Thomas Winning
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Joseph Winning (June 3, 1925 - June 17, 2001) was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Glasgow, Scotland (from 1974) and a Cardinal (from 1994).
Contents |
[edit] Early Years
Tom Winning was the oldest child of two born to a devout family in Wishaw, Lanarkshire. His father, the son of an Irish immigrant from County Donegal, had started as a coal-miner, served in the First World War, and was then in the steel industry.[1] On losing his job, his father invested in machinery for making boiled sweets which he sold around the houses in the district as a way of bringing in money for his family. Winning attended St Patrick's Primary, Shieldmuir, where his devotion to the Roman Catholic Church began. He served as an altar boy and chorister. Then, while at Our Lady's High School, Motherwell, he expressed the desire to become a priest. He successfully applied to study for the Archdiocese of Glasgow and on acceptance was appointed to St Peter's Seminary, Bearsden, at age 17.
[edit] Priestly Career
He began training in Saint Mary's College, Blairs, Aberdeen, where the Philosophy students of St Peter's were temporarily being housed and taught and then moved to St Peter's, Bearsden. When a fire in Bearsden destroyed the seminary during renovation works the entire college community was moved from there to St Joseph's College, Mill Hill, London. After the war ended, he was part of the first group of students to be sent to re-populate the Scots College in Rome. The College had been empty of students since 1939. He was ordained in the Church of St John Lateran, in Rome, on 18 December 1948. His father sold the sweet making machinery as a way to pay the fare for the family to come to Rome for the ceremony.
His first appointment was as an Assistant (curate) at St Aloysius, Chapelhall, Lanarkshire, but after a year he returned to Rome to study Canon Law gaining in 1953 a Doctorate (DCL). Then he was a curate in St Mary's Church in Hamilton from 1953 to 1957 and from 1956 secretary to Bishop James Donald Scanlan of Motherwell. After a period in Our Lady of Good Aid Cathedral in Motherwell from 1957 to 1958 he became Chaplain to the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in Bothwell until 1961. In 1961 he became Spiritual Director at the Pontifical Scots College. Soon after his arrival in Rome, the Second Vatican Council took place and he was therefore uniquely placed to be involved with the bishops during those historic years of the various Sessions of the Council. At the same time he continued his studies becoming an Advocate of the Sacred Roman Rota in 1965. In the late 1960s after returning to Scotland the bishops turned to him when they needed a minute secretary for the meetings of the Bishops' Conference of Scotland.
In 1966 he was called back to Scotland where he was appointed to his first charge as Parish Priest in Saint Luke's, Motherwell, where he remained until 1970 when he was appointed as the first Officialis of the newly formed Scottish National Tribunal.
[edit] Episcopal Career
On 22 October 1971 he was nominated to the episcopacy, as Auxiliary Bishop to the Archbishop of Glasgow, being ordained Titular Bishop of Louth on 30 November 1971 and three years later on 23 April 1974 succeeded Archbishop Scanlan when he was translated to the See of Glasgow. In 1975 he became the first Roman Catholic Archbishop to address the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in the history of that Church. After his appointment to the College of Cardinals (see below), he was invited once again to address the General Assembly.
Winning was often outspoken, and unafraid to publicly expound the Catholic Church's understanding of moral matters such as abortion and homosexuality (becoming a supporter of the campaign against allowing the promotion of homosexuality in schools, led by businessman Brian Souter in 2000), and ecclesiastical matters such as the celibacy of priests. He challenged the Act of Settlement. He also began a scheme to give financial support to young mothers, as an alternative to abortion. He rejected a plan to renovate and extend St Andrew's Cathedral, as the money would be better spent on the poor of the Archdiocese. He played a major role in bringing Pope John Paul II to Britain in 1982, a visit that was almost called off because of the Falklands Conflict that coincided with the visit. Winning is thought to have convinced the Pope to continue with the visit which was the first official visit to the United Kingdom by a Pontiff.
[edit] Career as a Cardinal
On 26 November 1994, he was elevated to cardinal by John Paul II and appointed cardinal-priest of S. Andrea delle Fratte. Winning was only the second cardinal since the Reformation to be based in Scotland. He was awarded honorary degrees from the universities of Aberdeen (LL.D. 1996), Glasgow (DD, 1983) and Strathclyde (D. Univ, 1992); Glasgow University made him an honorary Professor in the Faculty of Divinity in 1996. He was appointed by Pope John Paul II to the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity and to the Pontifical Council for the Family, November 1994 until his death.
[edit] Death
He died in 2001, following a heart attack whilst in office. He is interred in the crypt of St. Andrew's Cathedral, Glasgow. He was succeeded as Archbishop of Glasgow by Mario Conti.
[edit] External links
The Scotsman 'Great Scots' [2]
Preceded by James Donald Scanlan |
Archbishop of Glasgow 1974–2001 |
Succeeded by Mario Conti |