A Catholic cardinal is a senior church official in the Roman Catholic hierarchy, directly below the pope.
Definition
- Title: Cardinal (from Latin cardo, “hinge”) — meaning one on whom the Church “hinges.”
- Office: Advisor to the pope and, collectively, the body that elects his successor.
- Rank: The highest clergy rank below the pope.
Core Functions
- Elect the Pope: Members of the College of Cardinals meet in a conclave to choose a new pope.
- Advise the Pope: Serve as senior counselors on theological, administrative, and diplomatic matters.
- Govern: Many cardinals head major dioceses or lead departments (dicasteries) in the Vatican Curia.
- Represent the Church: Act as papal envoys or legates on international missions.
Composition
- Usually bishops or archbishops, but the pope can appoint priests or even deacons.
- Appointed directly by the pope, typically during a ceremony called a consistory.
- Divided into three orders:
- Cardinal Bishops: Senior-most, often with historic suburbicarian dioceses near Rome.
- Cardinal Priests: Typically archbishops of major dioceses worldwide.
- Cardinal Deacons: Usually Vatican officials or curial heads.
Address and Insignia
- Addressed as: His Eminence.
- Symbol: Red vestments, representing willingness to shed blood for the faith.
- Headquarters: Vatican City (if serving in Curia) or local archdioceses worldwide.
In short: a cardinal is a pope’s top-tier advisor and a papal elector, forming the Church’s governing elite.