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Brazil's Cardinal Odilo Scherer: The man who would be pope?

SAO PAOLO —  His position as archbishop of the biggest diocese in the world’s most populous Catholic country, means Cardinal Scherer has been considered a contender to become the next leader of the church since Pope Benedict’s shock resignation.

For a new pope, issues of a global church

ROME — The Catholic Church is a global church. And for the 1.2 billion adherents to the faith worldwide, it is a decisive moment. The faithful are looking to a new pope to bring a time of healing — and better governance — to a church tarnished by scandal and deeply divided.

Waiting for the conclave at Santa Maria Maggiore

A walk through one of the world's most historic churches reveals a modern puzzle.
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The Papal Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome, Italy. (Jason Berry/GlobalPost)

ROME — Over the weekend, as cardinals shunned the press to preserve the secrecy of a conclave two days off, I made pilgrimage to Santa Maria Maggiore, the great church facing a traffic circle on the Esquiline Hill. In a city of monumental churches, this mammoth papal basilica holds within the paradox of beauty and power that colors the oldest church in Christendom.

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Papal conclave date announced

The cardinals of the world will convene next Tuesday to elect the next pope.
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Cardinals attend a meeting of prayer at St. Peter's Basilica on March 6, 2013 in Vatican City, Vatican. (Franco Origlia/AFP/Getty Images)

ROME — The Vatican announced this afternoon that the conclave of cardinals to elect the new pope will begin Tuesday, March 12, ending a week of meetings — called congregations — in which dozens of cardinals spoke amid discussions of the central issues facing the church. The cardinals adhered to a tight policy restricting access to the media in order to preserve decorum and a sense of fraternal confidence among the 115 who will vote.

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Survivors endorse church penal centers for abusive priests

The sex abuse survivors' movement is using the papal transition to press the church for stronger action against pedophiles in its ranks.
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David Clohessy (L) and Barb Dorris of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests speak at a press conference in Rome on March 8, 2013. (Jason Berry/GlobalPost)

ROME — Yesterday as cardinals huddled in secret meetings before the conclave, a leader of the women’s priest movement wearing her liturgical robes was arrested for unfurling a banner at St. Peter’s Square.

Today leaders of the abuse survivors’ movement called on bishops to fund penal centers for predator priests who avoided prosecution.

Such are the moments in a slow news town when one of the biggest stories in the world plays out behind closed doors.

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Rome: The media and the conclave  

As cardinals move at their own pace, access for reporters is reduced and speculation abound.
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French cardinal Philippe Barbarin (C) is escorted by security as journalists surround him when leaving on his bicycle after a pre-conclave meeting on March 6, 2013 at the Vatican. The Vatican on Wednesday said no date had been set for a conclave to elect a new pope and that not all the 115 'cardinal electors' expected to take part in the vote had arrived yet. (Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images)

ROME — Pope Benedict XVI’s farewell deprived the media of one of those rare events that rivet coverage across the globe: the solemn majesty of a papal funeral. Presidents and prime ministers seated in pews set a stately tone for the conclave to follow, as the cardinals retreat under tight security to elect the new pope, signaled by the white smoke sent up after burning their ballots.

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Cardinals begin talks to decide next pope

BRUSSLES — The College of Cardinals will now meet every day before the conclave begins, which is expected to be sometime next week.

Who is Father Dan Ward?

Dan Ward is by any measure a complex man. The lawyer-priest righteously helps nuns on property matters and how to deal with a Vatican investigation. A canonist and civil lawyer, he has also done extensive defense work for clergy sex offenders and their communities. He refused interview requests.

Q&A with editor at Ireland's longest-running LGBT magazine

Brian Finnegan talks to GlobalPost about his country's changing attitude toward Catholicism, LGBT rights and gay marriage.
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A man walks past the Papal Cross, which was built for the visit of the late Pope John Paul II in September 1979, in Phoenix Park, in Dublin, Ireland. (Peter Muhly/AFP/Getty Images)

Not long ago, Ireland was considered one of the most devout nations in the world. Catholicism was synonymous with the Irish identity, and for most of the 20th century, the Catholic Church in Ireland was an immovable, unparalleled force in Irish society. The institution had its hand in education, in hospitals and in private life.

But in the latter part of the century, Ireland shifted its course.

At the hands of the "Celtic Tiger" — Ireland’s 1995 economic boom — the country moved toward a modern European republic, and away from a monotheistic state. In the 1970s, more than 90 percent of Irish Catholics said they regularly attended Mass. That number is now just under one third.

Why have Irish Catholics lost their reverence for the once almighty Roman Catholic Church? A slew of factors come into play, but the slow erosion of faith is due mostly to damning revelations of clergy sex abuse scandals and the church's intolerance in the face of changing social mores.

Women's rights and gay marriage are chief among the concerns listed by those whose faith dwindles. Irish LGBT life has radically changed in the last decade — homosexuality was decriminalized in 1993, more gay people are "out" in society, and with the advent of civil partnerships there has been a growing push for marriage equality.

Despite such strides, the LGBT community still faces discrimination at the hands of the church. Homosexual acts are considered a sin, and the Vatican remains a staunch critic of the gay rights movement.

Brian Finnegan is deputy editor of GCN, the longest-running LGBT magazine in Ireland. The former Catholic says despite the church’s teachings, it’s only a matter of time until gay marriage becomes a reality.

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Does Ireland hold the key to Catholic Church's future?

Ireland's Catholics have been profoundly affected by the scourge of clergy sex abuse. Author Michael D’Antonio explains why the Irish are vital to the future of the global church.
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A churchgoer holds a cross and rosary beads in St. Patrick's Cathedral on March 20, 2010 in Armagh, Northern Ireland as the head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, Cardinal Sean Brady, speaks. Brady voiced hope on March 20 that the pope's letter addressing sex abuse by priests could lead to "a great season of rebirth." (Peter Muhly/AFP/Getty Images)

Ireland, once called “the most Catholic country in the world” by Pope Paul VI, isn’t as Catholic as it used to be. Surveys show dramatic drops in the number of Irish people who identify as religious or attend weekly masses. News of heinous sex abuse and coordinated cover-ups challenge the church’s crucial position in Irish life.

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