In the historical practice of the Catholic Church, a lay cardinal was a man whom the pope appointed to the College of Cardinals while still a layman. This appointment carried with it the obligation to be ordained to a clerical order,[1] meaning that "lay cardinal" was not a permanent state, but a term in reference to a man who was appointed cardinal prior to taking on the clerical state corresponding to that appointment.[2]
The current law of the Catholic Church is that a man must be first ordained at least a priest in order to be considered for appointment as a cardinal.[3]
Name | Year created cardinal | Highest clerical order received |
---|---|---|
Pope Paul III | 1493 | Pope |
Pope Leo X | 1489 | Pope |
Charles Borromeo | 1560 | Archbishop |
Ferdinando I de' Medici | 1562 | Minor orders[4] |
Maurice of Savoy | 1607 | Minor orders[4] |
Francisco Gómez Rojas de Sandoval | 1618[5] | Priest[6] |
Ferdinand of Austria | 1620 | Minor orders[7] |
Giulio Raimondo Mazzarino | 1641 | Minor orders |
Marino Carafa di Belvedere | 1801 | Resigned before being ordained[8][9] |
Teodolfo Mertel | 1858 | Deacon[10] |
In 1917, Pope Benedict XV promulgated the first edition of the Code of Canon Law, which included a provision that a man must be first ordained a priest prior to being considered for appointment as a cardinal.[11]
According to The New York Times, Pope Paul VI considered making the French Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain a cardinal in 1965.[12]
Laymen were named Cardinals only for twelve months, being bound within that period to take Deacon's orders
In all these cases, however, it is clear that some orders had been taken; and therefore, in the strict sense of the term, these Cardinals were no longer laymen.