Benedict's "spiritual son": Christoph
Cardinal Schönborn
The son
of German aristocrats, the Cardinal is well educated and multilingual
Mar 06, 2013
Fr Dwight Longenecker
One of the fascinating
details to emerge when considering the cardinals of the Catholic Church is the
vast range not only of nationalities, but also of educational and social
backgrounds. Here the son of a truck driver, there the son of a peasant worker.
Here the boy of a middle class family from the developed world, there a boy of
South American factory workers. Here a child of an American farmer, there the
scion of an aristocratic European dynasty.
Christoph Cardinal
Schönborn is a member of the venerable Bohemian noble family of
Schönborn-Buchheim-Wolfstahl. Through the years the family has produced two
cardinals and 19 archbishops, bishops, priests, and religious sisters. He
follows in the footsteps of his great-great uncle, Franz Graf Cardinal Schönborn,
who was also the leader of the Austrian episcopacy.
After the Second World
War, the Schönborn family was forced to flee from Bohemia. Christoph
entered the Dominican Order in 1963 and studied theology in Paris and
philosophy and psychology in Bornheim-Walberberg. He did further studies at the
Catholic Institute of Paris and studied Slavic and Byzantine Christianity at
the Sorbonne. He was a student of Fr. Joseph Ratzinger at Regensburg, completed a doctorate in Sacred Theology in
Paris, and taught theology at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. He is
fluent in seven languages and is well known as the general editor of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church.
As Archbishop of Vienna,
Cardinal Schönborn has had a stormy ride. Dealing with a Church in turmoil, he
helped steady the boat after a sex abuse scandal, but then seemed impotent to
deal with a high level open rebellion amongst liberal clergy who are demanding
reform in the Church over issues such as celibacy and women’s ordination. He’s
also had clashes with high level Vatican officials and has been criticized for
interfering in internal disputes in areas of the Church beyond his authority.
What would a Schönborn
papacy look like? He certainly has the intellectual acumen to lead the Church.
He’s been called Benedict XVI’s “spiritual son,” so he would be a conservative
and reliable as a defender of the faith. He is not only an accomplished
academic, but he communicates well with ordinary people. He’s a polished
performer with the media – articulate, popular, and able to relate to people of
many different backgrounds, including youth.
Schönborn is active in
the New Evangelization, and is a keen proponent of new mission and spiritual
movements that attract the young. I met Cardinal Schönborn while visiting
Vienna as part of a large conference on the New Evangelization. He spoke well
and with passion, and he was at home with the many young people who wanted to
listen and speak with him. With his many languages, and his skill in
communications, he would be at home on the big stage with top billing. He would
be able to carry the large set pieces of the papacy in a way that Benedict XVI,
in his reserved way, was not.
The problem is that
Schönborn often seems to take one position, get involved in a problem, put a
foot wrong, then try to make amends. There is an ambiguity and uncertainty
about him that is troubling. Was his handling of crises in his
archdiocese an example of weak and ineffectual leadership, or was he pastorally
sensitive – prepared to listen and compromise and work behind the scenes to
maintain unity? Such ambiguity might mean he lacks the backbone to initiate the
reform that the Church needs at this time.
In Cardinal Schönborn, we
would have an intellectual European aristocrat leading the Church. Although he
has seven languages and a keen interest and education about the Eastern Church,
does he have the foreign experience necessary to lead the global Church? Does
the Church need another German-speaking intellectual, or do we need a leader
from the developing world? Does she need an aristocrat born in a castle and
educated at the best schools, or does the Church need a man with
a common touch – the son of a truck driver? the son of a farmer?
Perhaps these questions
are irrelevant. The Catholic priesthood is a great leveler; questions of family
origin and background become less significant the higher a man rises in the
ranks. The scarlet robes of the cardinals have a way of making them all very
equal. Should Cardinal Schönborn be elected pope by the power of the Holy
Spirit, he would be able to overcome the limitations of his aristocratic
ancestry just as much as the son of a peasant may overcome his own set of
obstacles.
This is ultimately the
job of the electors: to weigh up a man’s qualifications, his social and ethnic
background, his experience and relationships, the needs of the whole Church,
and then to discern that extra ‘something’ – those indefinable spiritual
qualities that separate out that one man who goes into the “Room of Tears” to
don the white cassock.
Fr. Dwight Longenecker is
the Parish Priest of Our Lady of the Rosary Church in Greenville, South
Carolina. Be in touch, connect with his blog, and browse his books at www.dwightlongenecker.com.
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