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1 Life  





2 Works  





3 References  





4 External links  














Paul Melchers






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His Eminence


Paul Ludolf Melchers


S.J.
Cardinal, Archbishop emeritus of Cologne
ChurchRoman Catholic
ArchdioceseCologne
Installed8 January 1866
Term ended3 July 1885
PredecessorJohannes von Geissel
SuccessorPhilipp Krementz
Other post(s)Cardinal-Priest of Santo Stefano al Monte Celio
Orders
Ordination5 June 1841
Consecration20 April 1858
Created cardinal27 July 1885
byLeo XIII
RankCardinal-Priest
Personal details
Born(1813-01-06)January 6, 1813
Münster, Germany
DiedDecember 14, 1895(1895-12-14) (aged 82)
Rome, Italy
BuriedCologne Cathedral
NationalityGerman
Previous post(s)Bishop of Osnabrück (1857-1866)

Paul Melchers (6 January 1813 – 14 December 1895) was a Cardinal and Archbishop of Cologne. At the height of the Kulturkampf he took refuge in the Netherlands.

Life[edit]

Melchers was born in Münster. He studied law at Bonn (1830–33), and a few years practice at Münster, took up theology at Munich under Heinrich Klee, Joseph Görres, Karl Joseph Hieronymus Windischmann and Ignaz von Döllinger. Ordained in 1841, he was assigned to duty in the village of Haltern. In 1844 he became vice-rector of the diocesan seminary, rector (1851), canon of the cathedral (1852), vicar-general (1854).

Pope Pius IX appointed him Bishop of Osnabrück (1857) and Archbishop of Cologne (1866). He inaugurated (1867) at Fulda, meetings of the German bishops. He regarded the formal definition of papal infallibility as untimely, a conviction which he, with thirteen other bishops, expressed in a letter to the pope, 4 September 1869.

In the First Vatican Council Melchers took a prominent part. At the session of 13 July 1870, he voted negatively on the question of papal infallibility; but he refused to sign an address in which fifty-five other members of the minority notified the pope of their immediate departure and reiterated their non placet. He left Rome before the fourth session, giving as his reason the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war, and declaring his readiness to abide by the decisions of the Council.

On his return to Cologne he proclaimed in an address (24 July) the dogma defined on 18 July. As a means of ensuring obedience to the Council, the bishops assembled by him in Fulda, published (1 September) a joint letter, for which Pius IX (20 October) expressed gratitude. To eliminate the opposition at Bonn, the archbishop (20 Sept. and 8 Oct.) called on professors Franz Xaver Dieringer, Franz Heinrich Reusch, Joseph Langen, and Franz Peter Knoodt to sign a declaration accepting the Vatican decree and pledging conformity thereto in their teaching. Dieringer alone complied; the others were suspended and eventually (12 March 1872) excommunicated.

The Kulturkampf was firmly resisted by Archbishop Melchers. In June, 1873, he excommunicated two priests who had joined the Old Catholics; for this and other administrative acts he was fined and imprisoned for six months (12 March–October, 1874). On 2 December 1875, the President of the Rhine Province demanded his resignation on pain of deposition; he refused, but learning that preparations were being made to deport him to Küstrin he escaped (13 December) to Maastricht and took refuge with the Franciscans. From their monastery he administered his dioceses for ten years. On different occasions he informed Pope Leo XIII of his willingness to resign for the general good. The pope at last consented, but called him to Rome, and created him cardinal (27 July 1885).

In 1892, during a serious illness he was received into the Society of Jesus and lived as a Jesuit until his death three years later in Rome. He was laid to rest in the cathedral of Cologne. St. Paul's Church, Cologne, completed in 1908, commemorates Melchers.

Works[edit]

His principal publications are: Erinnerungen an die Feier des 50jährigen Bischofsjubiläums des h. Vaters Pius IX. (Recollections on the Golden Jubilee of Pope Pius IX; Cologne, 1876); Eine Unterweisung über das Gebet (Cologne, 1876); Einer Unterweisung über des heilige Messopfer (Cologne, 1879); Das Sendschreiben des heiligen Vaters Papst Leo XIII. über den Socialismus (Cologne, 1880); Die katholische Lehre von der Kirche (Cologne, 1881); Das eine Nothwendige (Cologne, 1882); De canonica dioecesium visitatione (Rome, 1892).

References[edit]

External links[edit]

Catholic Church titles
Vacant

Title last held by

Frederick, Duke of York and Albany
Bishop of Osnabrück
1857–1866
Succeeded by

Johannes Heinrich Beckmann

Preceded by

Johannes von Geissel

Archbishop of Cologne
1866–1885
Succeeded by

Philip III, Krementz

Vacant

Title last held by

Johannes von Geissel
Chairman of the Würzburg Conference of Bishops
Chairman of the Fulda Conference of Bishops
1867–1883
  • icon Catholicism
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    This page was last edited on 8 August 2023, at 08:50 (UTC).

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