Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops

NEW YORK – In one of three episcopal appointments in the United States announced today, Pope Francis has appointed a successor to Archbishop Dennis Schnurr of Cincinnati, who has had a chequered tenure, and has been battling cancer since last May. Pope Francis appointed Auxiliary Bishop Robert Casey of Chicago to replace Schnurr, 76, who The post Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops first appeared on Catholic Herald. The post Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops appeared first on Catholic Herald.

Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops

NEW YORK – In one of three episcopal appointments in the United States announced today, Pope Francis has appointed a successor to Archbishop Dennis Schnurr of Cincinnati, who has had a chequered tenure, and has been battling cancer since last May.

Pope Francis appointed Auxiliary Bishop Robert Casey of Chicago to replace Schnurr, 76, who has led the Archdiocese of Cincinnati since 2009 at the appointment of Pope Benedict XVI. The change was announced by Cardinal Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

Archbishop Schnurr’s 15-year tenure has included a few controversies.

In 2019, Archbishop Schnurr removed Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Binzer from his post as director of priest personnel after he failed to properly report an archdiocesan priest’s inappropriate conduct with minors.

Then, in 2021, Archbishop Schnurr made the controversial decision to appoint Bishop Binzer pastor of an archdiocesan parish consisting of two churches.

More recently, Archbishop Schnurr has been battling health challenges. He was diagnosed with stage 3 small bowel cancer last May, and has been undergoing chemotherapy treatment. It was also announced earlier this week that Schnurr is recovering from a fall and subsequent back surgery.

In a statement on Bishop Casey’s appointment, Archbishop Schnurr said that “it has been my great honour and privilege to serve the people of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati these past 15 years”.

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati is comprised of 8,543 square miles in the State of Ohio and has a total population of 3,090,762 of which 438,802, are Catholic, according to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Bishop Casey, 57, has served as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Chicago – led by close Pope Francis ally Cardinal Blase Cupich – since he was ordained a bishop in 2018 at the appointment of Pope Francis.

Most recently, he was the archdiocese’s vicar general. He has held a number of leadership and parish roles in the archdiocese since he was ordained a priest in 1994.

Pope Francis made two other appointments to U.S. dioceses, including filling one of the nation’s vacant dioceses.

Pope Francis accepted the resignation of Bishop Ralph Walker Nickless, 77, of Sioux City, Iowa, and appointed Father John Keehner, Jr, as his successor.

Bishop-elect Keehner, 59, is a priest of the Diocese of Youngstown, Ohio, where he currently serves as pastor of four parishes.

Pope Francis also appointed Mgr Richard Reidy as Bishop of the Diocese of Norwich, Connecticut. Bishop-elect Reidy, 66, is a priest of the Diocese of Worcester, Massachusetts, where he currently serves as vicar general and moderator of the curia. The Diocese of Norwich has been vacant since last September, when the pontiff accepted the resignation of Bishop Michael Cote.

The Norwich appointment leaves only five U.S. dioceses without a bishop – Houma-Thibodaux, Louisiana; Steubenville, Ohio; Austin, Texas; Providence, Rhode Island; and San Diego, California.

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati appointment in particular is the latest of a number of appointments Pope Francis has made to prominent U.S. dioceses in recent months with a number of bishops at, or reaching, retirement age – making his mark on the hierarchy of the nation’s episcopacy.

Since last August, Pope Francis has appointed new heads of the Archdioceses of Boston, Galveston-Houston, Washington, D.C., Detroit, and Milwaukee. And with six other archdioceses currently led by men past retirement age (75), it’s likely more changes are coming down the pike.

(Picture of Archbishop Schnurr by CNS)

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The post Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops first appeared on Catholic Herald.

The post Pope appoints new Archbishop of Cincinnati and two other new U.S. bishops appeared first on Catholic Herald.