On 28 October 1978, Rodríguez was named
auxiliary bishop of
Tegucigalpa and
titular bishop of
Pudentiana. He received his
episcopal consecration on the following 8 December from Archbishop
Gabriel Montalvo, with archbishops and
Miguel Obando y Bravo serving as co-consecrators. Rodríguez was named Archbishop of Tegucigalpa on 8 January 1993. Rodríguez was created
Cardinal-Priest of
Santa Maria della Speranza by
Pope John Paul II in the
consistory of 21 February 2001. He is the first cardinal from Honduras. He was president of the
Episcopal Conference of Honduras from 1996 to 2016. On 5 June 2007 Rodríguez was elected president of
Caritas International by the Caritas Confederation members at their 18th General Assembly in Vatican City. He was reelected to a second four-year term on 24 May 2011 and served until 2015. He was one of the
cardinal electors who participated in the
2013 papal conclave that elected
Pope Francis. On 13 April 2013, he was appointed to the
Council of Cardinal Advisers, a group of cardinals established by
Pope Francis to advise him and to study a plan for revising
Pastor Bonus, the Apostolic Constitution on the
Roman Curia. In 2013 an interview with Salt and Light, he said, "It is not just taking the constitution
Pastor Bonus and trying to change this and that," referring to the 1988 papal constitution governing the organization of the Roman Curia. "No, that constitution is over," he said. "Now it is something different. We need to write something different." Reflecting on the reorganisation of the Roman Curia, his advisory role to the pope and Catholic response to climate change. The cardinal made the comment in a 23 September interview with Catholic News Service in New York, where he was participating in interreligious meetings in his capacity as president of Caritas Internationalis. Reformation of the Roman Curia, the church's central administrative offices, is a normal response to changing times, has a significant 20th-century precedent, and was a focus of the pre-conclave meetings before Pope Francis was elected, Cardinal Rodriguez said. “Many people do not look back at history and they think now it's a revolution. No! This is a normal process… that takes place in order to answer to the new signs of the times,” he said. On 10 March 2015, Rodriguez received the
University of Dayton's Archbishop
Oscar Romero Human Rights Award for his humanitarian work. Romero, who was beatified as a martyr on 23 May 2015 and is honored in a few other Christian denominations, was Archbishop of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Salvador in
San Salvador,
El Salvador, when he was assassinated on 24 March 1980, in a hospital chapel while saying Mass, by a death squad assassin. On 15 October 2020, Pope Francis renewed Rodríguez' appointment as Coordinator of the Council of Cardinal Advisers. Rodríguez was diagnosed with
COVID-19 on 4 February 2021. On 26 January 2023, Pope Francis accepted Rodriguez' resignation as Archbishop of Tegucigalpa. ==Views==