R.I.P



ĐTGM Leonard Faulkner DD nguyên TGM Tổng Giáo Phận Adelaide Nam Úc vừa qua đời lúc 01.30pm (giờ Adelaide) Chúa Nhật ngày 06.5.2018 tại nhà hữu dưỡng Adelaide - Hưởng Thọ 92 tuổi. Ngài là vị Tổng Giám Mục thứ VII của Tổng Giáo Phận Adelaide – Nam Úc.

Khi Ngài còn trên cương vị Tổng Giám Mục TGP Adelaide, Ngài rất thương mến Cộng Đồng Tỵ Nạn Việt Nam. Hàng năm Ngài đều nhận lời mời đến trung tâm Đức Mẹ Thuyền Nhân Nam Úc dâng thánh đêm NOEL và Giao Thừa Tết Ta và lưu lại ăn Tết đón Giao Thừa với Cộng Đồng Việt Nam. Ngài là vị TGM đã ký sắc lệnh thành lập Cộng Động Công Giáo Việt Nam là Hiệp Hội dưới sự bảo trợ của pháp luật: Giáo Quyền và Pháp Quyền và được hưởng quy chế như một Hiệp Hội sắc tộc.

Ngài ký đã ký giấy phép cho Cộng Đồng Công Giáo Việt Nam mua đất và xây trung tâm Đức Mẹ Thuyền Nhân. Được biệt lập sinh hoạt như một giáo xứ người Úc.

Tiểu Sử Wikipedia:

Archbishop Leonard Anthony Faulkner (born 5 December 1926) is an Australian Roman Catholic clergyman, and was the seventh Archbishop of Adelaide. Born in rural South Australia, Faulkner served as an Adelaide parish priest and Bishop of Townsville before being appointed Archbishop of Adelaide in 1985. He is currently Archbishop Emeritus of Adelaide. Faulkner was born in Booleroo Centre, South Australia in 1926. The son of a farm labourer and the eldest of ten siblings, Faulkner did not begin to attend school until he was seven years old, as until then he was considered too young to walk the four kilometres from his house to the local school. Faulkner was ordained on New Year's Day, 1950 in Rome, along with twelve other priests from around the world. His first posting was to the parish of Woodville, Seaton, Royal Park and Albert Park in Adelaide, South Australia. He served as a chaplain within the Young Christian Workers movement until his consecration as Bishop of Townsville.

Episcopacy

On 28 November 1967, Faulkner was consecrated as the Bishop of Townsville in Queensland.

In 1983 he returned to Adelaide to assist the ailing Archbishop James Gleeson, and in 1985 he was installed as Gleeson's successor. During his tenure as Archbishop, Faulkner declined to live in the bishop's quarters, instead choosing to reside in a plain house in the Adelaide suburb of Netley.

Controversy regarding communal confession

In 1999, Faulkner caused controversy when he defied Vatican pressure to cease the practice of communal confession, wherein a priest may grant absolution without hearing individual confessions. Following a meeting with Australian bishops in late 1998, Pope John Paul II sent a letter to all Australian bishops outlining concerns with the relaxed nature of Australian Catholicism. In particular, he formally requested that the bishops eliminate the use of communal confession. While the dioceses of most other capital cities in the country abandoned the practice, Faulkner refused, allowing communal confession during Lent of 1999. In June 1999, Faulkner sent a pastoral message to all parishes in the Archdiocese of Adelaide allowing communal confession, but requiring prior approval from the Archbishop. This made Adelaide one of the few places in Australia where communal confession was still practised.Retirement

In November 2000, Pope John Paul II appointed the Bishop of Wollongong, Philip Wilson to the position of coadjutor Archbishop of Adelaide, in doing so naming him as Faulkner's successor.[9] On 3 December 2001, two days before his seventy-fifth birthday, Faulkner retired as Archbishop, and Wilson was installed as his successor. As a retired Archbishop, Faulkner retains the title of Archbishop Emeritus. An autobiographical book based on his edited memories, A Listening Ministry, appeared in 2016