Many are now calling for the next pope to have a proven
capacity for governance and what in management-speak is known as ‘global
fluency’.
So the electing cardinals might look to the business world
for lessons on how to choose their man.
On its management
blog, the magazine Business Week recently had an entry that compared
the Catholic Church’s selection of a new pope to a multi-national
company’s search for a chief executive.
Both business and the Church,
the blog’s author suggested, had suffered comparable reputational
damage; business in its financial excesses, the Church in its inept
handling of the child sex-abuse scandals.
Succession planning for both a
pope and a CEO in these circumstances means a search for a figure of
unusual gifts who can “get a grip”. One Vatican official even told The
Wall Street Journal that the Church needed a turnaround expert, “a
Carlos Ghosn”, the chief executive who rescued the fortunes of Nissan
cars.
The Church’s problems have been greatly exacerbated by the
fact that it has not had an administratively gifted pope in its recent
history. The last ones were Pius XII and his protégé Paul VI. John XXIII
and John Paul II were charismatic leaders, the latter, in Cardinal
Cormac Murphy-O’Connor’s words, a “world evangelist” with a style unlike
any previous pope, while Benedict XVI’s approach harked back to such
previous scholar popes as Pius XI.
The lack of an instinct for
governance in both John Paul II and Benedict XVI became a serious
problem for the Church, leaving it flat-footed and exposed when it was
faced with the full force of the child sex-abuse scandals, the
Vatican’s own finances and the VatiLeaks affair.
Neither Pope
had at his side a Cardinal Benelli, a figure of administrative genius,
who ran the Roman Curia for Paul VI. Under John Paul and Benedict, the
tidal flow of collegiality so desired by the Second Vatican Council was
checked. The primacy of the Curia reasserted itself with vigour, even as
the Curia’s serious flaws became glaringly evident.
At most
conclaves there is some inevitability about the progress to a final
vote. This time the cardinals have no straightforward options. An “ideal
type” candidate might have Pius XII or Paul VI’s instincts for
governance, John XXIII’s warmth, John Paul II’s evangelical charisma,
coupled with Benedict XVI’s intellectual qualities. Such a candidate is
unavailable.
But there are boxes the next pope will need to tick, and
the management sciences might help in defining them.
Governance
will be key. In Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor’s words, the Vatican has
to be “put in order”. This means choosing a pope who has a demonstrable
administrative record and who can impose discipline, efficiency and
business-like conduct in the Curia.
But if Vatican II’s desired
collegiality is ever to have a chance, the new pope has to be guileful
enough to overcome resistance in the Curia, while preserving a creative
tension between the Vatican and bishops around the world.
If the
capacity to govern is an essential requirement for the next pope, it
becomes hard to make a case for several of the candidates thought of as
papabile, for instance Cardinals Ravasi, Turkson, Braz de Aviz, and many
of the mooted figures from the developing world.
But if governance is
just one element in what the business world calls a “balanced
scorecard”, it makes sense to look at the other desirable elements.
The
quality of “global fluency” is a key requirement of a multinational CEO
and also a twenty-first-century pope. A globally fluent leader can
engage comfortably with a great range of cultural experiences. In some
ways, John Paul II has been the Pope who has most nearly done this.
But
his global fluency was more gestural than a fluency of intellect or
language – and perhaps the more effective for that. In contrast,
Benedict XVI had a “regional fluency”, a sharp grasp of the crisis
facing Catholicism in Western Europe, but without the same ready
instincts for the wider world. The new pope’s curial cardinals must also
share his fluency.
It is common ground in the business world
that leaders learn “global fluency”, or cultural intelligence, by living
in countries where the language spoken is not their own. There is a
lack of such fluency at the Church’s very centre and instead an
over-Italianised Curia.
Conventional wisdom has it that Italians best
understand the papacy and can use its levers to best effect, a view most
recently expressed by Cardinal George Pell. This assumes a versatility
in managerial and cultural skills notable by its absence in the Curia’s
recent history, and indeed in the ambient (and not irrelevant) realities
of Italian political culture.
The gene pool is simply too small.
Global
business leaders are expected to be self-aware and self-assured. A
healthy, resilient ego is also vital in the person of the pope. John
Paul I, and self-confessedly Benedict XVI in his remarks explaining why
he was resigning, struggled with the demands of office.
