Josef Alois Kessler: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:1862 births]]
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[[Category:20th-century Roman Catholic archbishops]]
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Revision as of 08:43, 30 December 2009

Template:Infobox bishopbiog

Joseph Kessler (Joseph Aloysius Kessler, de: Josef Alois Kesser,ru:Иосиф Кесслер)(August 12, 1862– December 10, 1933) the last Archbishop of Diocese of Tiraspol (Russia), the last Volga German Bishop

Biography

Joseph Kessler was born 12 of August in Louis(Ostrogovka) Government Samara. After he finished studies in the Saratov Priest Seminary, he was ordained in 1889. He graduated from Theological Academy in St.Petersburg with the degree of Master of Theology. In 1889 he became a vicar of a parish in Saratov, at the same time he taught in the Saratov Seminary. After that, his life entered a period of transition. He took the following positions during the next 13 years: 1892 Simferopol parish vicar, 1895 Sulz parish priest, 1899 Chisinau (today Moldova) parish priest, 1903 Saratov Seminary inspector, and in 1904 canon lawyer. He was appointed Bishop of Tiraspol on 1 April 1904 and was consecrated the 5th Bishop of Diocese of Tiraspol (Russia) on 28 October 1904 and took residence in the diocesan headquarters in Saratov. While Josef Kessler was Bishop of Tiraspol, the pastoral life of diocese became successful and vital. Bishop Kessler expanded the Seminary, founded a publishing house, supported work of male and female ordained persons, visited all parishes of the giant diocese, and conducted 75,000 confirmations.[1].

Grave stone of Josef Kessler in Ornbau, Germany

On 14 of August 1918 before Bolsheviks entered the city of Saratov, Bishop Kessler left Saratov on foot, and went to Odessa. When the new regiment entered the Seminary, they found a message from the Bishop, where he declared the power of Bolsheviks to be a power of Antichrist. The message warned people that, if they cooperate with this power, they will be excommunicated. The Bolsheviks conducted a Russia-wide manhunt for Bishop Kessler. The Bishop secretly left Russia for Bessarabia (today Moldova), where he was a priest in the village of Krasnoe. In 1921, he visited Kansas. He made a trip to the United States to raise funds for the famine stricken among the German colonies along the Volga, as well as in the Black Sea area. The rest of his life was spent in Zinnowitz, Germany on the Baltic coast . He died 10 December 1933 and was buried in Ornbau , Bavaria, next to other Bishop of Tiraspol Franz Zottmann, who was born in Ornbau.

References

  1. ^ I.Osipova, F. B. Chaplizky "Mortirology of catholic church in the USSR"(Rus), ISBN 5891630486

External links