Augustin Bea

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His Eminence
Augustin Bea
Cardinal-Deacon of San Saba
CardinalBea.jpg
Appointed 17 December 1959
Term ended 16 November 1968
Predecessor None
Successor Jean Daniélou
Orders
Ordination 25 August 1912
by Hermann Jürgens
Consecration 19 April 1962
by Pope John XXIII
Created Cardinal 14 December 1959
by Pope John XXIII
Rank Cardinal-Deacon
Personal details
Birth name Augustin Bea
Born (1881-05-28)28 May 1881
Riedböhringen, Germany
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Rome, Italy
Nationality German
Denomination Roman Catholic
Previous post
Motto In nomine domini Jesu (In the name of Jesus)
Coat of arms {{{coat_of_arms_alt}}}

Augustin Bea, S.J. (28 May 1881 - 16 November 1968), was a German Jesuit priest and scholar at the Pontifical Gregorian University specialising in biblical studies and biblical archeology. He also served as the personal confessor of Pope Pius XII.

In 1959, Pope John XXIII made him a cardinal of the Catholic Church. He served as the first president of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity from 1960 until his death. Bea was a leading biblical scholar and ecumenist, who greatly influenced Christian-Jewish relations during the Second Vatican Council in Nostra aetate. Bea published several books, mostly in Latin, and 430 articles.

Biography

Styles of
Augustin Bea
60px
Reference style His Eminence
Spoken style Your Eminence
Informal style Cardinal
See Germania in Numidia (titular)

Bea was born in Riedböhringen, today a part of Blumberg, Baden-Württemberg; his father was a carpenter. He studied at the Universities of Freiburg, Innsbruck, Berlin, and at Valkenburg, the Jesuit house of studies in the Netherlands. On 18 April 1902, he joined the Society of Jesus, as he "was much inclined to the scholarly life".[1] Bea was ordained a priest on 25 August 1912, and finished his studies in 1914. He then served as Superior of the Jesuit residence in Aachen until 1917, at which time he began teaching Scripture at Valkenburg. From 1921 to 1924, Bea was the provincial superior of Germany. Superior General Wlodimir Ledochowski then sent him to Rome, where he worked as the Superior of the Biennial House of Formation (1924–1928), professor at the Pontifical Biblical Institute (1924–1949), and rector of the Institute of Superior Ecclesiastical Studies (1924–1930). In 1930, Bea was named rector of the Pontifical Biblical Institute, a post in which he remained for nineteen years.

Raised to the rank of cardinal before his episcopal consecration, Bea was created Cardinal-Deacon of S. Saba by Pope John XXIII in the consistory of 14 December 1959. On 6 June 1960, he was appointed the first president of the newly formed Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, a Curial organisation charged with ecumenical affairs. It was not until two years later that, on 5 April 1962, Cardinal Bea was appointed a bishop: the Titular Archbishop of Germania in Numidia. He received his consecration on the following 19 April from John XXIII himself, with Cardinals Giuseppe Pizzardo and Benedetto Aloisi Masella serving as co-consecrators, in the Lateran Basilica. He resigned his post as titular archbishop in 1963, one year after the Second Vatican Council was convened.

Cardinal Bea was one of the electors in the 1963 papal conclave, which selected Pope Paul VI, and was confirmed as the President of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity (renamed the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity by Pope John Paul II on 28 June 1988) on 3 January 1966.

Cardinal Bea liked to visit his native Black Forest

Cardinal Bea died from a bronchial infection in Rome, at age 87.[2] He was buried in the apse of the parish church of Saint Genesius[disambiguation needed] in his native Riedböhringen, where there is a museum honoring him.

