
Baltimore, Md., Jun 12, 2019 / 03:48 pm (CNA).- At the US Conference of Catholic Bishops’ biannual assemblies, new members of the US episcopate are announced, to much applause. CNA spoke to the newest members of the USCCB to find out what it’s like to be the new kid on the block.
Two of this year’s newcomers, Bishops William Muhm and Joseph Coffey have much in common. They have both served in the Navy, both as chaplains and prior to entering seminary; both were announced as the auxiliary bishops of the Archdiocese for the Military Services Jan. 22; and both were consecrated March 25. Neither expected to be bishops.
This is the first time either of them have attended a USCCB general assembly, and they told CNA they were a little bit intimidated at first by some of their brother bishops.
Bishop Coffey said that he did not anticipate speaking up much during this assembly, and that “as a new guy, I’m going to do a lot of observing.” Coffey was chosen to be one of the tellers of the assembly, an administrative duty that means he will be verifying the vote totals of the elections. He told CNA that he suspects he was chosen for this role because he is a brand new bishop.
Mild episcopal hazing aside, Coffey said that “it’s pretty darn exciting” to be at the general assembly and to be sitting next to the men he has read about and admired for years. He said he felt as though he has joined an “incredibly warm and friendly and welcoming community of brothers.”
Coffey said that as a bishop, he has been given the chance to represent Archbishop Timothy Broglio at events, and has traveled around the country with the permission of the military. As he is still active duty in the Navy, he said he will be seeking retirement or entering the reserves in order to work full-time as a bishop.
The whole experience, said Coffey, has been surreal.
“I was not expecting this at all, and so, it has only been a couple of months, so I’m still getting used to God’s providence and how it’s really changed my life, but it’s exciting, to say ‘yes’ and see what happens,” he said.
Bishop Muhm likened the feeling to the first day of school, but said that “everyone’s been really welcoming.” He relished the chance to get to know the other bishops and to develop fraternal bonds, which he said was “one of the most important reasons to be here.”
Like Coffey, Muhm also said he planned on “doing a lot more listening than talking”, and that he was adjusting to the nuances associated with the bishops’ conference. With his primary priestly experience as a military chaplain, and only about six weeks administering a parish prior to being appointed a bishop, Muhm’s ecclesiastical career has been very different from most of his brother bishops.
“It’s been a little bit overwhelming, with the level of detail that’s being discussed,” said Muhm. “I don’t have a background in many of these things that they’re talking about, and I hadn’t seen the documents until recently.”
Muhm told CNA that he has been enjoying his time at the general assembly nevertheless, and is excited to move forward with his duties as bishop, which will involve tending to the needs of Catholics in the military serving in Asia and Europe.
Bishop Alex Aclan, an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, was driving when he received a call from the nuncio Feb. 17. Aclan, who was on a sabbatical at the time, said that he was “pretty calm” when he found out his new role, and that he had “really no strong emotions.”
As the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is home to about 11.6 million people, with about 4.3 million Catholics, the auxiliary bishops are assigned to regions. Aclan is assigned to the San Fernando region, which includes 55 parishes, 13 high schools, and three hospitals. He said he has had a chance to visit a little less than half of the parishes so far, and that he has been very busy.
Aclan told CNA that he has been warmly received by the other bishops, who are “very welcoming” and “very hospitable, you know, when they see that you look lost.”
“They walk up to you and they’re talking to you, so they’re very really nice,” he said with a laugh.
While Aclan may be new to the USCCB, his prior role as the Vicar for Clergy for Losg Angeles archdiocese meant that he was already familiar with some of the bishops, and was not entirely alone at his first general assembly.
“Some of the bishops actually attended the conferences that we had (for other Vicars for Clergy), and some of those Vicars for Clergy now have also become bishops themselves,” he said.
While Bishops Aclan, Coffey, and Muhm are all newly consecrated, Archbishop Borys Gudziak was consecrated nearly seven years ago. Gudziak was installed June 4 as head of the Ukrainian Archeparchy of Philadelphia. Prior to that, he was Bishop of the Ukrainian Eparchy of Saint Vladimir the Great of Paris, and thus a member of the French bishops’ conference. The spring meeting marked the first time he has attended a USCCB general assembly.
Gudziak said that transitioning from a European eparchy to an American archeparchy was an adjustment, and that the Ukrainian Catholic population in the United States is substantially different than that of Europe. His past eparchy included five western European countries, and the war in Ukraine has resulted in an influx of very poor, often undocumented, Ukrainian emigrants moving to the European Union.
