Could the wrong person be chosen as Pope? It is a vote made by men, who are fallible, and I’ve read about a 12 year old Pope (benedict IX) and that just seems so incredulous to me. Basically, could the wrong person be chosen as Pope because of human error or sin?
Hypothetical questions can be great ways of expanding the mind. They open one to stretch out from their normal confines of thinking and can enlighten us to new possibilities. It can be a mistake, however, to mix the hypothetical into a world where there are definitive lines that cannot or will not bend and transcendent mysteries that cannot be breached by human wisdom. How so?
Hypothetical questions are better known as “thought experiments.” While practical applications can be found by introducing such a hypothesis, you have to accept the fact that without direct response from God some questions can’t be answered.–Compare Job 42:1-6.
Again, this doesn’t mean one can’t do this. Thought experiments are often undertaken with the understanding that it may be impossible to actually recreate or demonstrate the circumstances and results one’s hypothetical question raises. Take for example the famous Gedankenexperiment known as “Schrödinger’s cat.” You don’t give up on thinking the impossible just because it’s impossible.
Your question is similar to the example above. What you are presenting is a paradox. For it to be possible to ascertain whether the “wrong” person could be chosen as Pope, one has also to prove how choice of the “right” person can be verified. Can you do one without the other? Probably not, but I can only offer that as a “probably.”
Without having the transcendent knowledge of the universe that God possesses there is always the possibility of an applicable variable that we cannot at present know about. There may be three or more possibilities to weigh from God’s vantage, but only two in our present temporal existence. (Yep, this can be a trip in a can of worms unlike anything you’ve experienced–so I hope you like worms!)
And I hope you find an answer that brings you enlightenment. It may not be the one you hope to find as it may not be “yes” or “no.” But if you are open to search for it and open to the idea that the answer may be something you will not like at all, then the journey to that answer can be as exciting as the answer when and if you find it.
For now I can say that there is no official answer to this thought experiment of yours, interesting as it is.