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Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus

The Diocese of Columbus (Latin: Dioecesis Columbensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church covering 23 counties in central Ohio in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Cincinnati.

Diocese of Columbus

Dioecesis Columbensis
St. Joseph Cathedral
Coat of arms
Location
Country United States
Territory23 counties in Central and Southern Ohio.
Ecclesiastical provinceCincinnati
Coordinates39°57′48″N 82°59′41″W / 39.96333°N 82.99472°W / 39.96333; -82.99472
Statistics
Area29,282 sq mi (75,840 km2)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2006)
2,447,972
252,103 (10.3%)
Parishes108
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
EstablishedMarch 3, 1868 (156 years ago)
CathedralSt. Joseph Cathedral
Patron saintSt. Francis de Sales
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopEarl K. Fernandes
Metropolitan ArchbishopDennis Marion Schnurr
Bishops emeritusJames Anthony Griffin,
Frederick Francis Campbell
Map
Website
columbuscatholic.org

The mother church of the Diocese of Columbus is St. Joseph Cathedral in Columbus. The diocese was erected on March 3, 1868, by Pope Pius IX. The current bishop of Columbus is Earl K. Fernandes.

Geography edit

The Diocese of Columbus contains 108 parishes in 23 counties:

Coshocton, Delaware, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Hardin, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson, Knox, Licking, Madison, Marion, Morrow, Muskingum, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto, Tuscarawas, Union, and Vinton.[1]

History edit

1700 to 1860 edit

During the 17th century, present day Ohio was part of the French colony of New France. The Diocese of Quebec, had jurisdiction over the region. However, unlike other parts of the future American Midwest, there were no attempts to found Catholic missions in Ohio.

In 1763, Ohio Country became part of the British Province of Quebec, forbidden from settlement by American colonists. After the American Revolution ended in 1783, Pope Pius VI erected in 1784 the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States, encompassing the entire territory of the new nation. In 1787, the Ohio area became part of the Northwest Territory of the United States. Pius VI created the Diocese of Baltimore, the first diocese in the United States, to replace the prefecture apostolic in 1789.[2][3]

In 1808, Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of Bardstown in Kentucky, with jurisdiction over the new state of Ohio along with the other midwest states. Dominican priests from Bardstown were the first missionaries and clergy in the Columbus area. The first Catholic chapel built in Ohio was a log structure in Perry County; it was dedicated in 1818 by Edward Fenwick.[4]

Pope Pius VII in 1821 erected the Diocese of Cincinnati, taking all of Ohio from Bardstown.[5] The visit of Cincinnati Bishop John Purcell to central Ohio in June 1836, began the activity of the Catholic Church in the city of Columbus. After saying Mass in a house on Canal Street on June 5, Purcell asked the Catholic men in attendance to meet regarding the construction of a church. They developed a plan to build a church on a lot already owned by the Catholics of the area—where Holy Cross Church now stands. In 1837, the diocese sent a resident pastor, Henry Juncker, to cover the Columbus and Chillicothe areas. Juncker built Holy Cross Church, opening it in 1838 with a Sung Mass. By 1843, Holy Cross parish was scheduling multiple masses on Sundays and building a school.[4]

1860 to 1900 edit

At the close of the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1866, the American bishops petitioned Pope Pius IX to establish a new diocese with its seat in Columbus. On March 3, 1868, the pope erected the Diocese of Columbus, encompassing the portions of Ohio "...lying south of 40' and 41" and between the Ohio River on the East and the Scioto River on the West together with the Counties of Franklin, Delaware and Morrow."[6] Pius IX appointed Auxiliary Bishop Sylvester Rosecrans of Cincinnati as the first bishop of Columbus.

When the Diocese of Columbus was erected, it had only three churches, all in the city of Columbus: Holy Cross, St. Patrick's, and St. Mary's. The diocese was mostly agricultural, having been settled first by Maryland and Pennsylvania residents who had moved west, and then later by German and Irish immigrants. Rosecrans established the Catholic Columbian, a newspaper for the diocese, in addition to opening St. Aloysius Seminary and St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum. He oversaw the construction of St. Joseph Cathedral to its consecration in 1878, before dying the following morning.[4]

To replace Rosencrans, Pope Leo XIII appointed John Watterson as the second bishop of Columbus in 1880.[7] The major challenge facing the diocese was the debt accrued by the construction of St. Joseph. During his 19-year-long tenure, Watterson increased the number of priests and schools in the diocese, oversaw the building of two hospitals and the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus and erected many new missions and parishes.[8]

1900 to 1945 edit

On April 6, 1900, Henry K. Moeller, chancellor of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, was appointed the third bishop of Columbus by Leo XIII.[9] During his episcopacy, the diocesan debt was split among the parishes and nearly eliminated in three years and a diocesan synod was convened. Moeller also established missions, parishes, and schools to serve the increasing immigrant population of the Diocese. Moeller was appointed as the coadjutor bishop of Cincinnati by Pope Pius X in 1903.[4]

Moeller's replacement, James Hartley, was appointed bishop in 1903. During his tenure, Hartley oversaw a significant growth of the diocese In 1905, he erected his first parishes, Holy Rosary and St. Aloysius. In 1906, he retired the debt on St. Joseph Cathedral. Within the first five years of his episcopate, Hartley began or dedicated over 25 churches, schools, and chapels. He established the following institutions:

Toward the end of his term as bishop, Hartley consecrated Edward Hettinger as the first auxiliary bishop of the Columbus diocese. Hartley died in 1944.

