PropertyValue
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rdfs:label
  • Stanisław Nagy
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  • Stanisław Nagy, SCI (September 30, 1921 in Bieruń Stary near Katowice, Poland, of a Hungarian father and Polish mother) is a member of the Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Dehonians) and a Cardinal. He entered the Congregation of the Dehonian Fathers in 1937. On 8 July 1945 he was ordained a priest for the Order. He served as rector of the Dehonian Fathers' Minor Seminary in Kraków-Płaszów and of the Major Seminary in Tarnów. He taught at the Catholic University of Lublin where, in 1972, he became professor.
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dipstyle
  • His Eminence
Date
  • August 2009
Bot
  • yes
cardinal name
  • Stanisław Nagy
offstyle
  • Your Eminence
See
  • none
abstract
  • Stanisław Nagy, SCI (September 30, 1921 in Bieruń Stary near Katowice, Poland, of a Hungarian father and Polish mother) is a member of the Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Dehonians) and a Cardinal. He entered the Congregation of the Dehonian Fathers in 1937. On 8 July 1945 he was ordained a priest for the Order. He served as rector of the Dehonian Fathers' Minor Seminary in Kraków-Płaszów and of the Major Seminary in Tarnów. He taught at the Catholic University of Lublin where, in 1972, he became professor. From 1973 to 1974 he was a member of the Joint Catholic-Lutheran Commission. He also served as a member of the International Theological Commission and as director of the Ecumenical Theology section on the editorial staff of the Catholic Encyclopaedia of the University of Lublin. He took part in the Synods of 1981 and 1985. Concerned with the issue of ecumenism, he has written on the post-conciliar Church's openness to other Confessions. He is the author of many books on John Paul II, with whom he had been a long-time collaborator. Preconized Cardinal, he was elected to the titular church of Hólar, with the personal title of Archbishop, on 7 October 2003 and consecrated on 13 October. Created and proclaimed Cardinal by John Paul II in the Consistory of 21 October 2003, of the Deaconry of St. Mary della Scala (his titular church in Rome, in the Trastevere district).