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Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez

Alfredo José Isaac Cecilio Francesco Méndez-Gonzalez CSC (June 3, 1907 – January 28, 1995) was an American Catholic bishop who served in Puerto Rico[1] and who later became involved with sedevacantists.


Alfredo Méndez Gonzalez

Bishop of Arecibo
ChurchCatholic
DioceseArecibo
AppointedJuly 23, 1960
Term endedJanuary 21, 1974
PredecessorOffice established
SuccessorMiguel Rodriguez Rodriguez, C.Ss.R.
Other post(s)Bishop Emeritus of Arecibo (1974–1995)
Orders
OrdinationJune 24, 1935
ConsecrationOctober 28, 1960
by Francis Spellman
Personal details
BornJune 3, 1907 (1907-06-03)
Died28 January 1995 (1995-01-29) (aged 87)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
BuriedCatedral de San Felipe Apostol, Arecibo, Puerto Rico, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Notre Dame, U.S.
MottoCaritas
(Charity)
Ordination history of
Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez
History
Priestly ordination
DateJune 24, 1935
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorFrancis Spellman
Co-consecrators
DateOctober 28, 1960
PlaceSacred Heart Church, Notre Dame, Indiana, U.S.
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez as principal consecrator
Marcos Gregorio McGrath [es]1961
Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver1964
Rafael Grovas Felix1965
Miguel Rodriguez Rodriguez1974
Paul Edward Waldschmidt1978
Kenneth Donald Steiner1978
Clarence Kelly, SSPV1993
Styles of
Alfredo Méndez Gonzalez
Reference style
Spoken styleYour Excellency
Religious styleYour Excellency

Biography edit

Early life edit

Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, on June 3, 1907, of mixed Spanish and Puerto Rican ancestry.[2] On June 23, he was baptized as "Alfredo José Isaac Cecilio". He took the name "Francesco" at his confirmation.[3]

As a boy of about nine years old, he was tapped on the head by Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini, an elderly nun who came to the Mendez home to thank Mendez's mother for her work in supporting Catholic charities. Méndez said afterward that it was at that moment that he was tapped on the head by Cabrini that he knew he would become a priest. Méndez harbored a great devotion to her for the rest of his life.[3]

Education edit

He attended school in New York, United States, and in Barcelona, Spain, and finished high school in Evansville, Indiana, United States. In 1925, he entered the postulancy of the Congregation of the Holy Cross at Holy Cross seminary at the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, and made his novitiate there in 1926 at Saint Joseph's Novitiate. In 1931, he graduated from the University of Notre Dame.[4] He performed his theological studies at Holy Cross College of Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.[3]

Priesthood edit

On June 24, 1935, in Washington, D.C., Méndez was ordained a priest.[3] He then returned to the University of Notre Dame for graduate studies.[3]

In 1926, his religious superiors sent him to teach at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas. As a priest in Austin, he devoted himself to Mexican immigrants (the Catholic Church in Mexico was suffering persecution during this time).[3] He established parishes and built churches for them during the late 1930s and early 1940s.[3]

in 1948. Later that year, he was transferred to the University of Notre Dame to assume administrative positions in there.[3] In 1956, his religious superiors named him the first Director of Province Development for the Congregation of the Holy Cross.[3]

Episcopacy edit

On July 23, 1960, Pope John XXIII named Méndez the first bishop of Arecibo, Puerto Rico.[5] He traveled to Rome for the Second Vatican Council, but soon, he and several others fell ill with hepatitis, but he sufficiently recovered to be able to return and attend the council's closing days. He is said to have been shocked upon his return and stated: "They're all Protestants!"[3] On the other hand, it is also said that he stated that his big contribution to the council was his effort for a married diaconate.[6]

On January 21, 1974, at the age of 66, after only 14 years of active service as a diocesan bishop,[3] he resigned as Bishop of Arecibo[7] and returned to California. Numerous diocesan bishops in the United States invited him to assist in their dioceses, but Méndez refused such invitations.[3]