1945 to 1968 edit

Pope Pius XII appointed Michael Ready as bishop of Columbus in 1945. That same year, the pope established the Diocese of Steubenville. He removed 13 counties from the Diocese of Columbus to form the new diocese (Carroll, Jefferson, Harrison, Guernsey, Belmont, Noble, Monroe, Morgan, Washington, Athens, Meigs, Gallia, and Lawrence). At the same time, the pope added nine counties (Hardin, Marion, Union, Madison, Fayette, Pickaway, Ross, Pike and Scioto) to the Diocese of Columbus from the Archdiocese of Cincinnati.[11]

One of Ready's first tasks was overseeing the erection of the new Diocese of Steubenville.[12] He established the Catholic Welfare Bureau and appointed a director of charities for the diocese.[12] Ready was a critic of the Ohio State University board of trustees decision in 1951 that all campus speakers had to be cleared by University President Howard L. Bevis in advance.[13]

Ready also organized the Holy Name Society, a Parent-Teacher Organization, the Council of Catholic Women, the Catholic Youth Council, and the St. Vincent de Paul Society in the diocese.[12] He created 18 new parishes and oversaw the construction of nine elementary and five high schools.[12] Ready founded two nursing homes, the diocesan Child Guidance Center, and the Catholic Student Center at Ohio State University. He worked with his fellow Ohio bishops to start the Ohio Catholic Welfare Conference.[12] Ready died in 1957.

Pope Pius XII appointed Auxiliary Bishop Clarence Issenmann of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati as the sixth bishop of Columbus on December 5, 1957.[14][15] As bishop, Issenmann established the Diocesan Development Fund so as to supply for the expansion of the diocese, which added eight parishes and six high schools under Issenmann. He also found a new building to house diocesan offices, and offered a televised Mass every week.[16] Pope Paul VI named him as coadjutor bishop of the Diocese of Cleveland in 1964.

Bishop John Carberry from the Diocese of Lafayette in Indiana was appointed the seventh bishop of Columbus by Pope Paul VI on January 16, 1965.[17] As bishop, he implemented the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and supported the Civil Rights Movement and ecumenical movement.[18] He established the Clergy Advisory Council, and oversaw the renovation of St. Joseph's Cathedral after issuing regulations for liturgical changes.[18] Carberry also bought a new building to centralize the offices of the diocesan chancery.[18] He helped found the Inter-Church Board for Metropolitan Affairs, the first organization in the United States uniting Protestants and Catholics for ecumenism and social action.[18] In January 1968, he became the first Catholic bishop to receive the Ohio Council of Churches' annual "Pastor of Pastors" award.[19] Carberry was named archbishop of the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 1968.

1968 to 1982 edit

Paul VI named Auxiliary Bishop Clarence Elwell from the Diocese of Cleveland as the eighth bishop of Columbus in 1968.[20] During his tenure as bishop, Elwell continued the implementation of the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, initiated under Carberry.[21] An advocate of Catholic education, he opened the following schools in Ohio:

Elwell also converted the diocesan seminary in Columbus into St. Charles College Preparatory School.[21] He also established Resurrection Cemetery in Lewis Center, Ohio, St. Peter Parish in Worthington, Ohio, the Sisters' Council, and the Pastoral Council. He significantly expanded the Development Office, the Parish Aid Fund, and the diocesan self-insurance program.[21] Elwell died in 1973.

Auxiliary Bishop Edward Herrmann from the Archdiocese of Washington was appointed bishop of Columbus in 1973, by Paul VI.[22][23] Herrmann helped establish Operation Feed in Columbus, a countywide food drive that now provides millions of meals every year to people in the Columbus area. He also reorganized the diocese into the 15 vicariates and instituted the Emmaus Spirituality Program for priests.[23] Hermann died in 1982.

1982 to 2020 edit

In 1983, Pope John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop James Griffin from the Diocese of Cleveland as the tenth bishop of the Diocese of Columbus.[24] In 1985, Griffin established the Foundation of the Catholic Diocese of Columbus and initiated the Legacy of Catholic Learning campaign in 1989 and Challenge In Changing Times campaign. He also established "Breaking The Silence" task force to reduce family violence. Griffin also served on a number of committees of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and was president of Catholic Relief Services (1991–1995).[24] In 2004, after 21 years as bishop of Columbus, Griffin retired.

In 2004, John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop Frederick F. Campbell from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis as the eleventh bishop of Columbus.[25][26] In 2005, Campbell proposed the establishment of a civil registry of priests from the diocese of Columbus who had been "credibly accused" of sexual abuse.[27] Campbell spoke out in 2006 against a proposed law in the Ohio General Assembly that would have allowed a 20-year statute of limitations for sexual abuse cases. In his testimony to the legislature, Campbell claimed that the 20-year window for prosecution wasn't fair and would curtail the church's charitable work. In the end, the assembly passed the legislation with a 10-year window.[28][29]

In April 2013, the diocese fired Carla Hale, a teacher at Bishop Watterson High School in Columbus. The diocese took action after receiving a complaint that Hale had a domestic partner who was a woman. Hale then threatened to file a complaint with the City of Columbus under its anti-discrimination ordinances.[30] Hale and the diocese later reached a settlement in which she would not return to Bishop Watterson.[31]

After Campbell resigned in 2019, Pope Francis appointed Auxiliary Bishop Robert J. Brennan from the Diocese of Rockville Centre as bishop of Columbus that same year.[32][33][34] Brennan initiated the elevation of Saint Mary of the Assumption in Lancaster to the rank of a minor basilica in August 2019. In December 2020, Brennan announced the "Real Presence Real Future" strategic planning initiative, aiming at "increasing the presence of Christ throughout its 23 counties over the next three years and upholding the Faith for future generations."[35][36] According to Brennan, the process would likely result in some parishes closing.[37]

2020 to present edit

In February 2020, the diocese announced the closure of two diocesan retreat centers, St. Therese's in Columbus and Sts. Peter and Paul in Newark. The shuttering was due to dwindling use in part because of more parishes having parish centers, newer non-diocesan facilities being built, and the necessity of repairs at both sites.

