Leo Joseph Suenens
Leo Jozef Suenens was a Belgian Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels from 1961 to 1979. He was elevated to the cardinalate in 1962.
Suenens was a leading voice at the Second Vatican Council advocating for reform in the Church.
Biography
Early life and education
Leo Suenens was born at Ixelles, the only child of Jean-Baptiste and Jeanne Suenens. He was baptised by his uncle, who was a priest. Losing his father at age four, Leo lived with his mother in the rectory of his priest-uncle from 1911 to 1912. Wealthy relatives wanted him to study economics and manage their fortune, but he chose the priesthood. He studied at Saint Mary's Institute in Schaerbeek and then entered the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome in 1920, residing in the Belgian Pontifical College, where he also served as librarian. From the Gregorian he obtained a doctorate in theology and in philosophy, and a master's degree in canon law. Suenens had taken as his mentor Cardinal Désiré-Joseph Mercier, who had also sent him to Rome.Priesthood
Ordained to the priesthood on 4 September 1927 by Cardinal Jozef-Ernest van Roey, Suenens initially served as a professor at Saint Mary's Institute and then taught moral philosophy and pedagogy at the Minor Seminary of Mechelen from 1930 to 1940. He worked as a chaplain to the 9th artillery regiment of the Belgian Army in Southern France for three months, and in August 1940 he became vice-rector of the famed Catholic University of Louvain. When the Louvain's rector was arrested by Nazi forces in 1943, Suenens took over as acting rector, where he sometimes circumvented and sometimes openly defied the directives of the Nazi occupiers. He was deeply influenced by the Legion of Mary and for many years worked closely with Veronica O'Brien.Episcopal career
On 12 November 1945, he was appointed by Pope Pius XII as Auxiliary Bishop of Mechelen and Titular Bishop of Isinda. Suenens received his episcopal consecration on the following 16 December from Cardinal van Roey, with Bishops Étienne Joseph Carton de Wiart and Jean-Marie Van Cauwenbergh serving as co-consecrators. While an auxiliary bishop he served as National President of the Legion of Mary and Pax Christi, and national liaison for Catholic Action in Belgium.Suenens was named Archbishop of Mechelen on 24 November 1961; the primatial Belgian see was renamed Mechelen-Brussels on 8 December of the same year. Suenens was created Cardinal Priest of S. Pietro in Vincoli by Pope John XXIII in the consistory of 19 March 1962.
Suenens was one of the cardinal electors who participated in the 1963 papal conclave which selected Pope Paul VI.
He also [Cardinal electors in Papal conclaves, Papal conclave, August 1978|August and October 1978|voted] in the conclaves of August and October 1978, and finally resigned from his post in Mechelen-Brussels on 4 October 1979 after seventeen years of service.
Second Vatican Council
When Pope John XXIII called the world's bishops to Rome for the Second Vatican Council, he found in Suenens a man who shared his views on the need for renewal in the Church. When the first session fell into organizational chaos under the weight of its documents, it was Suenens who, at the invitation of the Pope, rescued it from deadlock and essentially set the agenda for the entire Council.Paul VI made him one of the four moderators of the council, along with Cardinals Gregorio Pietro Agagianian, Julius Döpfner, and Giacomo Lercaro. Suenens was also believed to be a decisive force behind the Conciliar documents Lumen gentium and Gaudium et spes.
Death
Suenens died from thrombosis in Brussels at age 91, and was buried at St. Rumbold's Cathedral.At the time of his death he was one of the four living cardinals elevated by Pope John XXIII.
After his death, Belgian police drilled into his tomb and that of Cardinal Jozef-Ernest Van Roey, searching for documents connected to the sex abuse scandal, which had supposedly been buried with the cardinals.
Views
Dialogue with the modern world
Dialogue with other Christian denominations as well as with other religions, the proper role of the laity, modernization of religious life for women, collegiality, religious liberty, collaboration and corresponsibility in the Church were among the causes he advocated at the council.Pope John Paul II himself later attested that "Cardinal Suenens had played a decisive part in the Council".
He was described by his successor, Godfried Danneels, as “an excellent weather-forecaster who know from which direction the wind was blowing in the Church, and an experienced strategist who realized that he could not change the wind’s direction but he could set the sails to suit it."