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At a conclave with many new members, a swift, stunning consensus built around an unknown to many outside of the church.
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, Archbishop of New York, about the significance of the Cardinals electing the first pope from the United States.
Congressman Brendan Boyle on how the new pope affects American politics, on issues both in line and at odds with the Trump administration ...
Members of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops are digesting that one of their own is now the head of the Catholic Church.
For cardinals who came from such different parts of the world, it was a feat but also an act of unity to elect someone in ...
Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, retired archbishop of Galveston-Houston, told the reporters that while the cardinals chose a pope ...
Leo XIV 'is a citizen of the world,' Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York underlined, and 'where he came from is secondary' to ...
Following the election of Pope Leo XIV, the first pontiff elected from the U.S., American cardinals shared their reaction to the new leader of the church.
Cardinals began describing the days and hours leading up to the final ballot that brought Leo past the two-thirds majority needed.
Speakers blasted “Born in the U.S.A. and ”American Pie" as six cardinal electors from the United States celebrated the first ...
Thursday marked an extremely important day in the Catholic Church, as Pope Leo XIV was chosen as its 267th leader. Leo XIV, ...
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