From his retirement, he had steady correspondence with the Vatican and with other bishops, urging the return of the traditional Latin Mass.[3] At some time, he favored the idea of a separate "Traditional Latin Rite" with independent status similar to the Eastern Catholic rites, but abandoned that idea as unworkable.[3] He then recommended and entertained the notion of some sort of Tridentine Ordinariate which, like the U.S. Military Ordinariate, would be independent of bishops throughout the world, but eventually judged that idea to be also unworkable.[3]

Méndez wrote to the Vatican defending Lefebvre, who was criticized by the Vatican.[3] In return, Giovanni Benelli from the Vatican defended the Vatican's criticism of Lefebvre, stating that Lefebvre rejects Paul VI and the Second Vatican Council.[8] On the other hand, Lefebvre thanked Méndez for his help and "courageous intervention to [the] Holy See."[9]

In 1988, in California, Méndez was visited by Paul Baumberger and Joseph Greenwell, two former seminarians of the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) who were then associated with the Society of Saint Pius V (SSPV), about the possibility of future priestly ordinations. Méndez encouraged them to find an active bishop who would ordain them. He attempted to help them, though all his efforts were in vain. On April 25, 1990, Méndez asked Bishop Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver to supply a "canonical cover" (in Oliver's expression) for traditionalist priests.[3] Oliver rejected his proposal.[10] In July 1990, after two years of attempts to negotiate a regular ordination for Baumberger and Greenwell with some as yet active bishop, Méndez decided that he himself will ordain them without the ordinary authorizations. The ordinations to the diaconate occurred on August 1, 1990, and with about four dozen people present, including five priests, the ordinations to the priesthood occurred on September 3.[3][11]

Méndez was a prominent, avid, and financial supporter of the television program "What Catholics Believe"[3] of Father Clarence Kelly and Father William Jenkins (both priests of the SSPV). Méndez even invited Pat Buchanan to be a guest in the show.[3]

On September 8, 1993, Méndez was visited by Kelly and Jenkins to be asked about the possibility of consecrating a bishop, but before Kelly and Jenkins had a chance to ask him, Méndez himself proposed to Kelly to consecrate him a bishop.[3] They discussed the question of excommunication at some length and talked about an interview with canon lawyer Count Neri Capponi that appeared in the May–June 1993 issue of The Latin Mass magazine, where Capponi expressed the view that Archbishop Lefebvre was not really excommunicated for the Écône consecrations. Méndez gave the whole matter further consideration. He then became ill and suffered pneumonia. He was rushed into the critical care unit (CCU). Jenkins arrived at the hospital in Vista, California, and administered the Sacrament of Extreme Unction and gave the Apostolic Benediction to Méndez, who then gradually but swiftly improved and recovered.[3]

On October 19, 1993, in his private chapel in his home in Carlsbad, California, Méndez consecrated Kelly a bishop, in secret and without papal permission.[3][12]

Death edit

In January 1995, the priests of the SSPV brought Méndez to Cincinnati to show him a church property they hoped he would buy for them. During the stay, Méndez became ill, suffered pancreatic tumor, and went into hospital. He died on January 28, 1995, at the age of 87.[3]

