Pascual Díaz y Barreto

The Most Reverend Pascual Díaz y Barreto, SJ (June 22, 1876 – May 19, 1936) was a Mexican prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who served as Archbishop of Mexico City from June 22, 1929 until his death in 1936. Throughout his tenure, he frequently came into conflict with the anti-Catholic Mexican government.

The Most Reverend

Pascual Díaz y Barreto, S.J.
Archbishop of Mexico
SeeMexico
InstalledJune 22, 1929
Term endedMay 19, 1936
PredecessorJosé Mora y del Rio
SuccessorLuis María Martínez
Orders
Ordination1896
ConsecrationFebruary 2, 1923
by Maximino Ruiz y Flores
Personal details
Born(1876-06-22)June 22, 1876
Zapopan, Jalisco
DiedMay 19, 1936(1936-05-19) (aged 59)
Mexico City, Mexico
NationalityMexican
DenominationRoman Catholic Church
Previous postBishop of Tabasco (1923–1927)
Styles of
Pascual Díaz y Barreto
Reference styleThe Right Reverend
Spoken styleYour Excellency
Religious styleBishop
Posthumous stylenone

Biography

Born in Zapopan, Jalisco, to a family of pure Huichol Indians, Pascual Díaz y Barreto was ordained to the priesthood in 1896 and incardinated into the Society of Jesus, more commonly known as the Jesuits, on October 9, 1903.[1][2]

On December 11, 1922, he was appointed the sixth Bishop of Tabasco by Pope Pius XI. Díaz received his episcopal consecration on February 2, 1923 from Bishop Maximino Ruiz y Flores, and was installed as Tabasco's ordinary on the following February 28. In 1927, he was sent into exile for carrying out his ministry in a manner which violated the country's Constitution. Díaz was later named Archbishop of Mexico City on June 25, 1929, as a signal of peace following Pope Pius's sanction of the plan of settlement to end the feud between the Mexican Church and the State.[3]

In late December 1930, the Archbishop issued a scathing denunciation of Protestantism in Mexico, claiming, "There is solid ground for believing that North American Protestant sects, moved by political motives, seek to aggravate religious perturbation in Mexico...The names Protestant, Methodist, and Presbyterian fall on Mexicans as a species of stigma because of the marked character of the North American dominion all these Protestants bring to Mexico. Hence the popular opinion that Protestantism is one of the elements upon which a powerful neighboring nation counts to effect slowly but surely domination, hegemony or realization of its imperialism in our land".[4]

A year later, he condemned a bill that would prohibit religions from being represented in Mexico by more than one clergyman per 50,000 as "an unheard of outrage of the public power against religion".[5] He stated, "It does not merit the name of law...it opposes the positive dispositions of God and the teachings of the Church, the authentic and infallible organ established by Jesus Christ our Lord..." Díaz unsuccessfully urged President Pascual Ortiz Rubio towards a veto, and, despite the large number of Catholic priests in Mexico, ordered the clergy under his jurisdiction to remain in their posts.[5]

Archbishop Díaz rejected the claim of anti-Catholic Plutarco Elías Calles that the Mexican episcopate were "organizing in preparation for a movement," or revolution, saying that Catholics are obliged "to preserve the immutable principles of justice and morality".[6] He later threatened Calles, as well as government employees, parents who sent their children to government-operated schools and the children themselves, the teachers of those schools, and any other Catholic who supported the government with excommunication in 1935.[7] However, no such excommunication was pronounced, and Díaz pardoned in advance those government employees who kept their occupations because they could not find work otherwise and those parents who sent their children to proscribed schools under pressure from the truant officer. Later that year, in March, he was arrested by traffic police to leave his car and enter theirs, kept sitting parked in a suburb of Mexico City for over two hours, and then taken to a police station where he sat all night; according to the Archbishop's private secretary, he subsequently suffered "from severe cramps and head pains".[8] Although he agreed to a fine of 100 pesos as well, he did not pay.

In 1936, the primate published a pastoral letter enforcing the Church's stance against Socialism.[9] In it he described Catholics who practiced, studied, or taught Socialism as guilty of mortal sin, and said, "No Catholic can be a Socialist, understanding by Socialism the philosophical, economic or social system which, in one form or another, does not recognize the rights of God and the Church, nor the natural right of every man to possess the goods he has acquired..."

Archbishop Díaz died from colitis[10] in Mexico City, at the age of 59.

gollark: You know you can just *throw away* things which cause horrible health problems if used?
gollark: I see. This definitely seems broader than common definitions in use then.
gollark: And I don't think it'll be shifted significantly by being able to deal with that kind of rare event much better as much as... blind luck, happening to have had relevant opportunities, social skills and intelligence.
gollark: Evolutionary fitness is also not the same as physical fitness.
gollark: That's plausible I guess, but it's possible that many of those could have been avoided (and your definition would count this as "fitness", even). I'm pretty sure it's still less common than, well, other day to day bad things.

References

  1. Hernández, Angel Santos (1998). Jesuitas y obispados [Jesuits and Bishoprics] (in Spanish). Comillas Pontifical University. p. 473. ISBN 9788489708488. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  2. "Los Arzobispos 1907–" [Archbishops 1907–] (in Spanish). Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  3. TIME Magazine. Again, Masses July 1, 1929
  4. TIME Magazine. Dynamite January 5, 1931
  5. TIME Magazine. Law or No Law? January 11, 1932
  6. TIME Magazine. Facts of Life November 5, 1934
  7. TIME Magazine. "Ossy, Ossy, Boneheads" February 4, 1935
  8. TIME Magazine. Plenty of Priests March 18, 1935
  9. TIME Magazine. Socialism: Mortal Sin January 27, 1936
  10. TIME Magazine. Milestones June 1, 1936
Religious titles
Preceded by
Antonio Hernández y Rodríguez
Bishop of Tabasco
19221929
Succeeded by
Vicente Camacho y Moya
Preceded by
José Mora y del Rio
Archbishop of Mexico City
19291936
Succeeded by
Luis María Martínez
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