Black Smoke Spews From Sistine Chapel Chimney…Cardinals Fail To Elect New Pope 1st Day

Loading

Black smoke billows from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel on the first day of the conclave, 7 May 2025.

The Sistine Chapel’s small chimney Wednesday evening, billowed out black smoke, signalling that Cardinals had failed to elect a new pope to lead the Catholic Church.

Thousands of people had gathered in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican waiting for smoke signalling whether a choice had been made or not.

At just past 2100h local time, black smoke spewed out of the chimney indicating that the first vote had failed to reach consensus.

White smoke and the pealing of bells would have announced that the 133 cardinals from some 70 countries had chosen the 267th leader of the global Catholic Church.

There is no time limit as to how long the secretive conclave, as the gathering is known, can last.

But given that it is the most geographically diverse one in the faith’s 2,000-year history, it is expected to last a few days.

A cardinal needs a two-thirds majority to win the centuries-old secret voting ritual.

As they enter the conclave, the Cardinal’s cell phones are taken away, they take oaths of secrecy, and airwaves around the Vatican are jammed to protect the deliberations.

While there was only one ballot on Wednesday, there can be as many as four votes a day thereafter.

The conclave began with a morning mass in St Peter’s Basilica.

Senior Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re prayed for the Cardinals to be enlightened to choose “the pope our time needs”.

The previous pontiff, Pope Francis, died on April 21 at the age of 88.

Share This

Related posts

Leave a Comment