The College of
Cardinals will want assurance that its chosen candidate is “up for the
job” and unlikely to wilt under its strains. It may also want to ensure
that there are no reputational issues down the line, in either the
re-emergence of a mishandled controversy or personal complications (as
in the case of Cardinal Keith O’Brien).
The memory of John Paul
II’s charisma is likely to influence the choice. Charisma is not always
essential in a leader, but several cardinals have expressed a desire for
someone who with his personal qualities can dramatise – and bring alive
– the real essential, faith.
The job description therefore is for a
candidate who is orthodox, resilient, energetic, charismatic (or at
least with a degree of personal “presence”), administratively capable
and culturally sensitive, with an acute – and judicious – sense of how
to use the levers of Vatican power (with a sense of its limits) and who
can communicate the Church’s message.
In other times, this job spec
might have favoured a curial candidate, but if the Curia has become part
of the problem, the case for looking outside it is a strong one.
The
following list includes cardinals who might feature if the electors are
determined on a combination of cultural and managerial abilities. Two
are cardinals who have shown rare qualities in the face of the scandals
of clerical sex abuse.
Leonardo Sandri: Cultural breadth and huge
administrative competence. Affable, but not charismatic and lacks
pastoral experience. He is Argentine-Italian and speaks English, French,
German, Italian and Spanish. Spent three years in the Vatican’s
Washington embassy. Now prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental
Churches. Sostituto (chief of staff) in the Secretariat of State, a post
once held by Paul VI marking him as the fastest of the Vatican’s
diplomatic fast stream. Major drawback is perceived to be past closeness
to Legionaries of Christ founder Marcial Maciel.
Angelo Scola:
Personal charm, pastorally gifted and may have more intellectual heft
than any of the others. Along with cultural breadth, he has energy and
resilience. One-time rector of the Lateran University. Proved himself a
decisive and vigorous Patriarch of Venice, setting up cultural and
educational projects and opening new routes to dialogue with Eastern
Christians and the Islamic world. But an outsider among the Italian
cardinals, some of whom may distrust his links to Comunione et
Liberazione, and a dense thinker. Likely to be Benedict XVI’s preferred
candidate. The question is whether he can communicate a clear, globally
fluent vision of the Church.
Christoph Schönborn: The Archbishop
of Vienna was reportedly a king-maker at the last conclave and will be a
likely decisive figure at the next. A man of intellect and
sophistication, he has shown flair in managing the tensions of his own
troubled Church, communicating the Roman line while keeping contact open
to dissenting Austrian Catholics. In an election in which all will be
mindful of the Vatican’s management of the clerical sex scandals,
Schönborn, who has shown sure-footedness and emotional intelligence in
the face of specific scandals, must be a serious candidate.
Luis
Antonio Tagle: Emerging Filipino star of the College of Cardinals and a
figure of immense charisma. Has studied in the US and is associated with
the School of Bologna’s assessment of the Second Vatican Council, which
has been out of favour in the recent pontificate. Has been a forceful
Archbishop of Manila. Ticks many cultural boxes and might be the
strongest of the developing world candidates. But not much evidence of
being tested to manage adversity.
Odilo Pedro Scherer: Archbishop
of São Paulo, one of the world’s largest dioceses, and a man of German
immigrant extraction. He has Roman experience having studied at the
Congregation of Bishops, and administrative experience from his time as
secretary general of the Brazilian bishops’ conference. But not enough
evidence that he has been an effective leader. Failed to stem
Pentecostalist and secularist tides in his own diocese. Being backed
strongly by members of the Curia.
Marc Ouellet: Witnessed at
first hand the fracturing and marginalisation of the Church in his
native Quebec. Has cultural breadth, and is an intellectual, but his
greatest experience was as a seminary professor. Has made a marginal
impact as Archbishop of Quebec. Recently was prefect for the
Congregation of Bishops but if capacity and taste for governance is a
defining quality, he may not feature in the eventual reckoning.
Sean
O’Malley: The Cardinal Archbishop of Boston is appearing on lists of
papabili with subtle tide of approval running in the Italian press. His
Franciscan habit somehow negates his Americanness, making him a more
global figure. Has shown leadership and rare courage in the face of
scandals in the US Church. Culturally versatile, speaks Italian,
Spanish, French and Portuguese and has a strong knowledge of both the
Latin American Church and his own country’s Latino communities. He
embodies qualities of governance and of global awareness. Questions may
be asked about his resilience and ability to endure if appointed.