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Adolfo Nicolás

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Adolfo Nicolás Pachón
Society of Jesus

Born
April 29, 1936 (age 74)
Villamuriel de Cerrato, Spain
Nationality Spanish
   
Occupation Superior General of the Society of Jesus
History of the Jesuits
Father Adolfo Nicolás Pachón, S.J., S.T.D. (born April 29, 1936) Regimini militantis
is a Spanish priest of the Roman Catholic Church. He is the Suppression
thirtieth and current Superior General of the Society of Jesus, the
largest male religious order in the Church. Jesuit Hierarchy
Superior General
Adolfo Nicolás
[edit] Biography Ignatian Spirituality
Spiritual Exercises
Adolfo Nicolás was born in Villamuriel de Cerrato, Palencia, and
Ad majorem Dei gloriam
entered the Society of Jesus, more commonly known as the Jesuits,
Magis
in the novitiate of Aranjuez in 1953.[1] He studied at the University
Discernment
of Alcalá, there earning his licentiate in philosophy, until 1960,
whence he traveled to Japan to familiarize himself with Japanese
Famous Jesuits
language and culture. Nicolás entered Sophia University in Tokyo,
St. Ignatius of Loyola
where he studied theology, in 1964, and was later ordained to the
St. Francis Xavier
priesthood on March 17, 1967.
Blessed Peter Faber
St. Aloysius Gonzaga
St. Robert Bellarmine
St. Peter Canisius
St. Edmund Campion
From 1968 to 1971, he studied at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, from where he
earned a doctorate in theology. Upon his return to Japan, Nicolás was made professor of
systematic theology at his alma mater of Sophia University, teaching there for the next thirty
years.

He was Director of the East Asian Pastoral Institute at the Ateneo de Manila University, in
Quezon City, Philippines, from 1978 to 1984,[2] and later served as rector of the theologate in
Tokyo from 1991 to 1993, when he was appointed Provincial of the Jesuit Province of Japan.
Nicolás remained in this post until 1999, and then spent four years doing pastoral work among
poor immigrants in Tokyo.

In 2004 he returned to the Philippines after he was named President of the Jesuit Conference of
Provincials for Eastern Asia and Oceania.[2][3] As Moderator, he was at the service of the Jesuits
of several countries, including Australia, China, Japan, Korea, Micronesia, Myanmar, and East
Timor.

In addition to his native Spanish, Nicolás can speak Catalan, English, Italian, French, and
Japanese.[4]

[edit] Secretary General of the Society of Jesus

On the second ballot of the thirty-fifth General Congregation (GC XXXV) of the Society of
Jesus, Nicolás was elected as the Order’s thirtieth[5] Superior General on January 19, 2008,
succeeding the Dutch Fr. Peter Hans Kolvenbach. His election was immediately relayed to Pope
Benedict XVI, who confirmed him in the post. Many have marked the similarities between
Nicolás and former Superior General Fr. Pedro Arrupe, who, after having suffered a stroke,
became the first Jesuit superior general to resign his office- with the urging and acceptance of the
Vatican[5] under Pope John Paul II. Father Arrupe, like his eventual successor, was a Spanish
missionary in Japan; Nicolás has described Arrupe, whom he had earlier had as Provincial
Superior, as a "great missionary, a national hero, a man on fire".[6] He leads a congregation which
currently numbers 18,500 members.[7]

[edit] General Curia restructuring

In March of 2011, Nicolás forwarded a communiqué globally of revisions to the General Curia
restructuring the secretariats, including the creation of new positions and a commission.[8]

[edit] Beliefs and values


[edit] Missionary work

He once stated, "Asia has a lot yet to offer the Church, to the whole Church, but we haven't done
it yet. Maybe we have not been courageous enough, or we haven't taken the risks we should".[9]
In an article on Nicolás, Michael McVeigh said that Nicolás has also expressed his wariness of
missionaries who are more concerned with teaching and imposing orthodoxy than in having a
cultural experience with the local people, saying, "Those who enter into the lives of the people,
they begin to question their own positions very radically."[9]

In the homily of the Mass celebrated after his election as Superior General, Nicolás emphasized
service, based on the scriptural reading for that day, the words of St. Ignatius of Loyola, and
Benedict XVI's teaching on God is love. He stated: "The more we become as servants, the more
pleased God is." Delving further on the scriptural passage and after relating an anecdote of
experiences with the poor in Asia, he related poverty with having God as the only source of
strength, pointing out that the Jesuit's strength is not in externals (power, media, etc.) nor in
internal fortitude (research). "The poor only have God in whom to find strength. For us only God
is our strength."

Nicolas also developed the following ideas: the message of the Jesuits is "a message of
salvation" and the challenge of discerning the type of salvation that people today are waiting for.
[10]

[edit] Obedience to Rome

After receiving a message from Pope Benedict asking the Society of Jesus to affirm its fidelity to
the magisterium and the Holy See, the Congregation presided by Nicolás responded, "The
Society of Jesus was born within the Church, we live in the Church, we were approved by the
Church and we serve the Church. This is our vocation...[Unity with the pope] is the symbol of
our union with Christ. It also is the guarantee that our mission will not be a 'small mission,' a
project just of the Jesuits, but that our mission is the mission of the Church."[11]

[edit] Liberation theology

In a November 2008 interview with El Periodico, Nicolás described liberation theology as a


"courageous and creative response to an unbearable situation of injustice in Latin America."[12]
These remarks are particularly controversial since some forms of liberation theology have been
denounced by Pope John Paul II[13] and by Pope Benedict XVI, when he was still Prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.[14] However, the Superior General also added, "As
with any theology, liberation theology needs years to mature. It's a shame that it has not been
given a vote of confidence and that soon its wings will be cut before it learns to fly. It needs
more time."[12]

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