

Angelo Cardinal Scola, Patriarch of Venice, wearing the bishop's
cope and
mitre.
Styles of Angelo Cardinal Scola |
 |
| Reference style | His Eminence |
| Spoken style | Your Eminence |
| Informal style | Cardinal |
| See | Venice| |
His Eminence Cardinal Angelo Scola,
Ph.D,
Th.D, (born
November 7,
1941) is an
Italian prelate of the
Catholic Church,
philosopher and
theologian. He currently serves as
Patriarch of Venice, and was elevated to the
cardinalate in
2003.
Scola is the author of numerous
theological and
pedagogical works on topics such as
bio-medical ethics,
theological anthropology,
human sexuality and
marriage and the
family, which have been translated into several different languages. In addition, he is the author of more than 120 articles published in scholarly
journals of
philosophy and theology. He inaugurated the
Studium Generale Marcianum, an academic institute, and the journal
Oasis, published in
Italian,
English and
Arabic as an outreach to Christians in the
Muslim world.
In his pastoral capacity as
bishop, Scola has paid particular attention to the issues of
education,
youth,
clergy formation, renewal of
parish life, pastoral care of workers,
culture and the family.
Scola's episcopal
motto is
Sufficit gratia tua ("Your grace is sufficient",
2 Corinthians 12:9).
Biography
He was born in
Malgrate,
Lombardy, to Carlo Scola, a truck driver, and Regina Colombo. He was the younger of two sons; Pietro, his elder brother, died in 1983. He attended
high school at the
Manzoni lyceum in
Lecco, where he participated in the youth movement
Gioventù Studentesca (Student Youth).
He studied
philosophy at the
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in
Milan from
1964 to
1967, obtaining his
doctorate with a
dissertation on Christian philosophy. During this time served as Vice-President and thereafter President of the Milanese diocesan chapter of FUCI (
Federazione Universitaria Cattolica Italiana, the university student wing of
Catholic Action.
Following study at the Saronno and Venegono
seminaries in Milan, Scola was
ordained to the
priesthood on
July 18,
1970 in
Teramo by Bishop Abele Conigli of Teramo-Atri. He subsequently attained a second
doctorate in theology from the
University of Fribourg in
Switzerland. He wrote his dissertation on
St. Thomas Aquinas. An active collaborator in the
Comunione e Liberazione (
Communion and Liberation) movement from the early
1970s, Scola collaborated in the founding of the journal
Communio with
Henri de Lubac and
Hans Urs von Balthasar (and conducted book-length interviews with them both).
After periods of study in
Munich and
Paris and time spent in pastoral work Scola returned to Fribourg to work as research assistant to the chair of political philosophy at Friburg from
1979 and thereafter Assistant Professor of Fundamental Moral Theology, a position he held until
1982 when he was appointed Professor of Theological Anthropology at the
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in
Rome and Professor of Contemporary Christology at the
Pontifical Lateran University. From
1986 to
1991 Scola served the
Roman Curia as consultor to the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. At the various institutes where he taught he promoted the establishment of bursaries to enable foreign students, particularly those from poorer countries, to study in Italy.
Episcopacy
He was named
Bishop of Grosseto on
July 18,
1991, and was consecrated by
Bernardin Cardinal Gantin (with Bishops Abele Conigli and Adelmo Tacconi serving as co-consecrators) on the following
September 21. As Bishop of Grosseto he promoted a renewal of catechesis in the diocese. Among Scola's chief pastoral concerns in Grosseto were the education of children and youths, vocations and clergy formation (he re-opened the diocesan seminary), new approaches to parish life, the pastoral care of labourers (particularly during the difficult period of the dismantling of mines in Grosseto), culture and the family, and the opening of a diocesan mission in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. During this period he wrote and published a book aimed at young people on the subject of the educative mission of the Church.
He subsequently resigned as bishop of Grosseto to serve as rector of the
Pontifical Lateran University in
Rome and President of the
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in Rome, with a term spent as visiting professor at the counterpart Institute in
Washington, D.C., during which time he wrote a monograph on the theology of von Balthasar. From 1995 until the death of John Paul II in 2005 he was a member of the
Congregation for the Clergy. He also served as member of the Episcopal Commission for Catholic Education of the Italian Bishops' Conference and, from 1996, as president of the Committee for Institutes of Religious Studies which addresses questions of the theological formation of the laity in Italy.
From 1996 to 2001 Scola was a member of the Pontifical Council for Health Workers and wrote several texts on issues around health care. In 1996 he was named a consultant to the Pontifical Institute of the Family.
He was appointed
Patriarch of Venice on
January 5,
2002, elected President of the Bishops’ Conference of the Triveneta region on
April 9,
2002 and created Cardinal-Priest of
Santi XII Apostoli on
October 21,
2003. After the death of Pope John Paul II in
2005, Scola was considered to be among the
papabili in the
2005 papal conclave. Srđa Trifković supported him vigorously in
Chronicles because he saw him as the only man who might reverse what paleoconservatives see as a the decay of European culture. It is quite probable that Scola's relative youth told against his chances after such a long papacy: the conclave elected Joseph Ratzinger as
Pope Benedict XVI. Cardinal Scola will be eligible to vote in any future
papal conclaves that occur prior to his 80th birthday in 2021.
Works
- Hans Urs Von Balthasar: A Theological Style Eerdmans Publishing Company (September 1, 1995) ISBN 0-8028-0894-8
- The Nuptial Mystery Eerdmans Publishing Company (February 15, 2005) ISBN 0-8028-2831-0
Online texts
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