- Giacomo Lercaro
infobox cardinalstyles
cardinal name=Giacomo Lercaro
dipstyle=His Eminence
offstyle=Your Eminence
relstyle=Cardinal
See=Bologna|Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro (
October 28 ,1891 —October 18 ,1976 ) was an Italianprelate of theRoman Catholic Church . He served as Archbishop of Ravenna from 1947 to 1952, and Archbishop of Bologna from 1952 to 1968. Lercaro was elevated to the cardinalate in 1953 byPope Pius XII .Biography
Giacomo Lercaro was born in Quinto al Mare,
Genoa , as the eighth of nine chidren. He came from a family of seamen, and two of his brothers, Amedeo and Attilio, also entered religion. From 1902 to 1914, Lercaro attended the archdiocesanseminary in Genoa. He was ordained a priest onJuly 25 , 1914 by Archbishop Ildefonso Pisani, and four months later, in November, traveled toRome to study at thePontifical Biblical Institute . WhenItaly enteredWorld War I , Lercaro was forced to change posts and become a militarychaplain until the war ended in 1917. In 1918, he became Prefect of the Seminary of Genoa, where his brother Amedeo wasrector , and would remain in that post until 1923. He also served as substitute professor oftheology (1921-1923) andprofessor of Sacred Scripture and Patrology (1923-1927). In 1927 he became a teacher of religion in secondary school and became involved in numerous student movements in the Genoa district.His involvement in these student movements gave Lercaro a great interest in engaging Catholic theology with modern culture, and during the war he became one of the most prominent anti-Fascists within the Church, preaching steadfastly against
Nazism and offering support in his home for those persecuted by Mussolini—most notably forItalian Jews whose persecution began as a result of Italy's collaboration withNazi Germany . At one point duringWorld War II Lercaro was forced to operate under the alias of "Father Lorenzo Gusmini" and live in a vacant monastery cell to avoid being killed by Nazi collaborators.Lercaro's reputation as an outspoken critic of Communism is believed to be a contributing factor in
Pope Pius XII 's decision to make him the firstArchbishop of Ravenna (January 31 ,1947 ) and then the twentieth Archbishop of Bologna (April 19 ,1952 ), both considered among the largest Italian cities under Communist rule. He received his episcopal consecration onMarch 19 , 1947 from Archbishop Giuseppe Siri, with Archbishop Angleo Rossini and Bishop Francesco Canessa serving as co-consecrators. In theconsistory ofJanuary 12 ,1953 , Lercaro was created Cardinal Priest of "Santa Maria in Traspontina " by Pius XII.During his early years as a cardinal, Lercaro established his first contacts with Angelo Roncalli and became well-known for the way in which he turned his episcopal palace into an
orphanage . Although he had been seen by Vatican-watchers ever since 1953 as a possible successor to Pius XII and was listed by "l'Osservatore Romano " as a "papabile", his reputation as the most idiosyncratic of all the Cardinals and the desire for a transitional pontiff saw him passed over.Even though Lercaro felt that Pope John was moving much too quickly when he first announced the
Second Vatican Council in late 1959, he later sat on its Board of Presidency and became regarded as one of the main architects of the Council's liturgical reforms. Cardinal Lercaro was also the first to popularise the theory of a "church of the poor" that developed further in Latin America during the 1970s.During his tenure of archbishop ofBologna where the most popular political party was The communist Party he tried to build a dialogue with the member of this party.Generally considered "
papabile " in the 1963 papal conclave closest to the vision of John XXIII, Lercaro, however, was considered too liberal by most of his fellow cardinal electors to be elected; Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montini ultimately won. Although Cardinal Lercaro did much vital work in the implementation of the Council after it closed in 1965, his advancing age saw him gradually disappear from prominence within the Church as the 1960s drew to a close. OnFebruary 12 ,1968 , Cardinal Lercaro stepped down from his position as Archbishop of Bologna and in 1971 he lost his right to participate in any future conclave upon reaching the age of eighty according to the then-recentmotu proprio Ingravescentem aetatem .Lercaro died from a cardiac crisis at 3:00 p.m. in Bologna, ten days short of his 85th birthday. He was buried in the metropolitan cathedral of that city.
External links
* [http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios-l.htm#Lercaro Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church biography]
* [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/blercaro.html Catholic-Hierarchy profile]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,839662,00.html TIME Magazine - Who Fired the Cardinal?]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,818066,00.html TIME Magazine - The Cardinal's Comeback]
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