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Henri de Lubac

His Eminence
Henri-Marie de Lubac,
S.J.
Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Domnica
Henri Cardinal de Lubac.svg
Church Roman Catholic Church
Appointed 2 February 1983
Term ended 4 September 1991
Predecessor Alfredo Ottaviani
Successor Luigi Poggi
Orders
Ordination 22 August 1927
Created Cardinal 2 February 1983
by Pope John Paul II
Rank Cardinal-Deacon
Personal details
Birth name Henri-Marie Joseph Sonier de Lubac
Born (1896-02-20)20 February 1896
Cambrai, France
Died 4 September 1991(1991-09-04) (aged 95)
Paris, France
Nationality French
Denomination Roman Catholic
Occupation Jesuit priest/theologian

Henri-Marie Joseph Sonier de Lubac, S.J., (known as Henri de Lubac, French: [lybak]; 20 February 1896 – 4 September 1991) was a French Jesuit priest who became a cardinal of the Catholic Church and is considered one of the most influential theologians of the 20th century. His writings and doctrinal research played a key role in shaping the Second Vatican Council.

Henri de Lubac was born in Cambrai to an ancient noble family of the Ardèche. He was one of six children; his father was a banker and his mother a homemaker. The family returned in 1898 to the Lyon district, where Henri was schooled by Jesuits. A born aristocrat in manner and appearance, de Lubac studied law for a year before, aged 17, joining the Society of Jesus in Lyon on 9 October 1913. Owing to the political climate in France at the time as a result of the French anti-Church laws of the early twentieth century, the Jesuit novitiate had temporarily relocated to St. Leonard’s-on-Sea, East Sussex, where de Lubac studied before being drafted to the French army in 1914 due to the outbreak of the Great War. He received a head wound at Les Éparges on All Saints Day, 1917, which would give him recurring episodes of dizziness and headaches for the rest of his life. Following demobilisation in 1919, de Lubac returned to the Jesuits and continued his philosophical studies, first at Hales Place in Canterbury and then, from 1920-3, at the Maison Saint-Louis, the Jesuit philosophate located at that time in St. Helier, Jersey. De Lubac taught at the Jesuit College at Mongré, in the Rhône, from 1923-4, and then in 1924 returned to England and began his four years of theological studies at Ore Place in Hastings, East Sussex. In 1926, the Jesuit college was relocated back to Fourvière in Lyons, where de Lubac completed the remaining two years of his theological studies. He was ordained to the priesthood on 22 August 1927.


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