Vidal was ordained a deacon on September 24, 1955, and as a priest on March 17, 1956, on
Lucena, Quezon Province, by Bishop
Alfredo Obviar. Vidal also helped found the Catechist Missionaries of St. Theresa, a Catholic religious congregation. Vidal was President of the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) from 1986 to 1987 and became Chairman of the CBCP-Episcopal Commission on the Clergy in 1989. He was appointed the
Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences's Convenor of the Standing Committee (1985 to 1994). He was a delegate to the Synod on Reconciliation (1983), the Extraordinary Synod (1985), the Synod on Priests (1991), and the Synod on Religious Life (1994), and also served as President Delegate at the 1989 Synod on the Laity. He was also a member of the Permanent Council of the Synod from 1989 to 1994. Vidal's posts in the
Roman Curia included memberships in the
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, the
Congregation for Catholic Education, and the
Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Health Care Workers.
College of Cardinals On May 25, 1985, he became
Cardinal-Priest of
Ss. Pietro e Paolo a Via Ostiense. He was one of the
cardinal electors who participated in the
2005 papal conclave that elected
Pope Benedict XVI, the only Filipino cardinal to do so, because Cardinal
Jaime Sin's poor health prevented him from attending.
Leadership in the Philippines Vidal and the Cardinal Archbishop of Manila
Jaime Sin supported the
1986 Philippine People Power Revolution. As Archbishop of Cebu and president of the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines, Vidal led the rest of the Philippine prelates and made a joint declaration against the government and the results of the snap election. In 1989
President Corazon Aquino asked Vidal to convince General Jose Comendador, who was sympathetic to the rebel forces fighting her government, to surrender peacefully. His intervention averted what could have been a bloody coup. In 2001, during the
2001 People Power Revolution Vidal convinced President
Joseph Estrada to step down. Estrada was later detained. Vidal along with Senator
Manny Villar and House Speaker
Jose de Venecia Jr. wrote a letter appealing to President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to grant pardon to Estrada in the "spirit of national unity and reconciliation". Estrada was pardoned and released from detention on October 26, 2007. ==Later life and death==