POPE'S DEATH PRECEDENCE
Most people think a pope dies, and that’s it. Funeral, mourning, next man up. But what actually happens behind Vatican walls? It’s one of the oldest and most secretive rituals in the world. And it just got triggered. 🧵👇Pope Francis is gone. He passed away on Easter Monday. And now, the Vatican enters a phase it hasn’t faced in 20 years—The Papal Interregnum. Here’s what’s really going on… and what happens next
The moment a pope dies, everything stops. The Papal Apartment gets sealed. Even though Francis didn’t live there, the tradition stands. It marks the end of his reign. No turning back.
A cardinal—right now, it’s Kevin Farrell—is put in charge. He becomes “Camerlengo,” the man who temporarily runs the Church. He holds the keys to everything—literally. No major decision is made without his seal.Francis’ body will lie in state inside St. Peter’s.
Soon, the lines will stretch for miles.
Just like they did in 2005 for John Paul II.
It won’t just be Catholics showing up.His funeral will follow a 9-day mourning period called the Novendiales. By Church law, he must be buried between Day 4 and Day 6. Francis asked to be buried underground, no gold, no fanfare. Just “Franciscus” carved on the stone.
After the funeral, things get serious.
Cardinals from all over the world fly in.
Only those under 80 can vote—136 this time.
They’ll meet, pray, and prepare for what’s next: The Conclave.When they’re ready, they lock themselves inside the Sistine Chapel. No phones. No press. No leaks. Each cardinal writes one name: “Eligo in Summum Pontificem” (I elect as supreme pontiff). Then they drop the folded ballot into a chalice.
If no one gets two-thirds of the vote, they burn the ballots with chemicals.
The smoke turns black.
It means: “No pope yet.”
But if the smoke turns white. That’s it.It can take days. Sometimes weeks.
They vote up to 4 times a day.
They pause to pray.
Talk. Vote again. Repeat.
Until one man gets the number.Then, a cardinal steps out onto the balcony.
Says two Latin words: Habemus Papam.
“We have a pope.”
And just like that, the Church has a new shepherd.But this time, it’s different. Because Francis changed the game.
He didn’t live in the palace. He washed the feet of refugees.
He said: “Who am I to judge?” He took hits for it. A lot.His successor has big questions to answer:
Will he follow Francis’ example—
or roll back the clock?
There’s also the abuse crisis.
It hasn’t gone away.
Whoever is chosen will be judged by how he handles it.
The Church’s future reputation depends on it.And it matters far beyond Rome.
1.4 billion people follow the pope.
The man they choose next can reshape how the world sees faith, justice, tradition, and mercy.For now, all eyes are on the chimney.
Because history still waits on smoke.Francis is gone. No marble. No throne.
Just a name in the dirt: Franciscus.
He left quietly.
Now, 136 cardinals have to decide who takes his place.The next pope will shape the future of the Church and maybe the world.
Which path do you think they’ll take?
Who should be the next pope?
Reply below.