Vicente Juan Segura

Styles of
Paul Sirba
Reference style The Most Reverend
Spoken style Your Excellency
Religious style Bishop
Posthumous style not applicable

Vicente Juan Segura (born 22 May 1955) is the bishop of Ibiza since his episcopal ordination on 14 May 2005. Segura was formerly head of the Spanish section of the Vatican Secretariat of State.

Segura was born in Tabernes de Valldigna the archdiocese of Valencia. He studied law at the Faculty of Civil Law of Valencia. He began training in the ecclesiastical seminary and then in the Real Colegio Seminario y Corpus Christi. He was ordained a priest in his home parish on 24 October 1981.

After having carried out his ministry for four years in the parish of Saint Anthony Abbot, Cullera, he was called to the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy, and entered the Holy See's diplomatic service on 1 July 1988. He worked at the Apostolic Nunciatures to Costa Rica, Morocco and Mozambique. In 1994 he became Head of the Spanish section at the Secretariat of State. During his time in Rome he exercised ministry as assistant to the parish of St. Melchiade in Rome and at the Little Sisters of the Abandoned Elderly. On 10 June 2000 he was appointed an Honorary Prelate. He earned a Doctorate in Canon Law at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum and another doctorate in Civil Law at the University of Valencia. In addition to Spanish, he speaks French, Portuguese and Italian.

On 22 January 2005 he was appointed bishop of Ibiza by Pope John Paul II[1] and was ordained on 14 May 2005 by Archbishop Leonardo Sandri with Cardinal Ricardo María Carles Gordó and Archbishop Agustín García-Gasco y Vicente of Valencia as principal co-consecrators.

In September 2007, Segura demanded that a collage of Pope John Paul II in a sexual pose be removed. saying that it “offended Catholic sentiment”, and calling for its “immediate and urgent withdrawal”.[2]

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Agustín Cortés Soriano
Bishop of Ibiza
14 May 2005present
Succeeded by
incumbent

References

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