Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 27, 2024 / 08:37 am (CNA).
The Holy See on Monday said Pope Francis had accepted the resignation of La Plata, Argentina Archbishop Gabriel Antonio Mestre, after the prelate had served in that role for less than a year.
The Vatican said in a press statement on Monday that the Holy Father “has accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the metropolitan archdiocese of La Plata, Argentina, presented by Archbishop Gabriel Antonio Mestre.” The archbishop had been appointed to that role in July of last year and installed in September.
The Holy See did not give a reason for Mestre’s resignation. In a statement posted to the archdiocese’s Facebook on Monday, meanwhile, Mestre said that he was “conscious of my weakness and the human weakness of the beautiful Church that is my home and my family” as he resigned.
“A few days ago, the Holy See summoned me to Rome to talk about some aspects of the Diocese of Mar del Plata after my transfer to the Archdiocese of La Plata when I was appointed Metropolitan Archbishop by Pope Francis,” Mestre wrote.
The prelate had previously served as the bishop of the Mar del Plata diocese from 2017 until his appointment to the archbishopric last year.
“In the Eternal City, after confronting some different perceptions with what happened in the Diocese of Mar del Plata from November 2023 to the present, Pope Francis asked me to resign from the See of La Plata,” Mestre wrote.
“With deep peace and total rectitude of conscience before God for how I acted, trusting that the Truth sets us free (cf. Jn 8:32), and with filial and theological obedience to the Holy Father, I immediately wrote my resignation, which was accepted and made public today,” he said.
In a message addressed to the archdiocese itself, Mestre said he had been “very happy these eight and a half months” serving in the archbishopric.
“It pains me to leave, it pains me to leave you as pastor of this Particular Church that is on pilgrimage in La Plata,” Mestre wrote, “but I am sure that God has much better plans that I cannot finish deciphering today.”
Mestre was born in 1968 in Mar del Plata in the province of Buenos Aires. He was ordained a priest of the diocese in 1997 and has a degree in theology with a specialization in sacred scripture from the Universidad Católica Argentina.
He was appointed bishop of Mar del Plata in 2017 after serving as a parish priest at the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Cecilia, vicar general of the diocese, and a member of the presbyteral council.
He was also a professor of sacred scripture at the Mar del Plata University School of Theology and founder of the diocesan biblical commission.
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As usual these days, a bishop resigns well under normal retirement age, after only eight months at that, and absolutely no reason is given. At a time when more candor is desperately needed, we get exactly the opposite.
What pains too is to be left in the darkness unknowing of what occurs at top level on matters that affect us all who love the Church. We want to see things change for the better, to be able to make a contribution but are reduced to speculations and too often cynical accusations. What will make us smile.
Robert Royal addresses the pursuit of happiness over at TCT, and comes to the conclusion that we can’t change the world, at least not in a significant way, although I would add the great saints were able to. But realistically as Royal says we can be satisfied and feel complete in knowing that we’re doing our individual part by living the life of Christ. Perhaps in line with what I commend in Altieri’s essay on the same subject, to think good thoughts and to live good lives.