For Gudziak, his time in Paris “wasn’t a place or position or a job, it really became a family.” So when he when he was asked to come to America, it was “mixed emotions.”
He said he felt “sadness of leaving family members whom we went through thin and thin, I would say, not thin and thick. But great joy at coming back home,” he said. Gudziak was born and raised in the United States.
Comparatively, the Ukrainian Catholics in the United States have “about 70 years more history” than their western European counterparts, as well as “much more infrastructure.”
“The number of churches, schools, facilities, that are archeparchy here I would say has 50-70 times as much as we had in France,” said Gudziak.
Despite this, Gudziak said that his new parishioners face many of the same issues as his older ones, particularly among young people.
“With the young generation, there’s a need for coming down as Jesus came down and meeting people heart to heart,” he said. “Or as one young person had told me, ‘I need to be met at my broken heart.’”
The Ukrainian Catholic Church is one of the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches. And although he is not a Latin rite bishop like the majority of the bishops in the USCCB, Gudziak said that his new brother bishops have been “particularly friendly, knowledgeable, and embracing.”
And while he declined, citing his relative newness, specifically to say how he planned on using his unique experience to help the USCCB, Gudziak told CNA that he thinks he can play a role in improving relations between the Church in the US and Churches around the world.
“One thing that I would like to witness to is the universality of the Church,” said Gudziak. He said that due to the lack of American priests and seminarians who study in other countries, “it’s becoming more difficult to keep a knowledgeable, friendly relationship with other episcopal conferences and other bishops.”
“And I hope that I can contribute to a friendship between the Church in the U.S. and the Church in Western and Eastern Europe,” said Gudziak, “since I lived in both parts of that continent for many years.”
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I’m sorry but the bishops don’t get to weigh in on our immigration crisis because they all share in the guilt of encouraging people to break the law by entering the USA illegally. And, in addition to that, the bishops profitted handsomely by this conspiracy to abet foreigners’ breaking our laws.
I’d suggest that Bishop Broglio try leaving the USA or entering any other country without a passport i.e. illegally and see what the consequences are.
Excellent point, Diogenes.
The bishops have blood on their hands. They have advocated for the illegal migration of millions into this country, which directly resulted in the deaths of thousands upon thousands of Americans due to drug overdoses, plus the sex trafficking of women and children.
Archbishop Broglio and his USCCB henchmen are complicit. It’s just one part of the legacy of Bergoglio.
(Also see: Rupnik, et al.)
I don’t believe the bishops see all sides of the border security issue, especially the tragic effects it’s had on Mexican communities plagued by cartel violence & extortion .Human smuggling just strengthens the cartels through profits & enables turf wars.
On the other hand, some who only see enforcing immigration law as a good in itself can miss the human suffering of those who are taken away from their work in our hotels, landscaping companies, & poultry processing plants. Most of these are otherwise decent folk who are trying to support their families back home & doing jobs many US citizens don’t want.
mrscracker, I do see your point about people wanting to come here to seek jobs and support their families. At the same time, how many of these people are holding jobs that are ‘off-the-books’ and are being paid slave wages? How many in the agriculture industry are picking crops and living in trailers moving from place to place as the seasons change- a totally peripatetic existence? How many jobs come with Workman’s Comp and health insurance? How many have fraudulently obtained drivers licenses and Social Security cards and then illegally vote in our elections as instructed by the DNC?
Let me tell you about someone I counseled in my Psychology practice a few years back. He came to the USA illegally and had to pay a huge sum of money to the cartel that guaranteed his safe passage. At first he was sending a good deal of the money he earned back to Mexico to support the wife and three children he left there. After he was here for a time, he began feeling lonely and he met an Hispanic woman who I guess sensed that he was a hard working guy and a good catch. She got pregnant. Now they are living together and the money he used to send back home stopped because few salaries can support two families. My guess is that his wife and three children are even more destitute than before, the children will be forgotten and will remain fatherless for their lives. Multiply this scenario hundreds of thousands of times. Illegal immigration is not only a crime; in my book it is a sin.
Yes, it certainly creates all kinds of opportunities for abuse & exploitation. That’s why I think we should try to normalize the immigration/work visa status for folks who are employed in our communities & have maintained clean records. It would also allow them to go home & visit their families on a regular basis instead of being stuck here & taking up with new partners.
The real criminals need to be deported ASAP but decent workers are an asset we shouldn’t take for granted. We’ll be competing soon with other nations for workers as our population ages.
