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{{Infobox Christian leader
{{Infobox Christian leader
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| title = [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Trier|Bishop of Trier]]
| title = [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Trier|Bishop of Trier]]
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Revision as of 11:03, 6 January 2018

The Right Reverend

Stephan Ackermann
Bishop of Trier
ChurchRoman Catholic
DioceseDiocese of Trier
Appointed8 April 2009
Installed24 May 2009
PredecessorReinhard Marx
Orders
Ordination10 October 1987
by Georg Moser
Consecration14 May 2006
by Reinhard Marx
Personal details
Born (1963-03-20) 20 March 1963 (age 61)
Mayen Germany
NationalityGerman
MottoIn Lumine Tuo Domine
Coat of armsStephan Ackermann's coat of arms

Stephan Ackermann (born March 20, 1963, in Mayen) is a German bishop. He was appointed Bishop of Trier (or Treves) in the Moselle area of Germany, in 2009.[1]

Early Life

The son of Helmy and Hermann and the eldest of two childern, Ackermann grew up in Nickenich. His father was a church books and souvenirs merchant and met his mother when she was working as a sales assistant in the Maria Laach Abbey gift shop. He has a sister named Bärbel and is the godfather of two of her children. Ackerman was educated at secondary school level in Andernach.[2]

Formation and Priesthood

Bishop of Münster Felix Genn and Bishop Stephen Ackermann during the unveiling of a commemorative plaque for the martyr priests in 2010.

He entered the Trier priest seminary at the age of 18 and studied at the Gregorian and Sankt Georgen higher education ecclesiastical schools.[3]. He was ordained a priest in 1987.

From 1989 to 1991, Ackerman was a chaplain in Bad Breisig in the catholic parishes of Niederbreisig and Oberbreisig.[4] In 1991 he returned to his seminary to be appointed chancellor for 8 years. Ackermann would then replace the newly appointed auxiliary bishop of Trier Felix Genn as the director of St. Lambert priest seminary and in 2000 he received an ecclesiastical doctorate in church dogmatics by Jesuit Fr. Medard Kehl. His dissertation "Church as a Person"[5] was followed by the book "In Action for the Church"[6], a series of essays co-authored with Felix Genn in dialogue with the former Jesuit leader Johannes Günter Gerhartz. In November 2005 he received the title of monsignor by the Holy see. The certificate was handed to him by the then Trier Bishop Reinhard Marx who appointed him auxiliary bishop 6 months later.

Bishop of Trier

Ackermann became Reinhard Marx's successor as Bishop of Trier in 2009[7]. Until the ordination of Bishop of Passau in 2014, Ackermann was Germany's youngest bishop. Days after his ordination, his biography, authored by the press office of the Diocese, was released[8]. The illustrated biography included images from his recent Bishop ordination and proclaimed a transition to a new period for the Diocese.

Ackermann appointed the South African Eifel priest Stefan Hippler in the archdiocese of Cape Town; Hippler where he would be involved in the development and expansion of aid projects for AIDS-infected people - on behalf of the local archbishop. In the German Bishops' Conference, he became chairman of the Liturgy Commission the Universal Church Commission. [8]

Child Abuse Controversy

While being the German Bishops Conference's spokesman on child abuse issues he encouraged victims of child abuse to come forward but later refused to actively pursue investigations or impose harsh penalties [9][10]. Ackermann had to issue a public apology after failing to immediately suspend a suspected pedophile priest in 2011 yet ignored press revelations about seven other cases of priests in the bishop's diocese who are suspected of having abused minors [11]. In January 2011, the police informed his office that a pastor from Saarbrücken, the state capital, had allegedly abused minors. According to the guidelines of the German Bishops' Conference, prompt action must be taken in such suspected cases, and the priest in question can be suspended until the accusations have been cleared up. But, despite these guidelines, and despite his status as the Church's spokesman on abuse issues, Ackermann allowed one suspected pedophile to remain in office. The priest continued to celebrate Mass and even held a dedication ceremony for a Catholic kindergarten in the summer. In the fall, another ceremony was held to mark his 70th birthday. [12]

Diocese Synod

On June 29, 2012, Bishop Ackermann proclaimed a diocesan synod that was constituted on 13 and 14 December 2013. It was the first synod in the diocese of Trier for almost 50 years.

Parish Abolishment and Clergy Role reformation Plan

Bishop Ackermann has announced that the diocese will be closing almost all of its parishes, reducing 903 parishes and all relevant organizations to 35 new regional authorities. The parishes of the future will have nothing in common with the parish concept “but the name”. [13][14]. The new entities will include limitation to the duties of the clergy and the introduction of lay people duties. According to Ackermann's plan, Lay people will have the right to make decisions and lead "traditional and new worship forms" and "there'll continue to be a priest who takes overall responsibility, but tasks and duties will also be distributed by the team — so there'll be less emphasis on the clergy's leadership, and more on its priestly and pastoral functions" [15].

In 2017, Ackermann became the president of the Liturgy Commission of the German Bishop's Conference

References

  1. ^ Curriculum vitae on catholic-hierarchy.org
  2. ^ [1] Paulinus: I have Something To tell you
  3. ^ CV on the pages of Bistum Trier
  4. ^ [2] International Biographies Archive
  5. ^ [3] Church As a Person
  6. ^ [4] In Action for the Church
  7. ^ Curriculum vitae on catholic-hierarchy.org
  8. ^ [5]World Cat: One of Us: Bishop of Trier Stephan Ackermann
  9. ^ [6] 20 Trier diocese priests accused of sex abuse
  10. ^ Zero-Tolerance SPIEGEL: Bishop Accused of Leniency
  11. ^ [7] NY Times: German Priests Carried Out Sexual Abuse for Years
  12. ^ Zero-Tolerance SPIEGEL: Bishop Accused of Leniency
  13. ^ [8] Gloria TV: Oldest German Diocese Dissolves All Parishes
  14. ^ [9] National Catholic Review: Europe's church creatively rethinks as numbers plummet
  15. ^ [10] National Catholic Review: Europe's church creatively rethinks as numbers plummet