Francis appointed Brennan as bishop of the Diocese of Brooklyn in 2021 and then named Reverend Earl K. Fernandes of Cincinnati is the current bishop of Columbus, appointed by Francis in 2022. Fernandes has continued the "Real Presence Real Future" process started by Brennan.[43] In October 2022, the Diocese of Steubenville announced that the Vatican was considering a merger with the Diocese of Columbus.[44][45] However, facing strong opposition within Steubenville, Bishop Jeffrey Monforton of Steubenville announced a few weeks later that the merger proposal had been put on hold.[46]

In May 2023, the diocese announced that it would closed 15 parishes as part of the “Real Presence, Real Future” initiative.[47] As of 2023, Fernandes is the current bishop of Columbus.

Bishops edit

Bishops of Columbus edit

  1. Sylvester Horton Rosecrans (1868–1878)
  2. John Ambrose Watterson (1880–1899)
  3. Henry K. Moeller (1900–1903), appointed Coadjutor Archbishop and later Archbishop of Cincinnati
  4. James Joseph Hartley (1903–1944)
  5. Michael Joseph Ready (1944–1957)
  6. Clarence George Issenmann (1957–1964), appointed Coadjutor Bishop and later Bishop of Cleveland
  7. John Joseph Carberry (1965–1968), appointed Archbishop of Saint Louis (elevated to Cardinal in 1969)
  8. Clarence Edward Elwell (1968–1973)
  9. Edward John Herrmann (1973–1982)
  10. James Anthony Griffin (1983–2004)
  11. Frederick Francis Campbell (2005–2019)
  12. Robert J. Brennan (2019–2021), appointed Bishop of Brooklyn
  13. Earl K. Fernandes (2022–present)

Auxiliary bishops of Columbus edit

Other diocesan priests who became bishops edit

Parishes edit

As of 2020, the Diocese of Columbus comprises 103 parishes and two missions. The parishes are divided into the following deaneries:

 
Saint Mary of the Assumption Church, South Columbus Deanery

Center - South Columbus Deanery edit

 
Saint Brigid of Kildare Church – Northwest Columbus Deanery

Northwest Columbus Deanery edit

  • Our Lady of Victory – Marble Cliff (1922)
  • St. Agatha – Columbus (1940)
  • St. Andrew – Columbus (1955)
  • Saint Brendan the Navigator Church – Hilliard (1956)
  • St. Brigid of Kildare – Dublin (1987)
  • St. Christopher – Columbus (1947)
  • St. Joan of Arc – Powell (1987)
  • St. Margaret of Cortona – Columbus (Italian 1921)
  • St. Peter – Columbus (1970)
  • St. Timothy – Columbus (1961)
 
Saint John the Baptist Italian Catholic Church – North High Deanery

North High Deanery edit

  • Holy Name – Columbus (1905)
  • Immaculate Conception – Columbus (1916)
  • Our Lady of Peace – Columbus (1946)
  • Parroquia Santa Cruz – Columbus (Hispanic 1993)
  • Sacred Heart – Columbus (1875)
  • St. Francis of Assisi – Columbus (1892)
  • St. John the Baptist – Columbus (Italian 1895)
  • St. Michael the Archangel – Worthington (1946)
  • St. Thomas More Newman Center – Columbus (1906)
 
Church of the Resurrection – Northland Columbus Deanery

Northland Columbus Deanery edit

  • Church of the Resurrection – New Albany (1983)
  • St. Elizabeth – Columbus (1967)
  • St. James the Less – Columbus (1947)
  • St. John Neumann – Sunbury (1977)
  • St. Matthias – Columbus (1956)
  • St. Paul – Westerville (1913)
 
Saint Joseph Church – West Columbus Deanery

West Columbus Deanery edit

  • Holy Family Church – Columbus (Irish; 1877)
  • Our Lady of Perpetual Help – Grove City (1954)
  • Sts. Simon & Jude – West Jefferson (German/Irish 1867)
  • St. Agnes, Columbus (1954)
  • St. Aloysius – Columbus (1906)
  • St. Cecilia – Columbus (1882)
  • St. Joseph – Plain City (1864)
  • St. Mary Magdalene – Columbus (1928)
  • St. Patrick – London (German/Irish 1866)
  • St. Stephen the Martyr – Columbus (Hispanic 1963)
 
Saint Catharine of Siena Church – East Columbus Deanery

East Columbus Deanery edit

  • St. John XXIII – Canal Winchester (2000)
  • Christ the King – Columbus (1946)
  • Holy Spirit – Columbus (1947)
  • Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal – Columbus (1967)
  • St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish – Pickerington (1978)
  • St. Catharine of Siena – Columbus (1931)
  • St. Mary – Groveport (1871)
  • St. Matthew – Gahanna (1959)
  • St. Philip the Apostle – Columbus (1956)
  • St. Pius X – Reynoldsburg (1958)
 
