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Giuseppe Pecci was elevated to the College of Cardinals by his brother, Pope Leo XIII in 1879[1]

Giuseppe Pecci S.J. (13 December 1807—8 February 1890) was a Catholic Thomist theologian whose younger brother, Vincenzo, became Pope Leo XIII and appointed him a cardinal. The Neo-Thomist revival, which Leo XIII and his brother Giuseppe originated in 1879, remained the leading papal philosophy until Vatican II.

Early Years[]

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Count Dominico Ludovico Pecci, father of Giuseppe and Vincenzo Pecci

Born in Carpineto Romano, near Rome, Giuseppe was one of the seven sons of Count Dominico Ludovico Pecci and his wife Anna Prosperi Buzi. From 1807 to 1818 he lived at home with his family, in which religion counted as the highest grace on earth, as through her, salvation can be earned for all eternity.[2] Together with his younger brother Vincenzo, he studied in the Jesuit College in Viterbo, where he stayed until 1824.[3]

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Anna Prosperi, Countess Pecci

In 1824, he and Vincenzo were called to Rome, where their mother was dying. Count Pecci wanted his children to be with him after the loss of his wife, and so they remained in Rome, attending the Jesuit Collegium Romanum. In 1828, the question of occupational choice arose for the two brothers; Giuseppe Pecci entered the Jesuit order, while Vincenzo decided in favour of secular clergy.[4] Giuseppe entered the Jesuit College in Viterbo in 1818.[5] In 1825, at the age of 17, he became a member of the Society of Jesus.

Professor[]

Pecci taught Thomism, the theology and philosophy of St Thomas Aquinas, at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome in 1847. At the request of his brother, who became Archbishop of Perugia, he was made a professor at the theological seminary in Perugia, where he remained, from 1852 through 1859. After the city was taken over by Piedmont forces in 1860, Pope Pius IX called him to Rome and offered him a professorship in theology at La Sapienza University. Pope Pius also called him into the papal commission to prepare the First Vatican Council. Good Thomist theology was hard to come by at that time, with the result that young scholars from other countries were sent to Rome to learn from Pecci and Tommaso Maria Zigliara.[6] In 1870 he resigned his professsorship because he refused to take the anti-papal oath which was demanded by the new Italian government. He continued his prominent theological research independently.

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Giuseppe, Cardinal Pecci. Throughout his life, he refused to be photographed: he considered painting a far superior and more benevolent presentation of a human being.[7]

Cardinal[]

In 1879, the College of Cardinals, led by Camillo, Cardinal di Pietro, insistently asked Pope Leo XIII to elevate his brother to their ranks,[8][9][10] and at the age of 72 Giuseppe Pecci was created Cardinal-Deacon of Sant'Agata dei Goti on 12 May 1879 in his brother's first consistory. He was the last member of a Pope's family elevated to the cardinalate.

The ceremony was described by Ludwig von Pastor in his diary: On May 15 at 11 a.m., Pope Leo XIII entered the hall in pontifical vestments, before him the College of Cardinals. The Swiss Guards stood to attention. After the Papal speech, each of the new cardinals, Pecci, John Henry Newman, Joseph Hergenröther and Tommaso Maria Zigliara, received the red hat, all of whom being well-known Church scholars.[11]

Thomism[]

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Carpineto in 1860

The elevation of Pecci, a well-known Thomist, took place in the context of the determined efforts of Leo XIII to foster science and Thomist theology throughout the Catholic Church[1]. Thomism had lost its role as a leading theology and Leo attempted to re-establish it "for the protection of faith, welfare of society and the advancement of science".[12] What he envisaged were not sterile interpretations of it, but a return to the original sources. This new orientation at the beginning of his pontificate was welcomed by Dominicans, Thomist Jesuits like Pecci and numerous bishops throughout the world. Strong opposition also developed as well on several fronts within the Church: Some considered Thomism simply outdated, while others used it for petty condemnations of dissident views that they did not like. [13] As traditional antagonists, Jesuits and Dominicans both claimed leadership in the renewal of Catholic theology.[13]

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The house in Carpineto, in which the Pecci brothers grew up

Pope Leo, after collaborating with Cardinal Pecci, responded with the encyclical Æterni Patris[2] on the restoration of Christian philosophy in the schools, which was published on August 4, 1879, whicn mandated all Catholic universities to teach Thomism and created a papal academy for the training of Thomist professors and publishing scholarly editions of the works of St Thomas Aquinas. The leadership of this academy he entrusted to his brother, who aided the creation of similar Thomas Aquinas academies in other places (Bologna, Freiburg (Switzerland), Paris and Lowden). In 1879, Cardinal Pecci was appointed as first Prefect of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas, which Leo founded on 15 October 1879, and was also appointed Prefect of the Congregation for Studies in February, 1884. (On 28 January 1999, the academy was reoriented to more social issues by Pope John Paul II.)[14] Pope Leo XIII appointed thirty members, ten each from Rome, from Italy, and from the rest of the world, and provided generous financial support to attract scholars from everywhere. The Pope also personally supported individual Thomist scholars and applauded numerous critical editions of the Angelic Doctor's texts.[13] To balance his Thomist Jesuit appointments, Leo entrusted the overall responsibility of the works of St Thomas Aquinas to the Dominican Order, of which the saint had been a member.

Vatican Library[]

Pope Leo XIII considered the mostly locked-up and neglected Vatican Library as "an infinite treasure for the Church and a monument to its role in culture and science".[15] He greatly increased staff and organization and appointed Jesuit father Franz Ehrle and Giuseppe Pecci to head the new undertaking as prefect and librarian, respectively. They in turn opened the Vatican Library to the general public after establishing a consultation library of 300,000 volumes. [16]

Cardinal Pecci died on 8 February 1890, of complications from pneumonia. His body was displayed in the Basilica of the Twelve Apostles in Rome, where his funeral took place on 12 February. He is buried in the chapel of the Society of Jesus in Campo Verano Cemetery, in Rome[3].

Notes[]

  1. Kühne, 247
  2. Kühne 7
  3. Kühne 12
  4. Kühne 20
  5. peter-hug.ch/lexikon/18_0714
  6. www.die-tagespost.de/Archiv/titel_anzeige.asp?ID=4748
  7. Benno Kühne, Papst Leo XIII Unser Heiliger Vater in seinem Leben und wirken, Benzinger, Einsiedeln, 1880
  8. Schmidlin, Papstgeschichte der Neuesten Zeit, Pustet München 1934, 537
  9. Acta Leonis XIII PM Romae, 1881, Acta I, 35 ff
  10. Kühne, 247
  11. L. von Pastor, Tagebücher, Heidelberg, 1950 127
  12. Schmidlin 394
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Schmidlin 395
  14. Annuario Pontificio 2005, p.1908
  15. Schmidlin 400
  16. Schmidlin 401

no:Giuseppe Pecci den yngre

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