As of July 2013, the last Catholic Cardinal to resign was the Archbishop of Edinburgh, Keith Cardinal O'Brien, there is an article below:
Cardinal Pole
As of my last knowledge update in October 2023, the Catholic Cardinal for Phoenix, Arizona, is Cardinal Thomas J. Olmsted. He has served as the Bishop of Phoenix since 2003 and was elevated to the rank of cardinal by Pope Francis in 2020. Cardinal Olmsted has been influential in the growth and development of the Catholic community in the region. Please verify this information for any updates beyond that date.
Prior to Benedict XVI in 2013, it was the year 1415, when Pope Gregory XII resigned..AnswerNever. A Catholic (It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church.) Pope can not retire. The few pope that have renounced the papacy have RENOUNCED it, not retired. Pope Gregory XII, above was the last pope to renounce the papacy, before that it was Pope St. Celestine V who renounced the papacy in 1294.
He only served the last two years of Nixon's second term when Nixon resigned. In fact, he replaced Nixon's V.P., and then when Nixon resigned, he replaced the President. He was never elected into the office.
I believe that is sign of being a servant, a humble servant of God. The Cardinal is called by his first name, John, then with title, as in John Cardinal Smith. Think of it as your servant, John, Cardinal Smith
Bill ClintonBill Clinton was the last U.S. President to be impeached. The House impeached him, but the Senate did not remove him from office.
Pope Urban VI, pope from 1378 to 1389, was the last non-cardinal to be elected as pope. Since the conclave method of electing a pope began there have been 6 non-cardinals elected . Actually, the election of Pope Celestine V was the last non-conclave election and Celestine V was a priest who was elected to end a stalemate that had gone on for over 2 years. He did not want the position and resigned a few months later. Prior to the conclave method of electing a pope there were a number of non-cardinal popes.
i resigned in my last job
Anglican Bishops (not Roman Catholic clergy) are referred to as "Your Grace." However, in parts of the world where Anglicanism is predominant the Roman Catholic clergy allow the use of Your Grace so that the general population who are not catholic are not confused about titles of address. For Roman Catholic Bishops.... In spoken conversation, you would call your bishop "Bishop (last name)" or "Your Excellency." In opening a letter, you would put "Dear Bishop (last name)" or "Your Excellency" ("Dear" is not used in front of "Your [title]"). In addressing an envelope you would put on the first line "The Most Rev. (full name)" and on the second line "Bishop of (diocese)." Archbishops follow the same protocol as bishops. Cardinals are addressed as "Cardinal (last name)" or "Your Eminence." Letters to cardinals open "Dear Cardinal (last name)" or "Your Eminence." In addressing the envelope the first line would read "(first name) Cardinal (last name)" or "Cardinal (full name)"; the second line would read "Archbishop (or Bishop) of (archdiocese or diocese)."
As of my last knowledge update in October 2023, there is no specific "Cardinal of Kansas." The term "Cardinal" in the Catholic Church refers to high-ranking officials, but Kansas does not currently have a cardinal. The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas is led by an archbishop, who at that time was Joseph F. Naumann. For the most current information, it's advisable to check the latest updates from the Archdiocese or relevant church authorities.
It is in the last syllable, -a is a schwa.
Because his party was beaten at the last election.