Philippe Laguérie

Philippe Laguérie (born 30 September 1952 in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine) is a French Traditionalist Catholic priest. He is the Superior General of the Institute of the Good Shepherd (French: Institut du Bon Pasteur), which upholds the Tridentine Mass.

The Very Reverend

Philippe Laguérie
Superior General of the Institute of the Good Shepherd
Successorincumbent
Personal details
Born30 September 1952
Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine
NationalityFrench

Career

Laguérie was raised in a Roman Catholic family and he studied for the priesthood at the International Seminary of Saint Pius X, in Écône, Switzerland. He was ordained a priest on 29 June 1979 by Marcel Lefebvre, founder of the Society of St. Pius X. In 1984 he succeeded François Ducaud-Bourget as priest in charge of Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet in Paris, and remained there until 1997. In 2002, he moved to Bordeaux where he illegally squatted the Saint-Eloi Church, before he re-examined his situation due to the creation of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei, which had been established in 1988 by Pope John Paul II to re-establish contacts with the Society of Saint Pius X.

On 16 September 2004, Laguérie was dismissed from the Society by his superior bishop Bernard Fellay. Two years later, on 8 September 2006, he was chosen as leader of the newly founded Institut du Bon Pasteur, which received Pope Benedict XVI's approval, thus regularizing the situation of the Saint-Eloi Church following a signed convention with the archbishop of Bordeaux, Jean-Pierre Ricard.[1] He was reelected for another six years term on 13 August 2013. The Holy See ratified the decision on 13 September 2013.[2]

According to canon law, the Institute of Pontifical Right of the Good Shepherd is a society of apostolic life dependent both on the Ecclesia Dei Commission and on the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life. It exercises ordinary jurisdiction over the priests who depend on it.

Controversies

Laguérie has been sometimes connected to the French far-right. In 1987, he took the defense of Jean-Marie Le Pen after his controversial remarks on the gas chambers usage in World War II and he criticized "the great Jewish banking who has held France in a dictatorship for forty-five years". He also claimed that some Holocaust denial thesis were "perfectly scientific".[3] After leaving the FSSPX, he was however very critical of Richard Williamson's negationist declarations, which he called on 13 February 2009, "scandalous and inadmissible ramblings".

See also

References

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