Immaculate Conception Church – Marion Deanery

Marion Deanery edit

  • Immaculate Conception – Kenton (1866)
  • Our Lady of Lourdes – Ada (1874)
  • Our Lady of Lourdes – Marysville (1866)
  • Sacred Hearts of Jesus & Mary – Cardington (1971)
  • St. Mary – Delaware (1854)
  • St. Mary – Marion (1864)
 
Saint Nicholas Church – Perry County-Zanesville Deanery

Perry County-Zanesville Deanery edit

 
Saint Vincent de Paul Church – Knox-Licking Deanery

Knox-Licking Deanery edit

  • Church of the Ascension – Johnstown (1912)
  • Church of the Blessed Sacrament – Newark (1904)
  • Our Lady of Mt. Carmel – Buckeye Lake (1928)
  • St. Edward the Confessor – Granville (1947)
  • St. Francis de Sales – Newark (1844)
  • St. Leonard – Heath (1962)
  • St. Luke – Danville (1823)
  • St. Vincent de Paul – Mt. Vernon (1839)
 
Sacred Heart Church – Tuscawarus-Holmes-Coshocton Deanery

Tuscawaras-Holmes-Coshocton Deanery edit

  • Holy Trinity – Zoar (1995)
  • Immaculate Conception – Dennison (Irish 1870)
  • Sacred Heart – Coshocton (1897)
  • Sacred Heart – New Philadelphia (1895)
  • St. Joseph – Dover (German/Italian 1848)
  • St. Peter – Millersburg (1877)
 
Saint John the Evangelist Church – Lancaster Deanery

Lancaster Deanery edit

 
Saint Sylvester Church – Chillicothe Deanery

Chillicothe Deanery edit

  • Holy Trinity – Jackson (1880)
  • Sts. Peter & Paul – Wellston (1881)
  • St. Colman of Cloyne – Washington Court House (1881)
  • St. Joseph – Circleville (1845)
  • St. Mary – Chillicothe (1837)
  • St. Mary Queen of the Missions – Waverly (1878)
  • St. Peter – Chillicothe (German 1846)
  • St. Sylvester – Zaleski (Irish 1864)
 
Saint Mary of the Annunciation Church – Scioto County Deanery

Scioto County Deanery edit

Education edit

Museum of Catholic Art and History edit

The diocese is home to the Museum of Catholic Art and History – the largest institution of its kind in the United States[48] It was founded in 1998 as the Jubilee Museum.[49]

Colleges edit

 
The Pontifical College Josephinum, Columbus

High schools edit

Closed schools edit

  • Bishop Flaget High School – Chillicothe (Currently a grade school)
  • Corpus Christi School – Columbus
  • Father Wehrle High School – Columbus
  • Holy Family School – Columbus
  • Holy Name School – Columbus
  • Holy Rosary (Grade School & High School)
  • Marion Catholic High School – Marion
  • St. Aloysius Academy – New Lexington
  • St. Ladislas School – Columbus
  • St. Leo School – Columbus
  • St. Mary – Chillicothe
  • St. Mary High School – Columbus
  • St. Peter – Chillicothe
  • St. Rose of Lima – New Lexington (closed 2021)[50]
  • St. Thomas the Apostle Grade School – Columbus

Elementary schools edit

  • All Saints Academy – Columbus
  • Bishop Fenwick – Zanesville
  • Bishop Flaget – Chillicothe
  • Blessed Sacrament – Newark
  • Holy Spirit – Whitehall
  • Holy Trinity – Somerset
  • Immaculate Conception – Columbus
  • Immaculate Conception – Dennison
  • Notre Dame Elementary – Portsmouth
  • Our Lady of Bethlehem – Columbus
  • Our Lady of Peace – Columbus
  • Our Lady of Perpetual Help – Grove City
  • Sacred Heart – Coshocton
  • St. Agatha – Columbus
  • St. Andrew – Columbus
  • St. Anthony – Columbus
  • St. Bernadette – Lancaster
  • St. Brendan – Hilliard
  • St. Brigid of Kildare – Dublin
  • St. Catharine – Columbus
  • St. Cecilia – Columbus
  • St. Francis de Sales – Newark
  • St. James the Less – Columbus
  • St. John – Logan
  • St. Joseph Montessori – Columbus
  • St. Mary Elementary – Lancaster
  • St. Mary Magdalene – Columbus
  • St. Mary – Columbus
  • St. Mary – Delaware
  • St. Mary – Marion
  • St. Matthew – Gahanna
  • St. Matthias – Columbus
  • St. Michael – Worthington
  • St. Patrick – London
  • St. Paul – Westerville
  • St. Pius X – Reynoldsburg
  • St. Timothy – Columbus
  • St. Vincent de Paul – Mt. Vernon
  • Sts. Peter and Paul – Wellston
  • Trinity Elementary – Columbus
  • Tuscarawas Central Catholic Elementary School – Dover

Hospitals edit

Current hospitals edit

  • Genesis HealthCare System – Zanesville (combination of Good Samaritan Hospital and Bethesda Hospital). Good Samaritan Hospital began in 1900 and is co-sponsored by the Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity of Manitowoc – Wisconsin.
  • Mt. Carmel Hospitals – Columbus (Mt. Carmel – East; Mt. Carmel – West; St. Ann, Westerville). Mt. Carmel opened in 1886, by the Sisters of the Holy Cross from St. Mary's, Indiana. In 1972, Mt. Carmel East opened to serve the suburbs. Also, St. Ann's Hospital was bought by Mt. Carmel in 1995. At one time, St. Ann's was operated by the Sisters of St. Francis of Penance and Christian Charity.
  • Trinity Hospital Twin City – Dennison. Bought by the Sisters of St. Francis of Sylvania in May 2011.

