Arthur Luysterman

Arthur Luysterman (born 18 March 1932) is a Belgian Roman Catholic Bishop. He served as the twenty-ninth Bishop of Ghent between 1991 and 2003.[1]

His Excellency

Arthur Luysterman
Episc. Gandavense (emeritus)
DioceseGhent
SeeSt Bavo's
PredecessorLéonce-Albert Van Peteghem
Personal details
Born18 March 1932

Life

Arthur Luysterman was born in Meerbeke, a village in the intensively developed countryside between Ghent and Brussels. He was the eldest of his parents' four children.

He attended school locally, obtaining a grounding in Graeco-Latin humanities at the St Aloysius College in Ninove and Our Lady's College, Dendermonde before abandoning an earlier ambition to become a lawyer and entering the seminary of Ghent in 1950: he was ordained into the priesthood on 26 August 1956.[2]

He received a degrees and a doctorate in Canon law from the Catholic University of Louvain in 1959.[3] After this he joined the military seminary in Aalst the produced military chaplains ("Centre d’Instruction de Base" / CIBE), initially as Professor of Moral Theology and later with more general responsibilities. However, over the years the number of candidates coming forward for training reduced, and in the end the institution was closed. After this, on 1 February 1973 he became chief chaplain to the Belgian armed forces,[2] a post he retained till 13 July 1990.[3]

On 13 July 1990 (a Friday[2]) Pope John Paul II appointed Luysterman coadjutor bishop of Ghent. He was consecrated a bishop by Léonce-Albert Van Peteghem, the Bishop of Ghent, on 21 October of the same year. Just over a year later, when Van Peteghem retired on 27 December 1991, Luysterman succeeded him.[1] He took as his episcopal motto "Et in terra pax" ("and Peace on Earth").[3]

He was the founder of the Fund for Church Buildings in the Diocese of Ghent.[4] During his time the number of seminarians declined and the episcopal seminary was closed, but he insisted that the quality of candidates for ordination was more important than their quantity.[2] On 28 August 1994 he was a principal co-consecrator of the Flemish born Bishop André de Witte as bishop of Ruy Barbosa, Bahia in Brazil.[5] On 11 October 2003 he was principal consecrator for Cardinal Joos.[6]

After reaching the age of 70, Arthur Luysterman offered his resignation to the pope. This was accepted on 19 December 2003. Since then, as an emeritus bishop, he has nevertheless continued as a member of the Belgian Bishops' Conference.[3]

gollark: I would actually prefer that over thinness, to be honest, personally.
gollark: Two IIRC, for WiFi and the cellular modem.
gollark: If you disconnect the network it gives you the offline account option IIRC, but it's annoying and stupid.
gollark: I've seen graphite thermal pad things. Maybe that would work.
gollark: *try and calculate something**accidentally fall over*

References

  1. "Bishop Arthur Luysterman". David M. Cheney ("Catholic Hierarchy"). 5 February 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  2. "Arthur Luysterma werd geen rechter maar bisschop". Stichting Rorate. 21 March 2004. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  3. Theo Borgermans (14 March 2007). "Mgr. Arthur Luysterman wordt 75 op 18 maart". Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  4. Eveline Coppin (19 November 2011). "Help mee de Kerk opbouwen". Kerk in Vlaanderen ("Kerknet"). Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  5. "Bishop André de Witte". David M. Cheney ("Catholic Hierarchy"). 5 February 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  6. "Gustaaf Cardinal Joos †". David M. Cheney ("Catholic Hierarchy"). 5 February 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2016.


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