The white smoke began billowing from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel at just after 2:00 p.m. EST on Wednesday and continued for the next 30 minutes. Tears of joy and shouts of jubilation were seen and heard across the globe–the papal conclave had elected a new pope.
Shortly thereafter, Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina (the first non-European chosen to lead the Church in more than 1,200 years) came out to greet the thousands who had waited in the pouring rain and the many millions more glued to their television sets. His decision to take the name Francis, in reference to the patron Saint Francis of Assisi should come as no surprise to anyone. Bergoglio, a Jesuit priest, has become well-known as a champion for the sick and the poor.
While the new pope has received an initial warm welcome, Pope Francis may face a rocky road ahead as he has inherited a church wrestling with myriad challenges–including a shortage of priests, a sexual abuse crisis and a congregation which seems to be abandoning the strict doctrine of yesteryear and moving in a more progressive direction.
But what else do we know about this 76-year-old Argentine that will now lead the approximately 1.2 billion Catholics around the world? Here are 5 facts to know about the church’s new leader.
1. Bergoglio came in 2nd place in 2005 when Pope Benedict XVI was elected to the papacy. He was considered a long-shot this time around given his age as many religious experts expected a younger man to take the helm and lead the Church in a more progressive direction.









