By consensus, there's no slam-dunk, take-it-to-the-bank favorite
heading into the next papal election, but the closest to thing to
someone in pole position is probably 71-year-old Cardinal Angelo Scola
of Milan.
Scola breathes the same intellectual air as Benedict XVI, coming out of the Communio
theological school co-founded by the young Joseph Ratzinger in the
period following the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). As a young
theologian himself, he published book-length interviews with Henri de
Lubac and Hans Urs von Balthasar.
During his college years, Scola met the famed Italian Fr. Luigi
Giussani and became part of his Communion and Liberation movement. Of
late, Scola has tried to put some distance between himself and the ciellini,
as the center-right movement's members are known, especially because
several leading Italian politicians identified with it have been
engulfed in corruption scandals.
Still, in Italian ecclesial politics, Scola is inextricably linked
with the movement, which cuts both ways -- some deeply admire Communion
and Liberation; others, not so much. The linkage with Scola was
solidified amid the Vatileaks scandal, which included a letter from
Giussani's successor to Pope Benedict XVI in March 2011, suggesting that
the previous two archbishops of Milan had fostered a critical stance
toward some aspects of church teaching and that Scola was the best
candidate to take over.
Intellectually, Scola's area is moral anthropology, a subject he
taught at the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family
at Rome's Lateran University before taking over as rector.
The case for Scola goes like this.
First, he's Ratzinger but with a better popular touch. He's
comfortable with the media, often better off-the-cuff than when he sits
down and writes a speech. His texts can sometimes be dense, but his
spontaneous commentary is accessible and informal with a good dose of
humor.
Second, as an Italian, he knows the lay of the land in terms of
Vatican politics. Since finding someone who can take control of the
Roman Curia is a perceived priority among many cardinals, that's a clear
plus.
Third, Scola has extensive pastoral experience, leading both the
archdioceses of Venice and Milan. He's not a career bureaucrat, and
several cardinals have already publicly said they want a pope with real
experience in the pastoral trenches.
Fourth, Scola launched the "Oasis" project back in 2004, designed
initially to support Christians in the Middle East, but it's grown over
time into a platform for dialogue with the Muslim world. Since relations
with Islam are considered a major challenge for the next pope, Scola's
background is another advantage.
Now for the case against Scola.
First, as an Italian, he gets swept up into the tribal rivalries of
the Italian ecclesiastical scene.
There are still some Italian prelates
wary of Communion and Liberation, seeing it as already too powerful, and
who might be reluctant to vote for a "ciellino pope."
It's important to understand that for the most part, these Italian
divisions have little to do with ideology or competing visions of the
church, though there are some such differences -- for instance, the
circles around the former president of the Italian bishops' conference,
Cardinal Camillo Ruini, are conventionally seen as slightly more
conservative than those around the incumbent, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco.
For the most part, however, the contrasts are more determined by
personal relationships and networks of patronage.
Second, since Scola is a dedicated Ratzingerian in terms of
intellectual outlook, those who believe the next pope ought to take a
somewhat different approach, or at least have a somewhat different sense
of priorities, might see him as a bit too much continuity.
Third, some cardinals believe the solution to the Vatican's perceived
management problems is not to elect another Italian, but to break the
Italian stranglehold on the place's internal culture. For this camp, the
time has come to realize the long-promised "internationalization" of
the Vatican begun under Paul VI and carried forward in fits and starts
by both John Paul II and Benedict XVI.
Fourth, Scola may simply suffer from having been in the spotlight too
long, allowing opinions about him to crystallize, and making it
difficult for a sudden consensus around him to form.
How notorious is Scola as a possible papal successor?
Consider that another of the documents to make the rounds amid the
Vatileaks affair was an anonymous memo, written in German and passed
along to Benedict XVI by a retired Vatican cardinal, which was touted in
the Italian media as proof of a sensational "plot to kill the pope."
It
purported to relay private remarks by Cardinal Paolo Romeo of Palermo,
Sicily, during a trip to China, in which Romero allegedly said Benedict
XVI would be dead within the year and replaced with a top Italian
cardinal.
The name of that cardinal? Angelo Scola.
In a race in which too much publicity can sometimes be the kiss of
death, that's probably not the kind of PR destined to help Scola's
chances.
Fans, however, insist Scola has been in the spotlight for a long time
precisely because he's among the most impressive figures at the senior
level of the church, and that the fact that he hasn't wilted under the
attention proves he's got the right stuff to be pope.