Angelo Amato
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Styles of Angelo Amato |
|
Reference style | The Most Reverend |
Spoken style | Your Excellency |
Religious style | Archbishop |
Posthumous style | not applicable |
Angelo Amato (8 June 1938 -) is the currrent Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith since his appointment by Pope John Paul II on 19 December 2002. He served under Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger who was elected Pope Benedict XVI in 2005.
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[edit] Education
He entered the Salesians, after the novitiate attended a Salesian high school. Then he studied philosophy and theology in Rome. He was ordained a priest on 22 December 1967 becoming a member of the Salesians of Saint John Bosco. He studied at the Pontifical Salesian University. There he specialised in Christology. In 1972 he began to teach at the Salesian as an assistant. In 1974 he obtained his doctorate with a dissertation on The pronouncements tridentine on the need for sacramental confession in the canons 6-9 Session XIV.
In the years 1978 to 1979 he was a fellow of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in Thessaloniki in Greece, at the monastery Orthodox Moní Vlatádon, home of the renowned Institute of patriarchal patristic studies. In 1988 he spent a sabbatical year in Washington DC, USA, where he began to study the theology of religions.
[edit] Academic life
He was professor of dogmatics at PSU, and for twelve years (1981 - 1987 and then 1993 to 1997) was dean of the Faculty of Theology.
He served as a consultor to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity as well as for the Congregation for Bishops.
[edit] Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
On 19 December 2002, John Paul II appointed him as Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and titular bishop of Sila. Since the election of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger as Pope Benedict XVI, Archbshiop Amato has served under William Cardinal Levada. He was consecreted bishop on 6 January 2003 by Pope John Paul II with the archbishops Leonardo Sandri and Antonio Maria Vegliò serving as co-consecrators.
It is believed he was among the principal authors of the controversial Dominus Iesus issued in 2000. After the 2005 Papal conclave the first private audience granted by the new Pope Benedict was to Archbishop Amato on Monday 25 April.
In addition to his role as CDF secretary Amato is a consultor to the Pontifical Councils for Christian Unity and, Interreligious Dialogue.
[edit] Quotes
- "there is the so-called terrorism with a human face, which is also a daily occurrence and just as repugnant, which continues to be propagated by the media, manipulating traditional language with expressions that hide the tragic reality of the facts. The laboratories where, for example, RU-486, the morning-after pill, is made or where human embryos are manipulated as if they were simply biological material... [and] the parliaments of so-called 'civil' nations which promulgate laws contrary to the nature of the human person, like the approval of marriages between persons of the same sex, or of euthanasia."
- Speaking on the "Da Vinci Code, Archbishop Amato said that "such lies and errors had been directed at the Koran or the Holocaust they would have justly provoked a world uprising".
Preceded by Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone |
Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 19 December 2002–incumbent |
Succeeded by incumbent |