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Antonio Lucci
Italian Franciscan friar and bishop

Antonio Lucci

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Italian Franciscan friar and bishop
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Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Agnone
Place of death
Bovino
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Blessed Antonio Lucci (2 August 1682 – 25 July 1752) - born Angelo Nicola Lucci - was an Italian Roman Catholic professed member from the Order of Friars Minor Conventual and the Bishop of Bovino from 1729 until his death.
The beatification cause started on 5 December 1764 under Pope Clement XIII while he was later titled as Venerable on 13 June 1847 under Pope Pius IX. Pope John Paul II beatified Lucci on 18 June 1989 in Saint Peter's Square.

Life

Angelo Nicola Lucci on 2 August 1682 to the cobbler and coppersmith Francesco Lucci and Angela Paolantonio.

He attended the local school that the Order of Friars Minor Conventual managed and later joined them in 1698. Lucci made his solemn profession in 1698 in the religious name of "Antonio". He completed his studies for the priesthood in Assisi where he was ordained in 1705. He studied rhetoric and philosophical studies at Venagro and Alvito as well as in Aversa before doing theological studies at both Agnone and Fasani. Further studies led to a doctorate in theological studies and appointments as a professor in Agnone as well as at the Franciscan school in Ravello (from 1709 to 1712) and at the Franciscan school of San Lorenzo in Naples (from 1713 to 1718). He also served as guardian of the convent in Naples.

Lucci was elected as the Minister Provincial in 1718 and held that post until 1719; in 1719 he was appointed as a professor at St. Bonaventure College in Rome and remained there until his appointment to the episcopate. In 1725 he received instructions from Pope Benedict XIII to write against Jansenism. It was rumored that Benedict XIII would appoint him as a cardinal but this did not happen: the pope had decided to name him in 1729 as the Bishop of Bovino and explained of the appointment: "I have chosen as Bishop of Bovino an eminent theologian and a great saint". Benedict XIII himself conferred episcopal consecration upon Lucci in Saint Peter's Basilica.

He had a reputation for being reserved but his episcopate was marked with frequent visits to his local parishes in the diocese as well as a renewal of Gospel application amongst the faithful; he dedicated his episcopal income to works of education and set up catechesis classes for children and the poor. He also repaired churches and enforced discipline on priests that indulged in vanities while also visiting hermits to ensure that the magisterium was being upheld in those places of hermitage. The Minister General for his order requested he write a hagiographical account in 1740 and so he wrote a major book about the saints and blesseds in the first two centuries of his branch of friars.

Lucci studied with and was a close friend of Saint Francis Fasani who - after Lucci's death - testified on 29 November 1742 at the diocesan hearings regarding the holiness of Lucci's life; he and Fasani were both ordained as priests together. Saint Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori wrote of Lucci and heaped great praise upon him.

Lucci died in the morning due to a high fever in mid-1752 and his remains were interred in the Bovino Cathedral.

Beatification

The cause commenced under Pope Clement XIII on 5 December 1764 and Lucci became titled as a Servant of God while Pope Pius IX confirmed that Lucci had lived a model life of heroic virtue and so named him as Venerable on 13 June 1847.

The informative process for the miracle needed for beatification spanned from 1779 until 1780 and received validation in Rome from the Congregation for Rites on 10 September 1782 before a medical board met and approved this miracle two centuries later on 3 February 1988. Theologians approved the miracle on 7 July 1988 as did the Congregation for the Causes of Saints on 8 November 1988. Pope John Paul II approved this miracle on 28 November 1988 and beatified Lucci on 18 June 1989 in Saint Peter's Square.

The current postulator for this cause is Fra Angelo Paleri.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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