I worked for years & years with no health insurance or benefits. Lots of people here live in trailers, not just Hispanic migrants. Agricultural workers are generally legal. I’ve heard that fewer Mexicans want those kinds of jobs these days. Mexico’s no longer a 3rd World nation but there are still pockets of poverty.
I think the bishops see the human suffering without balancing that with the terrible price Mexico pays for our enabling the cartels. The border needs to be secured & the smuggling ended as much as possible. But we can work with people already in the workforce & not try to channel Inspector Javert. There should be a legal, humane & reasonable solution.
Bishops have been paid for “resettlement”.
I am a CPA, if I have any interest in a potential audit client, I may not opine on their financial statements. Why? Because my independence is impaired.
Same here.
Every illegal has a criminal history.
There is a bizarre notion among invasion advocates that somehow if somebody enters illegally, that “laying low” exonerates, excuses or mitigates their illegal entry. I assure you that if you commit tax fraud, the IRS will not defer prosecution simply because you haven’t followed up your initial evasion with another.
This is CCC 2241.
Catechism of the Catholic Church 2241:
The more prosperous nations are obliged, to the extent they are able,
(We are no longer able to do so. We are “broke”. There are cultural and economic reasons that impair our ability to receive more-especially millions-even if they all entered legally)
to welcome the foreigner in search of the security and the means of livelihood
(Seeking our welfare state, and the drive by certain industries to maintain subpar wages is not security or means of livelihood)
which he cannot find in his country of origin. Public authorities should see to it that the natural right is respected that places a guest under the protection of those who receive him.
(The operative word here is guest. Guests are respectful of their host, the host’s abode, the host’s needs and do not attempt to become squatters)
Political authorities, for the sake of the common good for which they are responsible, may make the exercise of the right to immigrate subject to various juridical conditions, especially with regard to the immigrants’ duties toward their country of adoption.
(NOTHING is ever said about the responsibilities of the immigrants or those that violate our sovereignty or their duties)
Immigrants are obliged to respect with gratitude the material and spiritual heritage of the country that receives them, to obey its laws and to assist in carrying civic burdens.
(Rioting and insisting on open borders, flying foreign flags and running for office and prioritizing the needs of one’s own tribe, ethnicity, religion or country of origin is NOT respecting with gratitude the material and spiritual heritage of the country that receives them, obedience to its laws or the assistance with carrying civic burdens.) Ilhan Omar should simply not be in any position of authority.
Bishops seem to have forgotten the citizens of this country have rights and reasonable expectations of a government in protecting their rights as well-and they never seem to worry about our concerns in this regard.
I think Archbishop Broglio may be missing important actions of ICE. Incited by Trump’s MAGA insanity, and the complicit Sec. Noem, and Border Czar Homan, having caused uprisings nationwide. What was ICE’s charter? I heard that the order was to seek out criminals, cartels like MS13.
The criminal actions this week by ICE “officers” handcuffing Senator Alex Padilla and New York Comptroller Brad Lander proved that Trump, again, is out of control.
This week, the raids resumed on farms, meat processors, restaurants, and hotels. I have asked some GOP leaders, Senator majority leader, John Barrasso, GOP Whip and Bill Cassidy, why they remain silent. No response. Seems like nothing has changed.
Dear Pitchfork. I agree with most of your hypotheses. As a Catholic, I most always, favor the decisions of the Hierarchy. I try to refrain from disparaging them. The challenged Church needs the help of its faithful.
No question, migration and the asylum overload are the main causes of criminals entering the country. The text makes no mention of ICE and its mission. ICE appears to be thrust onto the scene. They show little compassion even to the migrants working in the fields. There is strong evidence that Trump’s ICE minions have been given free range. Noem and Homan are using a “scorched earth, slash-and=burn methods. Ex: just this week, Senator Alex Padilla and NYC Comptroller Brad Landon were handcuffed and released. ICE seems to be in every city, even my little city of Kingston, NY. I asked my GOP congressional reps “did Congress appropriate taxpayer money to fund ICE?” No reply. I am amazed that my GOP US reps have remained silent on many issues facing the nation.
Criminal and ruthless cartels, Tren de Aragua and MS13 are driving many of the migrants from their countries. They are in the US.
There have been forceful statements from the church.
Thank you
Mr Morgan, no one comes to our border without having paid off the cartels. And not a few migrants remain in debt to them and are extorted into drug smuggling. It’s a really ugly revolving door that we have cooperated with by not securing the border.
I feel sorry for hardworking migrants who are just here to support their parents and families but the bad ones need to go. Hopefully we can fix our system to reward the good workers and make future entry safe and legal.