The cardinals in Rome should choose an Asian, African or Latin American to succeed Pope Benedict XVI.
If the cardinals vote based on where they come from, then it is unlikely we would see a pope who is not from Europe, where every pope in modern history was born. A majority of the 117 cardinals come from Europe.
But their nationalities do not reflect the changing demographics of the Catholic Church in the 21st century. There are around 1.2 billion Catholics in the world, and a majority of Catholics now live in Africa, Asia and Latin America.
The biggest concentration of Catholics is in Latin America and the Caribbean, at 39 percent. This is followed by Europe at 24 percent, sub-Saharan Africa at 16 percent, Asia and the Pacific at 12 percent, North America at 8 percent and the Middle East and North Africa at 1 percent, according to 2010 figures from the Pew Research Center.
Selecting a Latin American pope would help the Catholic Church further grow the number of faithful in the United States and Latin America.
An African or Asian pope would help grow Catholicism on those continents.
The names of several non-European cardinals have been mentioned as possible successors to Pope Benedict. They include Peter Turkson of Ghana, Francis Arinze of Nigeria, Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippines, Leonardo Sandri of Argentina, Oscar Maradiaga of Honduras, and Odilo Scherer and Joao Braz de Aviz, both from Brazil.
Catholics need a leader who will welcome everyone into the church and who will look at ways to examine whether church doctrine makes sense in today's modern world. Birth control, gay marriage and women priests are just some of the issues some Catholics like myself would like the church to re-examine.
The cardinals should select a pope who will best represent the faith and most eloquently speak for those who are voiceless and oppressed. And the pope must be a universal leader who can inspire us to live by the golden rule to "do unto others as you would have them do unto you."
When the smoke signals rise from the Vatican indicating the conclave of cardinals has selected a new pope, it would be powerful if this time the ashes were a shade darker than white.
Teresa Puente teaches at Columbia College in Chicago. She wrote this for the Progressive Media Project, www.progressive.org.