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Diocese of the Catholic Church in Texas From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Diocese of Corpus Christi (Latin: Dioecesis Corporis Christi) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church in southern Texas in the United States.
Diocese of Corpus Christi Dioecesis Corporis Christi | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
Territory | Counties of Aransas, Bee, Brooks, Duval, Jim Wells, Kenedy, Kleberg, Live Oak, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, and a portion of McMullen County |
Ecclesiastical province | Galveston-Houston |
Population - Catholics | 388,878 (69.9%) |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | March 23, 1912 |
Cathedral | Corpus Christi Cathedral |
Patron saint | Our Lady of Guadalupe[1] |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | William Mulvey |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Daniel DiNardo |
Bishops emeritus | René Henry Gracida Edmond Carmody |
Map | |
Website | |
diocesecc.org |
The Diocese of Corpus Christi is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston.
The first Catholic mission in Texas, then part of the Spanish Empire, was San Francisco de los Tejas. It was founded by Franciscan Father Damián Massanet in 1690 in the Weches area. The priests left the mission after three years, then established a second mission, Nuestro Padre San Francisco de los Tejas. near present-day Alto in 1716.
In 1839, after the 1836 founding of the Texas Republic, Pope Gregory XVI erected the prefecture apostolic of Texas, covering its present-day area. The prefecture was elevated to a vicariate apostolic in 1846, the year that Texas became an American state. In 1874, Pope Pius IX established the Vicariate Apostolic of Brownsville, including all the settlements south of the Nueces River to the Rió Grande River.[2]
Pope Pius X suppressed the Apostolic Vicariate of Brownsville and erected the Diocese of Corpus Christi on March 23, 1912. He appointed Reverend Paul Nussbaum as its first bishop in 1913.[3] As bishop, Nussbaum founded St. Ann's Society for married women, and promoted the Forty Hours' Devotion and daily communion. He also emphasized Catholic education and doubled the number of parochial schools in the diocese.[4] During his tenure, he welcomed into the diocese many Mexican priests and nuns who were forced to flee Mexico due to the Mexican Revolution. He set up Duns Scots College in Hebbronville, Texas, to train seminarians for future service in Mexico.[5] Nussbaum resigned as bishop in 1920 due to poor health.
In 1921, Reverend Emmanuel Ledvina of the Diocese of Indianapolis was appointed the second bishop of Corpus Christi by Pope Benedict XV.[6] During his tenure, Ledvina increased the number of priests from 32 to 160, and erected over 50 churches, 53 mission chapels, and 47 rectories.[7] He constructed Corpus Christi Cathedral in 1940, and a chancery office in 1947.[8] He invited the Benedictine monks of Subiaco Abbey to establish a community in the diocese and staff a new high school.[8] Ledvina also became known for his efforts among Mexican-American Catholics in South Texas and for his opposition to the Ku Klux Klan.[7] In 1936, Pope Pius XI named Reverend Mariano Garriga of the Archdiocese of San Antonio as coadjutor bishop in Corpus Christi to assist Ledvina.
After Ledvina retired for health reasons in 1949, Garriga automatically succeeded him as bishop of Corpus Christi. He was the first Texas native to be named bishop of a Texas diocese.[9] During his 16-year tenure, Garriga founded a minor seminary in 1960 and established several parochial schools.[10] Garriga died in 1965.
On July 19, 1965, Bishop Thomas Joseph Drury of the Diocese of San Angelo was appointed bishop of Corpus Christi by Pope Paul VI.[11] Earlier that month, the pope erected the Diocese of Brownsville, removing its territory from the Diocese of Corpus Christ.
Drury expanded diocesan activities from two to thirty-two departments, including Catholic Charities, the Office of Catholic Schools, the Catholic Youth Organization, and the Department of Hispanic Affairs.[12] Drury created a Diocesan Pastoral Council to advise him on current issues in the diocese. He also established a weekly newspaper, Texas Gulf Coast Register, in 1966; it was later known as Texas Gulf Coast Catholic. Today the newspaper is the official diocese newspaper called South Texas Catholic.[13][12]
After Drury retired in 1983, Pope John Paul II appointed Bishop René Gracida of the Diocese of Pensacola-Tallahassee as his replacement. In June 1990, Gracida excommunicated two parishioners in the diocese who were providing legal abortion services for women, citing canon law. They were Rachel Vargas, a women's health clinic director, and Dr. Eduardo Aquino, an obstetrician. In an interview, Aquino noted that he had recently won a $800,000 legal settlement against the anti-abortion group South Texas for Life, whose protestors had been picketing his house. Vargas ran her clinic for eight years and did not receive any notices from Gracida until she was interviewed on local television.[14][15] In 1995, Auxiliary Bishop Roberto Nieves of the Archdiocese of Boston was appointed coadjutor bishop of the diocese by John Paul II to assist Gracida.[16]
Gracida retired in 1997, allowing Nieves to automatically become bishop of Corpus Christi. John Paul II named him in 1999 as bishop of the Archdiocese of San Juan. To replace Nieves, John Paul II appointed Bishop Edmond Carmody of the Diocese of Tyler as bishop of Corpus Christi. Carmody retired in 2009. Monsignor Michael Mulvey of the Diocese of Austin was named bishop of Corpus Christi by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010.
In June 2018, Reverend Krzystof Bauta, the former parish administrator for St. Joseph's Parish in Port Aransas, was arrested of charges of second degree felony theft for stealing $150,000 from his parish from 2013 to 2017.[17] However, in August 2019, the local prosecutor decided not to press charges.[18]
As of 2023, Mulvey is the current bishop of Corpus Christi.
The Diocese of Corpus Christi was sued in 1988 by a couple who claimed that Reverend John J. Feminelli had engaged in private "wrestling matches" with their teenage son. The couple claimed that diocese officials slandered the boy, prompting him to recant his testimony in a court case.[19]
In 1995, Reverend Jesús Hernando was indicted for sexual assault and indecency with an altar boy in 1982. The criminal case was dismissed due to lack of evidence.[20]
The diocese in 2011 settled a lawsuit for $1.2 million that was brought by two men who accused Reverend Hugh Clarke of sexually assaulting them from 1972 to 1975 at the rectory and school at Christ the King Parish.[21] Diocese records later showed allegations from the 1980s that Clarke would take three teenage boys on outings in Mexico, where they would visit brothels and abuse alcohol and illegal drugs. He was sent away for treatment, where he was diagnosed with pedophilia. After returning to the diocese, the Vatican elevated him to monsignor.
In March 2018, Reverend Stephen Dougherty was convicted of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl at her parents' house in Beeville in 2011. The victim made the accusation in 2016. Dougherty was sentenced to 60 years in prison. The victim sued the diocese in 2016, claiming the diocese failed to protect her.[22]
In January 2019, Bishop Mulvey released a list of 20 diocesan clergy with credible accusations of sexual abuse of minors.[23] In June 2019, three priests on the list, Ferminelli, Hernando and Michael Heras, sued the diocese for defamation of character.[20] In August 2019, a judge dismissed the lawsuits by Ferminelli and Heras.[24]
The diocese was sued in 2020 in Arizona by two men who claimed they were sexually abused by Reverend Clement A. Hageman in Winslow, Arizona, and Mayer, Arizona, during the 1960s. The diocese had moved Hagemann to Northern Arizona in the early 1940s, but kept him under the control of the Bishop of Corpus Christi. The plaintiffs claimed that the diocese knew of Hagemann's inappropriate conduct with boys from records going back to 1939.[25]
Adolph Marx (1956-1965), appointed Bishop of Brownsville
K-12 schools:
High schools:
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