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Etymologies
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Examples
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Ms. Kirchner rebutted Archbishop Bergoglio, saying, "It's worrisome to hear phrases such as 'war of God' and 'projects of the devil,' which are things that send us back to medieval times and the Inquisition."
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Bergoglio also gained, climbing to perhaps forty votes.
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A curial official who has known Bergoglio for many years suggested that I look to Germany.
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It is unclear which cardinals might have put Bergoglio forward as the anti-Ratzinger or assembled a coalition in his support.
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A curial official who has known Bergoglio for many years suggested that I look to Germany.
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In the night the votes for the one Jesuit had passed to the other, and the unassuming Bergoglio had emerged as the candidate of those who opposed the formidable Ratzinger.
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Perhaps ten had cast ballots for Jorge Mario Bergoglio, a Jesuit and the archbishop of Buenos Aires; nine for Carlo Maria Martini, another Jesuit and the retired archbishop of Milan; six for Camillo Ruini, the vicar of Rome; four for Angelo Sodano, the Vatican's secretary of state; and many for scattered others.
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An ardent supporter of Ratzinger, he urged them to consider the tally for Bergoglio.
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With Martini of Milan finally judged unelectable, these men settled their hopes on another, very different Jesuit: Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the archbishop of Buenos Aires.
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Many of the votes for Bergoglio were probably coming from scandal-ridden North Americans or from Western Europeans whose flocks could fit onto the head of a pin.
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