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Former Archbishop of Milan Dies at 85 (1760)

The funeral Mass for the late cardinal will be held Sept. 3 in Milan’s cathedral.

09/01/2012 Comments (6)

MILAN, Italy—Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, the Archbishop Emeritus of Milan, Italy, died Aug. 31 at the age of 85 after a long battle with Parkinson's Disease.

The funeral Mass for the late cardinal will be held Sept. 3 in Milan’s cathedral.

Known for his expertise in Biblical studies, Cardinal Martini was being treated at a Jesuit-run clinic in the city of Gallarte, near Milan. He died at 3:45 p.m. local time on Aug. 31, after his condition took a turn for the worse the evening before.



Dr. Gianni Pezzoli, a specialist in neurology who led the team of doctors treating the cardinal, said he recently began experiencing difficulties with digestion but that Cardinal Martini remained alert until the end and refused any extraordinary treatments.



The current Archbishop of Milan, Cardinal Angelo Scola, urged the residents of his archdiocese to pray for the late cardinal.



Cardinal Martini was born on Feb. 15, 1927, in Turin and entered the Jesuit Order in 1944. He was ordained a priest in 1952 in Chieri and was named Archbishop of Milan in 1979.

He served as archbishop for 20 years, promoting biblical studies and dialogue with renowned intellectuals in the city.

On Feb. 2, 1983, he was made a cardinal by Blessed Pope John Paul II.



Cardinal Martini held a doctorate in Theology and Sacred Scripture and served as rector of the Pontifical Biblical Institute and the Gregorian Pontifical University.

He wrote various books on the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola, such as “The Ignatian Exercises in Light of the Gospel of St. John,” “The Spiritual Itinerary of the Twelve in the Gospel of St. Marcos,” and “The Ignatian Exercises in Light of the Gospel of St. Matthew,” among others.



The late cardinal was a member various curial offices, including the Congregation for the Eastern Churches, the Congregation for the Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, and the Congregation for Catholic Education.  He was also a member of the Pontifical Council for Culture and the Commission for the Cultural Patrimony of the Church.



After reaching the age of 75 in 2002, he retired as Archbishop of Milan and moved to Jerusalem to devote himself to the study of Sacred Scripture and to continue writing about the Bible. In recent years he maintained contact with the faithful through a question and answer column in the Italian newspaper Il Corriere della Sera.

 

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If the reports I’m reading of Cardinal Martini’s last interview are correct,he wanted to do away with the Catholic Church, and replace it with a new Church that would be called Catholic. Apparently, he believed the “spirit of Vatican two” had not gone far enough in eviscerating the Church that the Christ established. He was a heretic, who will be hailed as the true Catholic voice instead of the Pope, by dissident publications like “The National Catholic Reporter”. I pray that his ilk never get their hands on the Church again.

I notice that the article failed to mention that in his last interview, the Cardinal stated that “the Church was 200 years out of date,” and he went on to list the reasons.

Seems you’ve missed the “news” in this story.

http://ncronline.org/news/people/just-death-martini-church-200-years-out-date

Saturday’s Corriere della Sera has a very interesing interview with His Emminence that took place just before he died.  What are we to make of what he said?

So many of us who were lucky enough to be educated by the Jesuits can relate to this fine priest. Cardinal, Bishop, Educator, and Administrator. He preferred to speak to folks in his black Jesuit suit wearing the Pectoral Cross as his only indication of a life’s work. ‘Lucky’ is the word we use for those times.

This is for David Dickey, from the Catholic News Service:

  The late Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini was a “generous and faithful pastor of the church,” who not only studied the Bible, “but loved it intensely and made it the light of his life,” Pope Benedict XVI said.

In a message read at Cardinal Martini’s funeral Sept. 3 in Milan, where the cardinal had served as archbishop from 1979-2002, the pope said the Jesuit cardinal’s love of Scripture enabled him “to teach believers and those searching for truth that God’s word is the only word worthy of being listened to, accepted and followed.”

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