Closed hospitals edit

  • Mercy Hospital – Mt. Vernon (1919–1975). Owned by the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. This hospital closed and merged with the local public hospital of Mt. Vernon.
  • Mercy Hospital – Portsmouth (1917–1981). This hospital was owned by the Sisters of St. Francis of the Congregation of Our Lady of Lourdes from Rochester, Minnesota. It was sold to the community hospital in the city.
  • San Antonio Hospital – Kenton (1897–1963). The Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati owned the facilities.
  • St. Anthony's Hospital – Columbus (1891–1991). Also operated by the Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. The original building was razed in 1971 and was finally sold in 1991. It is now part of the Ohio State University hospital system.
  • St. Francis Hospital – Columbus (1862–1955). Operated by the Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. The building was razed in 1957 and today it is the site of Grant Hospital.

Religious institutes edit

 
Entrance to the Dominican Province of St. Joseph at St. Patrick Church in Columbus
 
Saint James the Less Church in Columbus

Religious men edit

Religious Order Location Served
Apostles of Jesus[51]
Congregation of the Holy Spirit[51]
Congregation of Clerics Regular of the Divine Providence (Theatines) [50] St. Joseph – Dover

Holy Trinity – Zoar

Christ the King – Columbus

Fathers of Mercy[51]
Glenmary Home Missioners[51]
Heralds of the Good News[52] St. John Neumann – Sunbury[40]

Church of the Resurrection – New Albany[40]

Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest (ICKSP) St. Leo – Merion Village[53]
Institute of the Incarnate Word[51]
Missionaries of the Precious Blood St. James the Less – Columbus[51]
Missionary Servants of the Word[50] St. Stephen the Martyr – Columbus

St. Agnes – Columbus

Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mercy (Mercerdarians) Holy Family – Columbus [54]
Order of Friars Minor[51]
Order of Preachers (Dominicans) Holy Trinity – Somerset[51]

Pontifical College Josephinum[55]

Ohio Dominican University

St. Joseph – Somerset[51]

St. Patrick – Columbus[51]

Society of the Catholic Apostolate (Pallottines) Sacred Heart – Columbus[52]

St. Christopher [40]

Sons of the Immaculate Conception Congregation Mt. Carmel Hospitals

St. Elizabeth – Columbus[56]

Religious sisters edit

 
St. Gabriel Radio office and studio

Catholic media edit

Radio edit

There are two stations in the diocese listed below, including:

  • WFOT at 89.5 FM licensed to Lexington and serving the Mansfield area. Annunciation Radio airs programming from EWTN Global Catholic Radio. WFOT broadcasts as a simulcast of WNOC.
  • WVSG 820 AM Saint Gabriel Radio (the former WOSU (AM))

There are two other stations also reaching the diocese listed below, including:

  • WNOP "Sacred Heart Radio" 720 AM licensed to Newport, Kentucky and based in Cincinnati which also airs local and EWTN programming...plus an FM sister, WHSS 89.5 in Hamilton.
  • WULM "Radio Maria" 1600 AM in Springfield Radio Maria USA is based at originating station KJMJ 580 AM in Alexandria, Louisiana.

Newspaper edit

"The Catholic Columbian" was the first official newspaper of the diocese, created in 1875 by Bishop Sylvester Rosecrans and Father Dennis Clarke.[63] In 1939, the newspaper announced it would no longer associate with the diocese, but continued to publish until 1940, when it was replaced by "The Columbus Register".[63] In 1951, the diocese established "The Catholic Times," replacing The Columbus Register, and is still in use today.[63]

Clergy abuse scandal edit

History edit

In 1993, Bishop Griffin removed Reverend Phillip Jacobs from his parish due to allegations that he had sexually abused a teenage boy. The boy's family requested that the police not be notified, but years later Griffin made the notification. When the Diocese of Victoria in British Columbia was considering hiring Jacobs, Griffin informed the diocese about the allegations against him. The Diocese of Victoria hired Jacobs anyway. In 2010, Jacobs was arrested in Victoria, British Columbia for sexual abuse of minors.[64] Jacobs was convicted in 2013 and sentenced to five months of home detention.[65]

In August 2018, Bishop Campbell and the diocese were named in a $2 million lawsuit by Kevin Heidtman, a former student at St. Charles Preparatory School in Columbus. Heidtman alleged that he was sexually molested on at least six occasions at the school by Reverend Thomas Bennett between 2002 and 2003. Bennett died in 2008. The lawsuit alleged that Campbell and the diocese became aware of Bennett's molestation of Heidtman, but failed to take any action. [1][2][3][66] After Heidtman filed suit, two other students came forward with accusations again Bennett.

