He was made
Cardinal-Priest of
Sant'Agostino in the
consistory of 24 March 2006 by
Pope Benedict XVI. He was appointed to the
Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei, the commission responsible for relations with the
Society of Saint Pius X on 8 April 2006. On 17 January 2009,
Pope Benedict XVI appointed him a member of the
Pontifical Council for Culture. In 2006, as president of the French Bishops Conference, Ricard objected to the recent authorization of the use of human embryos for scientific research in France and elsewhere in Europe. He called it a grave ethical transgression. In 2009 Ricard told the newspaper
La Croix that the Pope Benedict wanted to reconcile all Catholics by allowing a wider use of the
Traditional Latin Mass, which does not undermine the achievements of Vatican Council II. On 21 January 2010 he was appointed a member of the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, and on 6 July 2010 of the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, and on 12 June 2012 of the
Congregation for Catholic Education, and confirmed in the Education post by Pope Francis on 30 November 2013. He was one of the
cardinal electors who participated in the
2013 papal conclave that elected
Pope Francis. On 8 March 2014, he was named by
Pope Francis to serve as a member of the newly established Council for Economic Affairs, intended to oversee the work of the new Secretariat for the Economy, the financial regulatory agency for the departments of the
Roman Curia. He closed the Archdiocese's Saint Joseph seminary in May 2019 because enrollment failed to meet the minimum number of seminarians required. He said its seminarians can continue their studies and spiritual formation in Toulouse or Rome and that the closure was part of a national assessment of the country's many small seminaries. On 11 July 2019, Bordeaux Mayor
Nicolas Florian awarded Ricard the city's medal. On that occasion, Ricard praised the city for fostering collaboration between civic authorities and the leaders of its religious communities. He said he anticipated retiring as Archbishop of Bordeaux in a few weeks and returning to his native region. He announced on 4 August that he had already submitted his letter of resignation to Pope Francis, who accepted it on 1 October without naming his successor. On 10 February 2022, Ricard was named papal delegate for the
Foyers de charité, an organization subject to oversight by the
Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life following disclosures in 2020 of sexual abuse committed by one of its founders. ==Admission of sexual abuse==