He was ordained a priest on 19 March 1950 and worked for several years in the administration of the Diocese of Calahorra and teaching at the Instituto Marco Fabio Quintiliano.[3][1] To prepare for a diplomatic career he entered the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy in 1954.[4]
On 18 August 1956 he received a doctorate in canon law from the Pontifical Lateran University; his thesis topic was the Spanish concordat of 1953.[1] He then entered the Roman Curia, serving in the Secretariat of State, where he was responsible for the Spanish section. He also taught at the Ecclesiastical Academy from 1957 to 1970.[3]
On 12 November 1975, Pope Paul VI appointed him titular archbishop of Thagora and Apostolic Nuncio to Colombia.[6] He received his episcopal consecration on 13 December.[5]
Curial service
Pope John Paul II named him Substitute for General Affairs of the Secretariat of State on 5 May 1979.[7]
Pope John Paul announced on 30 May 1988[8] that he would make him a cardinal and did so on 28 June 1988, assigning him as a cardinal deacon the title of Santissimo Nome di Gesù.[9] He opted to join the order of cardinal priests on 9 January 1999.[10] He was thought a likely candidate to head the Secretariat of State when the post became vacant in December 1990, but was probably not appointed because the Polish pope thought it best to fill the position with an Italian.[11]
He was prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments from 1 July 1988[12] to 21 January 1992 and prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life from 21 January 1992[13] to 11 February 2004, when he resigned.[14][15] While in that post, he collaborated with other senior prelates to obtain the release of former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet from house arrest in Great Britain in 2000.[16][17] In 2001, he responded to reports that his congregation had failed to respond to reports of abuse of nuns by priests in Africa and many other countries by appointing a committee to investigate, but declined to comment publicly.[17][18][19][20] During his tenure as prefect his congregation issued a ruling that transsexuals be prohibited from entering religious orders and that anyone who had undergone sex-change surgery be expelled or suspended from their order.[17] A letter outlining the policy was sent to the heads of religious orders, but otherwise kept secret.[21][22]
In April 2010, a journalistic investigation identified Martínez Somalo as one of several senior curial officials who had supported Marcial Maciel, the founder of the Legion of Christ who was expelled from the priesthood in 2006, despite numerous charges of serious misconduct against him. Martínez Somalo accepted cash payments from Maciel while heading the dicastery responsible for "investigating any complaints about religious orders or their leaders". He took no action on 1997 reports that Maciel had abused nine seminarians. Martínez Somalo refused to be interviewed about Maciel and the Legion.[23][24]
As camerlengo, Martínez Somalo was responsible for verifying the death of Pope John Paul. Just minutes after his death, he performed the traditional ritual, proclaimed he had died, and removed his ring.[28] He presided at certain of his funeral
rites.[17] On 8 April, Martínez Somalo read Psalm 41:2 before the coffin was closed and the Mass of Requiem begun.[29] On 16 April, at the last meeting of the College of Cardinals before the conclave to elect a new pope began on 18 April, Martínez Somalo used a silver hammer to crush John Paul's ring and destroyed his lead seal as well.[30][31]
Health and death
He had bypass surgery in 2003 and a heart attack in July 2021. He died at his home in Vatican City on 10 August 2021 at the age of 94.[32][2][27]
^Berry, Jason (6 April 2010). "Money paved way for Maciel's influence in the Vatican". National Catholic Reporter. Archived from the original on 11 February 2019. Retrieved 12 August 2021. When Martínez Somalo, a Spaniard, became head of the congregation overseeing religious in 1994, Maciel dispatched this priest to Martínez Somalo's home. The young priest carried an envelope thick with cash. "I didn't bat an eye," he recalled. "I went up to his apartment, handed him the envelope, said goodbye. ... It was a way of making friends, insuring certain help if it were needed, oiling the cogs."