At that week, Mendez's consecration of Kelly in 1993 was announced by the SSPV.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Archdiocese of Arecibo: "Perfil de la Diócesis: PADRE ALFREDO F. MENDEZ GONZALEZ, C.S.C." retrieved June 9, 2016
  2. ^ Fenton, Jerry (1969). Understanding the Religious Background of the Puerto Rican. CIDOC. pp. 1–9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Rev. William Jenkins. "Bishop Alfred F. Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly". In The Roman Catholic (Special Edition, 1995).
  4. ^ (PDF). University of Notre Dame. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 2, 2013..
  5. ^ "Pope Creates VI Prelature; Msgr. Harper Prelate". The Virgin Islands Daily News. August 2, 1960.
  6. ^ Peter Scott, S.S.P.X. To Mario Derksen, M.A. March 27, 2008. From: Mario Derksen. "An Open Letter to Bishop Clarence Kelly on the 'Thuc Bishops' and the Errors in The Sacred and the Profane". January 8, 2011. Retrieved October 6, 2021. "He explained to me [in San Diego, 1991] that his big contribution to Vatican II was the effort he expended in obtaining a married diaconate"
  7. ^ "Bishop Alfredo José Isaac Cecilio Francesco Méndez-Gonzalez, C.S.C." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
  8. ^ Benelli, Giovanni. Letter to Most Rev. Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez. October 28, 1976. Vatican City State. From: Rev. William Jenkins. "Bishop Alfred F. Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly". In The Roman Catholic (Special Edition, 1995). Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  9. ^ Most. Rev. Marcel Lefebvre. Letter to Most Rev. Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez. October 26, 1987. Écône, Switzerland. From: Rev. William Jenkins. "Bishop Alfred F. Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly". In The Roman Catholic (Special Edition, 1995). Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  10. ^ Most. Rev. Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver. Letter to Most Rev. Alfredo Méndez-Gonzalez. From: Rev. William Jenkins. "Bishop Alfred F. Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly". In The Roman Catholic (Special Edition, 1995). Retrieved August 30, 2021.

    " But there is an important element that cannot be left out of this consideration. All the priests would exercise their ministry in the continental United States, and as you propose, would theoretically respond to the Bishop of Ponce. That is an awkward situation, and I cannot dismiss lightly the possibility that some Bishops may feel that their authority would thereby be undermined.

    " I am sorry that I must respond negatively to your well-intentioned proposal."
  11. ^ Cuneo, Michael W., The Smoke of Satan: Conservative and Traditionalist Dissent in Contemporary American Catholicism, JHU Press, 1999, p. 96ISBN 9780801862656
  12. ^ Kelly, Clarence (1997). (PDF). Oyster Bay Cove, NY. pp. 169–174. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 25, 2013. Retrieved November 15, 2012.

