papal name, which will be announced when the pontiff is introduced on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica.

There are no written rules or official criteria for a pope’s name, but they choose names that have meaning in the Catholic tradition.

The significance of a pope’s name

The name the new pope chooses will “indicate a certain spirit and direction and vision of the new pope,” said Dennis Doyle, a theologian and professor emeritus of religious studies at the University of Dayton. 

“The first thing that you would look for would be, which popes had that name before?” he said. “That would signify something about the direction that the pope wants to take.”

Pope Francis, whose birth name was Jorge Mario Bergoglio, chose a papal name that hadn’t been chosen by a pope before, so in his case, “you have to ask, well, are there any biblical figures or people in the tradition who have had that name?”

For Francis, it was Saint Francis of Assisi, known for his charity and simplicity. 

“If the new pope calls himself Francis II, that will say a lot,” Doyle said, explaining it will show that he “wants to continue what Francis did.”

If he chooses a name like John Paul III, “that’s going to say something else about what direction this pope is going to take the church.”

What are the most common papal names?

The names most used by popes have been:

  • John: 23 times
  • Benedict: 16 times
  • Gregory: 16 times
  • Clement: 14 times
  • Innocent: 13 times
  • Leo: 13 times
  • Pius: 12 times

“There could be more than one reference in the name that the pope chooses,” Doyle explained.

For example, Pope Benedict XVI paid homage to Benedict XV, who led the church during World War I, but also to St. Benedict of Nursia, who founded the Benedictine Order and influenced the spread of Christianity throughout Europe. 

The name John, the most popular, could refer back to the Gospel of John, which is one of “the most loved of the gospels,” Doyle said. It can also refer to St. John the Baptist, the prophet who baptized Jesus.

Have popes always changed their names?

Not every pope in history has changed his name. Out of 266 popes, 129 have chosen new names, according to Vatican News

The practice became more ingrained around the 11th century, a period of German popes who chose names of early church bishops out of “a desire to signify continuity,” Rev. Roberto Regoli, a historian at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University, told The Associated Press. 

For many centuries, new popes tended to choose the name of the pope who had elevated them to cardinal. 

Only starting in the mid-20th century did new popes begin to choose names signaling the aim of their papacy, Regoli said.

Names never chosen by a pope

Some biblical names that haven’t been used by a pope are Joseph, James and Andrew.

Popes also have not chosen the name Peter, out of respect for St. Peter, a disciple of Jesus who is recognized as the first pope, experts say.

contributed to this report.

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These tailoring businesses eagerly await new pope to see if their papal garments are chosen



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Known as papal vestments, the pope’s official attire has long been made by two family-run tailoring businesses in Rome. They’re eagerly waiting to watch white smoke rise from the Sistine Chapel and see a new pope emerge, possibly wearing the garments they created.

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2025 conclave day 2 brings more black smoke, as cardinals continue voting to pick a new pope

Black smoke was seen wafting from a chimney on Thursday above the Sistine Chapel, signaling that the 133 Catholic cardinal electors tasked with choosing a new pope to succeed Pope Francis had voted inconclusively for a third time. The cardinals were sequestered for a second day Thursday as the 2025 conclave continued. 

On Wednesday evening, the prelates from six continents conducted a first round of voting in the Sistine Chapel, but sent black smoke up through the chimney in the evening to indicate that a new pontiff had not yet been chosen.

The conclave began Wednesday, 16 days after Pope Francis, who led the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics for 12 years, died at the age of 88. 

Black smoke is seen from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel meaning a new pope is not yet elected and voting will continue tomorrow, May 7, 2025, at the Vatican.

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A new pope will be selected when a candidate gets a two-thirds-plus-one majority vote by the cardinal electors. White smoke will be sent up the chimney of the Sistine Chapel when that happens, to indicate a new pope has been chosen. 

Until that threshold — 89 votes for one man — has been reached, the electors will hold two votes every morning of the conclave, followed by black smoke if they are inconclusive, and then two more votes in the afternoon after a lunch break, with more black smoke in the evening to indicate there is still no new pontiff.

It is impossible to predict how long the conclave will last, but many observers expect the cardinals to choose a new pontiff, likely from among their own ranks, within a few days.

“I think the church at the moment realizes that they need to bring people together, that they don’t want the church to look split,” papal historian Rebecca Rist told CBS News partner network BBC News. “So I suspect we’ll have the decision by Saturday.”  

Spectators started lining up early on Thursday to enter St. Peter’s Square, after tens of thousands gathered to watch Wednesday evening’s smoke signal.

People gather in front of St. Peter’s Square and St. Peter’s Basilica, on the second day of the conclave to elect the new pope, as seen from Rome, Italy May 8, 2025.