In March 2019, the diocese released a list of 36 clergy with credible accusations of sexual abuse of children,[67] and updated the list to number nearly 50 in September of the same year [68] In August 2020, the diocese paid a $1 million settlement to Heidtman.[69]

Until 2020, the diocese was one of only three dioceses in the nation to have a priest serve as victim assistance coordinator. Victim advocates criticized this practice, saying it can re-traumatize survivors and discourage the reporting of abuse.[70] The diocese hired an outside licensed counselor in July 2020, coinciding with the formation of a Safe Environment Task Force by Bishop Brennan.[71]

List of credibly accused clergy edit

Living clergy with credible accusations

Name Ordained Status
Ronald Atwood 1969 Deceased
Thomas Brosmer 1969 Removed from ministry
R. Michael Ellifritz 1967 Laicized
Roger Emmert 1962 Deceased
Joseph Fete 1974 Laicized
Michael Hanrahan 1971 Laicized, deceased
James Hutson 1982 Deceased
Philip Jacobs 1974 Laicized
Raymond Lavelle 1957 Deceased
Frederick Loyd 1970 Laicized
Robert Luchi 1957 Left ministry
Kevin Lutz 1978 Removed from Ministry
Dean A. Matthewson 1973 Administrative Leave
Bernard McClory 1953 Deceased
Thomas McLaughlin 1956 Laicized, deceased
Samuel Ritchey 1973 Laicized, deceased
Francis Schaefer 1955 Deceased
George Tumeo 1965 Laicized
Martin Weithman 1980 Laicized

Deceased clergy with credible accusations

Name Ordained Status
Robert Brown 1939 Deceased
Harry Estadt 1932 Deceased
John Gamba 1942 Deceased
John Geiger 1957 Deceased
Louis Hoffman 1943 Deceased
John Ryan 1959 Deceased
Robert Schmidt 1943 Deceased
Ted Spires 1961 Laicized, deceased
Alan Sprenger 1960 Deceased
John Tague 1951 Deceased

Living clergy with credible accusations from outside the diocese

Name Ordained Status
Carl Drake 1964 Removed from ministry

Extern or religious clergy from outside the diocese with credible accusations

Name Ordained Status
Hector Bellinato 1935 No longer in Diocese
David Heimann 1958 Deceased
Gabriel Hernandez 2008 Dismissed from the Josephinum, laicized
Robert Hunt 1954 Deceased
Timothy Keane 1950 Deceased

Extern or religious clergy from the diocese with credible accusations elsewhere

Name Ordained Status
Pierre Albalaa 1995 Removed from ministry
Frank Benham 1963 Left ministry
Aaron J. Cote 1986 Deceased
Kenneth France-Kelly 1981 Deceased
Joseph Herlihy 1939 Deceased
Walter Horan 1945 Deceased
Stephan Johnson 1981 No longer in ministry
James Kilkenny 1936 Deceased
Francis Masserella 1941 Deceased
Thomas McCarthy 1960 Deceased
Richard J. McCormick 1970 Incarcerated
Joseph McGuiness 1939 Deceased
Robert Pelkington 1968 Deceased
John Powers 1952 Deceased
Francis Sweeney 1961 Deceased
John Walsh 1940 Deceased

References edit

  1. ^ "Parishes". Diocese of Columbus. Retrieved 2022-08-24.
  2. ^ . Archdiocese of Baltimore. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved 2009-03-30.
  3. ^ "Freedom of Religion Comes to Boston | Archdiocese of Boston". www.bostoncatholic.org. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
  4. ^ a b c d Clarke, D.A. (1918). Diocese of Columbus : the history of fifty years, 1868-1918. Columbus: Diocese of Columbus. p. 42.
  5. ^ Shearer, Donald (June 1933). "Pontificia Americana: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES 1784 -1884". Franciscan Studies. 11 (11): 343. JSTOR 41974134 – via JSTOR.
  6. ^ Shearer, Donald (June 1933). "Pontificia Americana: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES 1784 -1884". Franciscan Studies. 11 (11): 343. JSTOR 41974134 – via JSTOR.
  7. ^ "Bishop John Ambrose Watterson". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
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External links edit

