Jean Daniélou (original) (raw)

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French Jesuit theologian and cardinal (1905–1974)

His EminenceJean DaniélouS.J.
Cardinal-Deacon of San Saba
Daniélou in Florence with the mayor, Giorgio La Pira (left) in 1953.
Church Catholic Church
Appointed 30 April 1969
Predecessor Augustin Bea
Successor Joseph Schröffer
Previous post(s) Titular Archbishop of Taormina (1969)
Orders
Ordination 20 August 1938
Consecration 19 April 1969by François Marty
Created cardinal 28 April 1969by Pope Paul VI
Personal details
Born Jean-Guenolé-Marie Daniélou(1905-05-14)14 May 1905Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
Died 20 May 1974(1974-05-20) (aged 69)Paris, France
Motto Fluvium aquæ vitæ("The stream of the water of life")
Coat of arms Jean Daniélou's coat of arms

Jean-Guenolé-Marie Daniélou S.J. (French: [danjelu]; 14 May 1905 – 20 May 1974) was a French Jesuit and cardinal, an internationally well known patrologist, theologian and historian and a member of the Académie française.

Early life and studies

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Jean-Guenolé-Marie Daniélou was born on 14 May 1905 in Neuilly-sur-Seine. He was the son of Charles Daniélou and Madeleine Clamorgan. His father was an anticlerical politician who several times as a minister served in the French government, while his mother was a Catholic educator and the founder of institutions for women's education. His brother Alain (1907–1994) was a noted Indologist and historian.

Daniélou studied at the Sorbonne and passed his agrégation in grammar in 1927. He joined the Society of Jesus in 1929 and during his regency taught at a boys' school in Poitiers, from 1934 to 1936. He then studied theology at Fourvière in Lyon under Henri de Lubac, who introduced him to the specialized study of the Fathers of the Church. He was ordained a priest on 19 August 1938.[1]

Priesthood, episcopate and cardinalate

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During World War II, Daniélou served with the Air Force in 1939–1940. With the fall of France to Nazi Germany he was returned to civilian life and began doctoral studies, completing in 1942 his thesis on the spiritual doctrine of Gregory of Nyssa. He was then appointed chaplain to the female section of the École Normale Supérieure, at Sèvres. He spent most of his time on research in patristics, and he became, together with Henri de Lubac, one of the founders of the Sources Chrétiennes book series. In 1944 he was named Professor of Early Christian History at the Institut Catholique de Paris, later becoming dean there. Beginning in the 1950s he produced several historical studies which included The Bible and the Liturgy, The Lord of History, and From Shadows to Reality that furnished background for the development of Covenantal Theology.[2]

Thoroughly grounded in the Fathers of the Church, who worked from Scripture, Daniélou generally avoided the neo-Thomistic terminology and approach and used a more relational vocabulary, emphasizing our self-gift in response to God's gift in Jesus Christ, with the gradual unveiling of the Trinitarian life in history.[3]

Pope John XXIII appointed Daniélou a peritus of the Second Vatican Council.[4] In 1969 Pope Paul VI made him a cardinal. As a result, he was ordained to the episcopal titular see of Taormina, and assigned the title of Cardinal-Deacon of San Saba, a Jesuit-run parish in Rome.[5] Rather like his theology professor Henri de Lubac, Daniélou twice refused the cardinalate but eventually accepted at the insistence of Paul VI.[1] He was elected to the Académie Française on 9 November 1972 to succeed Cardinal Eugène Tisserant.[4]

He died unexpectedly in 1974 in the home of a woman who was alleged to be a prostitute. The Society of Jesus, after an investigation, stated that Daniélou was bringing a gift of money to pay for the bail of the woman's husband. Like a number of other prominent public figures, Daniélou's brother defended him strongly, pointing out that he had always gone out of his way to serve those in most need.[6][7]

A number of Daniélou's works on the early Church, often abridged for a popular audience, remain in print.

French works, with English translations

Other works

Other English translations

  1. ^ a b "Jean Guénolé Louis Marie Cardinal Daniélou, S.J." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Jean Daniélou". goodreads.com. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  3. ^ "Jean Daniélou and the "Master-Key to Christian Theology" | Carl E. Olson | 21 August 2007". ignatiusinsight.com. Archived from the original on 2 August 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Academie-francaise bio". Archived from the original on 20 July 2006. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  5. ^ Salvador Miranda. "Daniélou, S.J., Jean". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  6. ^ "Jean had always dedicated himself to disregarded people. For a certain period he had celebrated a Mass for homosexuals. He tried to help prisoners, criminals, troubled young people, prostitutes." Alain Daniélou.
  7. ^ "Despising Jean Danielou | Matthew Schmitz".