External links edit

alfredo, méndez, gonzalez, alfredo, josé, isaac, cecilio, francesco, méndez, gonzalez, june, 1907, january, 1995, american, catholic, bishop, served, puerto, rico, later, became, involved, with, sedevacantists, most, reverendalfredo, méndez, gonzalezcscbishop,. Alfredo Jose Isaac Cecilio Francesco Mendez Gonzalez CSC June 3 1907 January 28 1995 was an American Catholic bishop who served in Puerto Rico 1 and who later became involved with sedevacantists The Most ReverendAlfredo Mendez GonzalezCSCBishop of AreciboChurchCatholicDioceseAreciboAppointedJuly 23 1960Term endedJanuary 21 1974PredecessorOffice establishedSuccessorMiguel Rodriguez Rodriguez C Ss R Other post s Bishop Emeritus of Arecibo 1974 1995 OrdersOrdinationJune 24 1935ConsecrationOctober 28 1960by Francis SpellmanPersonal detailsBornJune 3 1907 1907 06 03 Chicago Illinois U S Died28 January 1995 1995 01 29 aged 87 Cincinnati Ohio U S BuriedCatedral de San Felipe Apostol Arecibo Puerto Rico U S Alma materUniversity of Notre Dame U S MottoCaritas Charity Ordination history of Alfredo Mendez GonzalezHistoryPriestly ordinationDateJune 24 1935Episcopal consecrationPrincipal consecratorFrancis SpellmanCo consecratorsEdwin Byrne Richard Henry AckermanDateOctober 28 1960PlaceSacred Heart Church Notre Dame Indiana U S Episcopal successionBishops consecrated by Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez as principal consecratorMarcos Gregorio McGrath es 1961Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver1964Rafael Grovas Felix1965Miguel Rodriguez Rodriguez1974Paul Edward Waldschmidt1978Kenneth Donald Steiner1978Clarence Kelly SSPV1993 Styles of Alfredo Mendez GonzalezReference styleHis Excellency The Most ReverendSpoken styleYour ExcellencyReligious styleYour Excellency Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 1 3 Priesthood 1 4 Episcopacy 1 5 Death 2 References 3 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez was born in Chicago Illinois United States on June 3 1907 of mixed Spanish and Puerto Rican ancestry 2 On June 23 he was baptized as Alfredo Jose Isaac Cecilio He took the name Francesco at his confirmation 3 As a boy of about nine years old he was tapped on the head by Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini an elderly nun who came to the Mendez home to thank Mendez s mother for her work in supporting Catholic charities Mendez said afterward that it was at that moment that he was tapped on the head by Cabrini that he knew he would become a priest Mendez harbored a great devotion to her for the rest of his life 3 Education edit He attended school in New York United States and in Barcelona Spain and finished high school in Evansville Indiana United States In 1925 he entered the postulancy of the Congregation of the Holy Cross at Holy Cross seminary at the University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana and made his novitiate there in 1926 at Saint Joseph s Novitiate In 1931 he graduated from the University of Notre Dame 4 He performed his theological studies at Holy Cross College of Catholic University of America in Washington D C 3 Priesthood edit On June 24 1935 in Washington D C Mendez was ordained a priest 3 He then returned to the University of Notre Dame for graduate studies 3 In 1926 his religious superiors sent him to teach at St Edward s University in Austin Texas As a priest in Austin he devoted himself to Mexican immigrants the Catholic Church in Mexico was suffering persecution during this time 3 He established parishes and built churches for them during the late 1930s and early 1940s 3 in 1948 Later that year he was transferred to the University of Notre Dame to assume administrative positions in there 3 In 1956 his religious superiors named him the first Director of Province Development for the Congregation of the Holy Cross 3 Episcopacy edit On July 23 1960 Pope John XXIII named Mendez the first bishop of Arecibo Puerto Rico 5 He traveled to Rome for the Second Vatican Council but soon he and several others fell ill with hepatitis but he sufficiently recovered to be able to return and attend the council s closing days He is said to have been shocked upon his return and stated They re all Protestants 3 On the other hand it is also said that he stated that his big contribution to the council was his effort for a married diaconate 6 On January 21 1974 at the age of 66 after only 14 years of active service as a diocesan bishop 3 he resigned as Bishop of Arecibo 7 and returned to California Numerous diocesan bishops in the United States invited him to assist in their dioceses but Mendez refused such invitations 3 From his retirement he had steady correspondence with the Vatican and with other bishops urging the return of the traditional Latin Mass 3 At some time he favored the idea of a separate Traditional Latin Rite with independent status similar to the Eastern Catholic rites but abandoned that idea as unworkable 3 He then recommended and entertained the notion of some sort of Tridentine Ordinariate which like the U S Military Ordinariate would be independent of bishops throughout the world but eventually judged that idea to be also unworkable 3 Mendez wrote to the Vatican defending Lefebvre who was criticized by the Vatican 3 In return Giovanni Benelli from the Vatican defended the Vatican s criticism of Lefebvre stating that Lefebvre rejects Paul VI and the Second Vatican Council 8 On the other hand Lefebvre thanked Mendez for his help and courageous intervention to the Holy See 9 In 1988 in California Mendez was visited by Paul Baumberger and Joseph Greenwell two former seminarians