  • Diocesan website

roman, catholic, diocese, columbus, diocese, columbus, latin, dioecesis, columbensis, latin, church, ecclesiastical, territory, diocese, catholic, church, covering, counties, central, ohio, united, states, suffragan, diocese, ecclesiastical, province, metropol. 1 The Diocese of Columbus Latin Dioecesis Columbensis is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church covering 23 counties in central Ohio in the United States It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Cincinnati Diocese of ColumbusDioecesis ColumbensisSt Joseph CathedralCoat of armsLocationCountry United StatesTerritory23 counties in Central and Southern Ohio Ecclesiastical provinceCincinnatiCoordinates39 57 48 N 82 59 41 W 39 96333 N 82 99472 W 39 96333 82 99472StatisticsArea29 282 sq mi 75 840 km2 Population Total Catholics as of 2006 2 447 972252 103 10 3 Parishes108InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablishedMarch 3 1868 156 years ago CathedralSt Joseph CathedralPatron saintSt Francis de SalesCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisBishopEarl K FernandesMetropolitan ArchbishopDennis Marion SchnurrBishops emeritusJames Anthony Griffin Frederick Francis CampbellMapWebsitecolumbuscatholic org The mother church of the Diocese of Columbus is St Joseph Cathedral in Columbus The diocese was erected on March 3 1868 by Pope Pius IX The current bishop of Columbus is Earl K Fernandes Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 1700 to 1860 2 2 1860 to 1900 2 3 1900 to 1945 2 4 1945 to 1968 2 5 1968 to 1982 2 6 1982 to 2020 2 7 2020 to present 3 Bishops 3 1 Bishops of Columbus 3 2 Auxiliary bishops of Columbus 3 3 Other diocesan priests who became bishops 4 Parishes 4 1 Center South Columbus Deanery 4 2 Northwest Columbus Deanery 4 3 North High Deanery 4 4 Northland Columbus Deanery 4 5 West Columbus Deanery 4 6 East Columbus Deanery 4 7 Marion Deanery 4 8 Perry County Zanesville Deanery 4 9 Knox Licking Deanery 4 10 Tuscawaras Holmes Coshocton Deanery 4 11 Lancaster Deanery 4 12 Chillicothe Deanery 4 13 Scioto County Deanery 5 Education 5 1 Museum of Catholic Art and History 5 2 Colleges 5 3 High schools 5 3 1 Closed schools 5 4 Elementary schools 6 Hospitals 6 1 Current hospitals 6 2 Closed hospitals 7 Religious institutes 7 1 Religious men 7 2 Religious sisters 8 Catholic media 8 1 Radio 8 2 Newspaper 9 Clergy abuse scandal 9 1 History 9 2 List of credibly accused clergy 9 3 References 10 External linksGeography editThe Diocese of Columbus contains 108 parishes in 23 counties Coshocton Delaware Fairfield Fayette Franklin Hardin Hocking Holmes Jackson Knox Licking Madison Marion Morrow Muskingum Perry Pickaway Pike Ross Scioto Tuscarawas Union and Vinton 1 History edit1700 to 1860 edit During the 17th century present day Ohio was part of the French colony of New France The Diocese of Quebec had jurisdiction over the region However unlike other parts of the future American Midwest there were no attempts to found Catholic missions in Ohio In 1763 Ohio Country became part of the British Province of Quebec forbidden from settlement by American colonists After the American Revolution ended in 1783 Pope Pius VI erected in 1784 the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States encompassing the entire territory of the new nation In 1787 the Ohio area became part of the Northwest Territory of the United States Pius VI created the Diocese of Baltimore the first diocese in the United States to replace the prefecture apostolic in 1789 2 3 In 1808 Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of Bardstown in Kentucky with jurisdiction over the new state of Ohio along with the other midwest states Dominican priests from Bardstown were the first missionaries and clergy in the Columbus area The first Catholic chapel built in Ohio was a log structure in Perry County it was dedicated in 1818 by Edward Fenwick 4 Pope Pius VII in 1821 erected the Diocese of Cincinnati taking all of Ohio from Bardstown 5 The visit of Cincinnati Bishop John Purcell to central Ohio in June 1836 began the activity of the Catholic Church in the city of Columbus After saying Mass in a house on Canal Street on June 5 Purcell asked the Catholic men in attendance to meet regarding the construction of a church They developed a plan to build a church on a lot already owned by the Catholics of the area where Holy Cross Church now stands In 1837 the diocese sent a resident pastor Henry Juncker to cover the Columbus and Chillicothe areas Juncker built Holy Cross Church opening it in 1838 with a Sung Mass By 1843 Holy Cross parish was scheduling multiple masses on Sundays and building a school 4 1860 to 1900 edit At the close of the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1866 the American bishops petitioned Pope Pius IX to establish a new diocese with its seat in Columbus On March 3 1868 the pope erected the Diocese of Columbus encompassing the portions of Ohio lying south of 40 and 41 and between the Ohio River on the East and the Scioto River on the West together with the Counties of Franklin Delaware and Morrow 6 Pius IX appointed Auxiliary Bishop Sylvester Rosecrans of Cincinnati as the first bishop of Columbus When the Diocese of Columbus was erected it had only three churches all in the city of Columbus Holy Cross St Patrick s and St Mary s The diocese was mostly agricultural having been settled first by Maryland and Pennsylvania residents who had moved west and then later by German and Irish immigrants Rosecrans established the Catholic Columbian a newspaper for the diocese in addition to opening St Aloysius Seminary and St Vincent s Orphan Asylum He oversaw the construction of St Joseph Cathedral to its consecration in 1878 before dying the following morning 4 To replace Rosencrans Pope Leo XIII appointed John Watterson as the second bishop of Columbus in 1880 7 The major challenge facing the diocese was the debt accrued by the construction of St Joseph During his 19 year long tenure Watterson increased the number of priests and schools in the diocese oversaw the building of two hospitals and the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus and erected many new missions and parishes 8 1900 to 1945 edit On April 6 1900 Henry K Moeller chancellor of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati was appointed the third bishop of Columbus by Leo XIII 9 During his episcopacy the diocesan debt was split among the parishes and nearly eliminated in three years and a diocesan synod was convened Moeller also established missions parishes and schools to serve the increasing immigrant population of the Diocese Moeller was appointed as the coadjutor bishop of Cincinnati by Pope Pius X in 1903 4 Moeller s replacement James Hartley was appointed bishop in 1903 During his tenure Hartley oversaw a significant growth of the diocese In 1905 he erected his first parishes Holy Rosary and St Aloysius In 1906 he retired the debt on St Joseph Cathedral Within the first five years of his episcopate Hartley began or dedicated over 25 churches schools and chapels He established the following institutions St Charles Seminary in Columbus St Joseph Cemetery in Lockbourne St Ann Hospital in Westerville Mercy Hospital in Portsmouth Good Samaritan