Impact and legacy

Bea was highly influential at the Vatican II Council in the 1960s as a decisive force in the drafting of Nostra aetate, which repudiated anti-Semitism. In 1963, he held secret talks with Abraham Joshua Heschel, promoting Catholic-Jewish dialogue.[3] John Borelli, a Vatican II historian, has observed that, "It took the will of John XXIII and the perseverance of Cardinal Bea to impose the declaration on the Council".[4] During a session of the Central Preparatory Commission, he also rejected the proposition that the Council Fathers take an oath composed of the Nicene Creed and the Anti-Modernist Oath.[5] After Alfredo Ottaviani, the heavily conservative head of the Holy Office, presented his draft of the schema on the sources of Divine Revelation, Bea claimed that it "would close the door to intellectual Europe and the outstretched hands of friendship in the old and new world".[6] He served on numerous ecumenical bodies and was the author of nine works, including The Church and the Jewish People (New York: Harper & Row, 1966).

Bea was a confessor to Pope Pius XII for a short time. The encyclical Divino afflante Spiritu was very much shaped by Bea and Jacques-Marie Voste, O.P. (secretary of the Pontifical Biblical Commission).[7][8]

When Pius XII proposed appointing Bea to the College of Cardinals in 1946, Superior General Jean-Baptiste Janssens spoke out against it, as many felt the Holy See was showing preferential treatment to the Jesuits.[9] He had for some time, among his theological advisers, Jesuit priest Malachi Martin.[10] Among the other offices, Bea was a consultor to several Roman congregations.

Poem of the Man God

As confessor to Pope Pius XII, Bea was instrumental in bypassing the Vatican hierarchy to help Father Corrado Berti deliver a copy of the book Poem of the Man God to Pope Pius XII when Father Berti approached both Bea and Msgr. Alphonso Carinci with a typed copy of the manuscript of Maria Valtorta's writings in 1947.[11][12] With Bea's assistance the manuscript was thus delivered to Pius XII and Father Berti, and Father Migliorini were granted a papal audience,[13] in which Pius XII reportedly gave his verbal approval for the book's publication.[14] However, Bea was a consultor of the Holy Office at the time it condemned the book, as was Dominican theologian Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange[15]

Awards

1954 Grand Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
Grand Cross of the French Legion of Honour
Grand Cross of the Greek Order of George I
1960 Grand Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
1965 International Prize for the brotherhood of the Fellowship Commission (International Fellowship Award), Philadelphia, Pa. / USA
1966 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, along with Visser 't Hooft
1967 Human Relations Award for the Society for Family of Man (New York)

Published works

Augustin Bea published 430 articles in the years 1918–1968. They dealt with archeological issues, exegesis of Old Testament texts, Mariology, papal encyclicals, the unity of Christians, anti-Semitism, Vatican II, relations to Protestantism and the eastern Orthodox Churches, and ecumenicism.

Among his books :

  • Maria in der Offenbarung Katholische Marienkunde Bd. I Hugo Rahner, Augustin Bea, Schöningh, Paderborn, 1947
  • Imagen de Maria en la Antigua Alianza, Buenos Aires, Revista Biblica,1954
  • De Pentateucho Institutiones Biblicaa Scholis Accomodatae, Romae, 1933
  • De Inspiratione Sacrae Scripturae, Romae, 1935
  • Archeologica biblica, Romae, 1939
  • La nuova traduzione Latina del Salterio, Romae 1946
  • Liber Ecclesiasticae qui ab Hebraeis appelatur Qohelet, Romae, 1950
  • Canticum Canticorum Salamonis, Romae, 1953
  • Cor Jesu Commentationes in Litteras encyclicas Pii Papae XII Haurietis Aquas, Herder Freiburg 1959
  • Die Kirche und das judische Volk, (German Translation of La Chiesa e il popolo ebraico) Herder Freiburg 1966

References

Further reading

  • Malachi Martin: Three Popes and the Cardinal, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 1972, ISBN 0-374-27675-7
  • Stjepan Schmidt: Augustin Cardinal Bea: spiritual profile (notes from the Cardinal’s diary), London, Geoffrey Chapman, 1971, 298pp.
  • Stjepan Schmidt: Augustin Bea, the cardinal of unity, New-York, 1992.

External links