Johannes Theodor Suhr Explained

Type:Bishop
Johannes Theodor Suhr
Bishop of Copenhagen
Diocese:Copenhagen
Appointed:29 April 1953
Term:1953–1964
Term End:6 October 1964
Predecessor:Josef Ludwig Brems
Successor:Hans Ludvig Martensen
Ordination:1 April 1933
Consecration:15 January 1939
Consecrated By:Pietro Fumasoni Biondi
Rank:Bishop
Birth Date:24 January 1896
Birth Place:Nyborg, Denmark
Death Place:Aabenraa, Denmark
Buried:Vestre Cemetery
Nationality:Dane
Honorific Prefix:The Most Reverend
Honorific Suffix:O.S.B.

Johannes Theodor Suhr, OSB (24 January 1896 in Nyborg – 10 March 1997) was a Danish Roman Catholic bishop and the second Danish Roman Catholic bishop since the Reformation.

Early life and conversion to Roman Catholicism

Johannes Theodor Suhr was the son of landowner Carl Emil Suhr (1861–1928) and his wife Laura Marie Miller (1859–1919), graduating from Odense Cathedral School in 1913. After that, he was an agricultural student and emigrated after World War I to Argentina where he was a farmer.

Some years later Suhr went back to Denmark, where he became increasingly preoccupied with life's basic questions. During a visit to Rome in 1925, Suhr was intrigued by Catholicism, and on 17 January 1926 he converted to the Roman Catholic Church. Then Suhr traveled to Benedictine Monastery of Clervaux in Luxembourg and entered in the Benedictine Order later in the same year. Suhr studied philosophy and theology in Luxembourg and Rome, was ordained on 1 April 1933 and was appointed prior of the newly established abbey of San Girolamo in Rome in 1935.

Ecclesiastical career

On 14 December 1938, Suhr was appointed by Pope Pius XI to Apostolic Vicariate of Denmark and became titular bishop of Balecio, however Suhr had poor pastoral experience and concerns.

Suhr became bishop and took place in San Girolamo on 15 January 1939 when St. Ansgar's Cathedral in Copenhagen was inaugurated on 3 February 1939. Suhr, on 29 April 1953, became the first "Bishop of Copenhagen" for the newly Roman Catholic Diocese of Copenhagen when Pope Pius XII had created via an apostolic letter on the same date.

He resigned in 1964 reportedly due to failing health. Hans Ludvig Martensen became his successor. In the 1960s, Suhr was a member of the Second Vatican Council's preparatory commission as head in Rome. In 1960 the Nordic bishops organized in the Scandinavian Bishops Conference, and Suhr was the first president.

Death

Bishop Johannes Theodor Suhr died on 10 March 1997, aged 101 in Aabenraa.[1]

Prizes

External links

References

  1. Web site: Bishop Johannes Theodor Suhr [Catholic-Hierarchy] ]. 2023-03-27 . www.catholic-hierarchy.org.