Thomas Tien Ken-sin
His Eminence Thomas Tien Ken-hsin SVD | |
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Cardinal, Archbishop of Beijing | |
Church | Catholic Church |
Archdiocese | Beijing |
Province | Hopeh |
See | Beijing |
Installed | 1946 |
Term ended | July 24, 1967 |
Predecessor | Paul Léon Cornelius Montaigne |
Successor | Matthias Pei Shang-de |
Other post(s) | Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Via |
Previous post(s) |
|
Orders | |
Ordination | June 9, 1918 |
Consecration | October 29, 1939 |
Created cardinal | February 18, 1946 by Pope Pius XII |
Rank | Cardinal-Priest |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | July 24, 1967 Taipei, Taiwan | (aged 76)
Buried | St. Joseph the Wonder Worker Church (Cardinal Tien Memorial Church), Chiayi City |
Nationality | Chinese |
Parents | Kilian Tien Ken-sin Maria Yang |
Coat of arms |
Styles of Thomas Tien Ken-sin | |
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Reference style | His Eminence |
Spoken style | Your Eminence |
Informal style | Cardinal |
Thomas Tien Ken-sin, SVD (Chinese: 田耕莘; pinyin: Tián Gēngxīn; October 24, 1890 – July 24, 1967) was a Chinese Cardinal of the Catholic Church and chair of Fu Jen Catholic University. He served as Archbishop of Peking from 1946 until his death, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1946 by Pope Pius XII.
Biography
[edit]Thomas Tien Ken-sin was born in Chantsui, Yanggu, (Shantung province) to Kilian Tien Ken-sin and his wife Maria Yang. Baptized in 1901, he studied at the seminary in Yenchowfu before being ordained to the priesthood by Bishop Augustin Henninghaus on June 9, 1918. Tien then did pastoral work in the Yangku Mission until 1939. He entered the Society of the Divine Word on March 8, 1929, in the Netherlands, taking his first vows on February 2, 1931, and his final ones on March 7, 1935. He was raised to Apostolic Prefect of Yangku on February 2, 1934.
On July 11, 1939, Tien was appointed Apostolic Vicar of Yangku and Titular Bishop of Ruspae. He received his episcopal consecration on the following October 29 from Pope Pius XII himself, with Archbishops Celso Constantini and Henri Streicher, MAfr, serving as co-consecrators. Tien was later made Apostolic Vicar of Qingdao on November 10, 1942.
He was elevated to Cardinal Priest of Santa Maria in Via by Pope Pius XII in the consistory of February 18, 1946. Tien, the first cardinal from China, was then named, on April 11 of that same year, the first Archbishop of Beijing in post-Yuan Dynasty China.[1] In 1951 he was exiled from China by the Communist regime, and spent this time in Illinois in the United States, to where he came that year for treatment of a heart ailment.[2] He was one of the cardinal electors who participated in the 1958 papal conclave which selected Pope John XXIII, and was Apostolic Administrator of Taipei from December 16, 1959 to 1966. From 1962 to 1965, he attended the Second Vatican Council, and voted in the 1963 papal conclave, which selected Pope Paul VI.
Tien died in Taipei on July 24, 1967, at age 76. He is buried in the St. Joseph the Wonder Worker Church at Chiayi City.
Influence
[edit]- He greatly promoted devotion to Our Lady of China.[3]
- Tien was the first Cardinal also from the Society of the Divine Word.
- The Holy See has not recognized any of CPA-approved successors of Tien as Archbishop of Peking, though in his 2007 letter to the faithful in China, Pope Benedict XVI expressed an openness to dialogue with the CPA-appointed "bishops".
References
[edit]- ^ See John of Montecorvino and Archbishop of Peking for further details.
- ^ TIME Magazine. Red Hats February 11, 1957
- ^ Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. The Great Upper Church Archived 2008-06-19 at the Wayback Machine
External links
[edit]- Cardinals created by Pope Pius XII
- 1890 births
- 1967 deaths
- 20th-century Roman Catholic archbishops in China
- Apostolic prefects
- Chinese cardinals
- Taiwanese Roman Catholics
- Taiwanese Roman Catholic priests
- Participants in the Second Vatican Council
- Divine Word Missionaries Order
- Taiwanese people from Shandong
- Chinese Roman Catholics
- Chinese Roman Catholic archbishops