of the Society of Saint Pius X SSPX who were then associated with the Society of Saint Pius V SSPV about the possibility of future priestly ordinations Mendez encouraged them to find an active bishop who would ordain them He attempted to help them though all his efforts were in vain On April 25 1990 Mendez asked Bishop Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver to supply a canonical cover in Oliver s expression for traditionalist priests 3 Oliver rejected his proposal 10 In July 1990 after two years of attempts to negotiate a regular ordination for Baumberger and Greenwell with some as yet active bishop Mendez decided that he himself will ordain them without the ordinary authorizations The ordinations to the diaconate occurred on August 1 1990 and with about four dozen people present including five priests the ordinations to the priesthood occurred on September 3 3 11 Mendez was a prominent avid and financial supporter of the television program What Catholics Believe 3 of Father Clarence Kelly and Father William Jenkins both priests of the SSPV Mendez even invited Pat Buchanan to be a guest in the show 3 On September 8 1993 Mendez was visited by Kelly and Jenkins to be asked about the possibility of consecrating a bishop but before Kelly and Jenkins had a chance to ask him Mendez himself proposed to Kelly to consecrate him a bishop 3 They discussed the question of excommunication at some length and talked about an interview with canon lawyer Count Neri Capponi that appeared in the May June 1993 issue of The Latin Mass magazine where Capponi expressed the view that Archbishop Lefebvre was not really excommunicated for the Econe consecrations Mendez gave the whole matter further consideration He then became ill and suffered pneumonia He was rushed into the critical care unit CCU Jenkins arrived at the hospital in Vista California and administered the Sacrament of Extreme Unction and gave the Apostolic Benediction to Mendez who then gradually but swiftly improved and recovered 3 On October 19 1993 in his private chapel in his home in Carlsbad California Mendez consecrated Kelly a bishop in secret and without papal permission 3 12 Death edit In January 1995 the priests of the SSPV brought Mendez to Cincinnati to show him a church property they hoped he would buy for them During the stay Mendez became ill suffered pancreatic tumor and went into hospital He died on January 28 1995 at the age of 87 3 At that week Mendez s consecration of Kelly in 1993 was announced by the SSPV 3 References edit Archdiocese of Arecibo Perfil de la Diocesis PADRE ALFREDO F MENDEZ GONZALEZ C S C retrieved June 9 2016 Fenton Jerry 1969 Understanding the Religious Background of the Puerto Rican CIDOC pp 1 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Rev William Jenkins Bishop Alfred F Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly In The Roman Catholic Special Edition 1995 University of Notre Dame promotional booklet PDF University of Notre Dame 2005 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 2 2013 Pope Creates VI Prelature Msgr Harper Prelate The Virgin Islands Daily News August 2 1960 Peter Scott S S P X To Mario Derksen M A March 27 2008 From Mario Derksen An Open Letter to Bishop Clarence Kelly on the Thuc Bishops and the Errors in The Sacred and the Profane January 8 2011 Retrieved October 6 2021 He explained to me in San Diego 1991 that his big contribution to Vatican II was the effort he expended in obtaining a married diaconate Bishop Alfredo Jose Isaac Cecilio Francesco Mendez Gonzalez C S C Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved January 21 2015 Benelli Giovanni Letter to Most Rev Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez October 28 1976 Vatican City State From Rev William Jenkins Bishop Alfred F Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly In The Roman Catholic Special Edition 1995 Retrieved August 30 2021 Most Rev Marcel Lefebvre Letter to Most Rev Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez October 26 1987 Econe Switzerland From Rev William Jenkins Bishop Alfred F Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly In The Roman Catholic Special Edition 1995 Retrieved August 30 2021 Most Rev Juan Fremiot Torres Oliver Letter to Most Rev Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez From Rev William Jenkins Bishop Alfred F Mendez and the Consecration of Bishop Clarence Kelly In The Roman Catholic Special Edition 1995 Retrieved August 30 2021 But there is an important element that cannot be left out of this consideration All the priests would exercise their ministry in the continental United States and as you propose would theoretically respond to the Bishop of Ponce That is an awkward situation and I cannot dismiss lightly the possibility that some Bishops may feel that their authority would thereby be undermined I am sorry that I must respond negatively to your well intentioned proposal Cuneo Michael W The Smoke of Satan Conservative and Traditionalist Dissent in Contemporary American Catholicism JHU Press 1999 p 96ISBN 9780801862656 Kelly Clarence 1997 Sacred and Profane PDF Oyster Bay Cove NY pp 169 174 Archived from the original PDF on September 25 2013 Retrieved November 15 2012 External links edit bishop bmendez Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Catholic Church titles New title Bishop of Arecibo1960 1974 Succeeded byMiguel Rodriguez Rodriguez Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfredo Mendez Gonzalez amp oldid 1192721996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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