Alkis Konstantinidis / REUTERS


“I don’t mind that it’s black smoke, it shows the Holy Spirit is at work,” James Kleineck, who was visiting the Vatican from his home in Texas, said Wednesday. “There will be other votes soon enough. We will get our pope.”

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Catholic school students bring the papal conclave to their classroom



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As the world waits for white smoke to emerge at the Sistine Chapel, more than 6,000 miles away, with no fanfare or oath to secrecy, 8th graders at St. Mel’s Catholic School are immersing themselves in the centuries-old tradition. Elise Preston reports.

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What factors the conclave will consider when electing the next pope



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CBS News papal contributor Francis Rocca, who has covered the Vatican for more than 15 years, breaks down the process of electing the next pope and what the cardinals are considering as they cast their votes.

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Everything we know about the first day of the papal conclave



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Catholic cardinal electors from six continents gathered inside the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican to select a new pope. After the first round of voting, black smoke was seen rising from the Sistine Chapel as night fell in Rome, indicating they have not yet agreed on a choice for the next pontiff. Maurice DuBois reports and Crux editor John Allen joins to discuss.

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Motorcycle-riding bell ringer keeps Rome churches in harmony



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When a pope is elected, we will first see white smoke. Then, we will hear the bells from all over Rome sounding in unison. Maurice DuBois met the man who will make it happen.

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Vatican City filled with hope and anticipation for new pope



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The black smoke from the Sistine Chapel indicated that two-thirds of the Catholic cardinals are still grappling with which one of them will be the next pope. Chris Livesay reports.

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The conclave’s black and white smoke indicates if there’s a new pope. Here’s why the tradition exists.

Black smoke rising from the Sistine Chapel chimney on Wednesday indicated that a new pope has not been chosen to replace Pope Francis on the first ballot.

Using smoke to communicate to the public whether a new pope has been elected is somewhat a recent tradition for the Catholic Church. Cardinal electors in the conclave, which originates from a Latin word meaning “with key,” are locked away with no contact to the outside world. So they use one of the oldest methods of long-distance communication: smoke signals.

What black and white smoke means

Black smoke means the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics don’t yet have a new pope; white smoke means they have a new leader of the church.

Why the Vatican uses smoke to announce a pope

Smoke signals have been used for communication for millennia, Clare Johnson, professor of Liturgical Studies and Sacramental Theology at Australian Catholic University wrote in an article published in The Conversation. They have been used as a warning, a call to gather or to transmit news — and many indigenous peoples use sophisticated techniques to indicate specific messages.

“These techniques can include changing the location of the fire (such as halfway up or at the top of a hill), adjusting the colour of smoke (using different types of foliage or damp/dry foliage) and the interruption or diversion of the smoke column at different intervals to produce particular patterns of smoke,” Johnson wrote.

Cardinals of the conclave have been burning ballots since at least 1417, according to the professor, but it wasn’t until the 18th century that the Sistine Chapel had its first chimney installed. After that, smoke at certain times meant a new pope had not been elected and the absence of smoke indicated that the was a new pope, according to Johnson.

The first time white smoke was the indicator that a new pope was elected was in 1914. The previous pope, Pius X, had mandated in 1904 that all papers related to the election, not just the ballots, be burned, “thus producing a great deal more white smoke for the final ballot and making it truly visible,” historian Frederic J. Baumgartner wrote in his book, “Behind Locked Doors: A History of the Papal Elections.

Johnson also noted, “A stereotypical association of the colour of the smoke — white (positive) and black (negative) — lies behind the use of the two contrasting smoke colours.”

How the conclave creates black and white smoke

Over the years, the conclave has used different methods to create black and white smoke. 

After some confusion in past conclaves, including in 1958, when smoke first appeared white and then became darker, the conclave began using chemicals to get the proper color. 

In 2013, former Vatican spokesperson Federico Lombardi said the cardinals added cartridges containing potassium perchlorate, anthracene — a component of coal tar — and sulfur to the burned ballots to create black smoke. And if a new pope has been elected, potassium chlorate, lactose and chloroform resin would be added to produce white smoke.

Has a pope ever been elected on the first ballot?

It is possible for a pope to be elected on the first ballot, but a pope hasn’t received the two-third majority on the first ballot in recent elections.

The shortest conclave on record was in 1503, when it took the cardinals only 10 hours to choose Pope Pius III as the new pontiff. The late Pope Francis was elected in two days with five ballots and the two popes before him had been elected in two or three days.

The longest conclave on record dragged on for nearly three years. Pope Gregory X was finally elected in September of 1271 after about 1,000 days.

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