Hospital in Zanesville Mercy Hospital in Mount Vernon St Therese Shrine in Columbus 10 Toward the end of his term as bishop Hartley consecrated Edward Hettinger as the first auxiliary bishop of the Columbus diocese Hartley died in 1944 1945 to 1968 edit Pope Pius XII appointed Michael Ready as bishop of Columbus in 1945 That same year the pope established the Diocese of Steubenville He removed 13 counties from the Diocese of Columbus to form the new diocese Carroll Jefferson Harrison Guernsey Belmont Noble Monroe Morgan Washington Athens Meigs Gallia and Lawrence At the same time the pope added nine counties Hardin Marion Union Madison Fayette Pickaway Ross Pike and Scioto to the Diocese of Columbus from the Archdiocese of Cincinnati 11 One of Ready s first tasks was overseeing the erection of the new Diocese of Steubenville 12 He established the Catholic Welfare Bureau and appointed a director of charities for the diocese 12 Ready was a critic of the Ohio State University board of trustees decision in 1951 that all campus speakers had to be cleared by University President Howard L Bevis in advance 13 Ready also organized the Holy Name Society a Parent Teacher Organization the Council of Catholic Women the Catholic Youth Council and the St Vincent de Paul Society in the diocese 12 He created 18 new parishes and oversaw the construction of nine elementary and five high schools 12 Ready founded two nursing homes the diocesan Child Guidance Center and the Catholic Student Center at Ohio State University He worked with his fellow Ohio bishops to start the Ohio Catholic Welfare Conference 12 Ready died in 1957 Pope Pius XII appointed Auxiliary Bishop Clarence Issenmann of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati as the sixth bishop of Columbus on December 5 1957 14 15 As bishop Issenmann established the Diocesan Development Fund so as to supply for the expansion of the diocese which added eight parishes and six high schools under Issenmann He also found a new building to house diocesan offices and offered a televised Mass every week 16 Pope Paul VI named him as coadjutor bishop of the Diocese of Cleveland in 1964 Bishop John Carberry from the Diocese of Lafayette in Indiana was appointed the seventh bishop of Columbus by Pope Paul VI on January 16 1965 17 As bishop he implemented the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and supported the Civil Rights Movement and ecumenical movement 18 He established the Clergy Advisory Council and oversaw the renovation of St Joseph s Cathedral after issuing regulations for liturgical changes 18 Carberry also bought a new building to centralize the offices of the diocesan chancery 18 He helped found the Inter Church Board for Metropolitan Affairs the first organization in the United States uniting Protestants and Catholics for ecumenism and social action 18 In January 1968 he became the first Catholic bishop to receive the Ohio Council of Churches annual Pastor of Pastors award 19 Carberry was named archbishop of the Archdiocese of St Louis in 1968 1968 to 1982 edit Paul VI named Auxiliary Bishop Clarence Elwell from the Diocese of Cleveland as the eighth bishop of Columbus in 1968 20 During his tenure as bishop Elwell continued the implementation of the reforms of the Second Vatican Council initiated under Carberry 21 An advocate of Catholic education he opened the following schools in Ohio Tuscarawas Central Catholic High School in New Philadelphia William V Fisher Catholic High School in Lancaster Bishop Rosecrans High School in Zanesville Elwell also converted the diocesan seminary in Columbus into St Charles College Preparatory School 21 He also established Resurrection Cemetery in Lewis Center Ohio St Peter Parish in Worthington Ohio the Sisters Council and the Pastoral Council He significantly expanded the Development Office the Parish Aid Fund and the diocesan self insurance program 21 Elwell died in 1973 Auxiliary Bishop Edward Herrmann from the Archdiocese of Washington was appointed bishop of Columbus in 1973 by Paul VI 22 23 Herrmann helped establish Operation Feed in Columbus a countywide food drive that now provides millions of meals every year to people in the Columbus area He also reorganized the diocese into the 15 vicariates and instituted the Emmaus Spirituality Program for priests 23 Hermann died in 1982 1982 to 2020 edit In 1983 Pope John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop James Griffin from the Diocese of Cleveland as the tenth bishop of the Diocese of Columbus 24 In 1985 Griffin established the Foundation of the Catholic Diocese of Columbus and initiated the Legacy of Catholic Learning campaign in 1989 and Challenge In Changing Times campaign He also established Breaking The Silence task force to reduce family violence Griffin also served on a number of committees of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and was president of Catholic Relief Services 1991 1995 24 In 2004 after 21 years as bishop of Columbus Griffin retired In 2004 John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop Frederick F Campbell from the Archdiocese of St Paul and Minneapolis as the eleventh bishop of Columbus 25 26 In 2005 Campbell proposed the establishment of a civil registry of priests from the diocese of Columbus who had been credibly accused of sexual abuse 27 Campbell spoke out in 2006 against a proposed law in the Ohio General Assembly that would have allowed a 20 year statute of limitations for sexual abuse cases In his testimony to the legislature Campbell claimed that the 20 year window for prosecution wasn t fair and would curtail the church s charitable work In the end the assembly passed the legislation with a 10 year window 28 29 In April 2013 the diocese fired Carla Hale a teacher at Bishop Watterson High School in Columbus The diocese took action after receiving a complaint that Hale had a domestic partner who was a woman Hale then threatened to file a complaint with the City of Columbus under its anti discrimination ordinances 30 Hale and the diocese later reached a settlement in which she would not return to Bishop Watterson 31 After Campbell resigned in 2019 Pope Francis appointed Auxiliary Bishop Robert J Brennan from the Diocese of Rockville Centre as bishop of Columbus that same year 32 33 34 Brennan initiated the elevation of Saint Mary of the Assumption in Lancaster to the rank of a minor basilica in August 2019 In December 2020 Brennan announced the Real Presence Real Future strategic planning initiative aiming at increasing the presence of Christ throughout its 23 counties over the next three years and upholding the Faith for future generations 35 36 According to Brennan the process would likely result in some parishes closing 37 2020 to present edit In February 2020 the diocese announced the closure of two diocesan retreat centers St Therese s in Columbus and Sts Peter and Paul in Newark The shuttering was due to dwindling use in part because of more parishes having parish centers newer non diocesan facilities being built and the necessity of repairs at both sites Sts Peter and Paul was constructed as a seminary for the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions in 1957 38 It closed in 1990 was acquired by the diocese and reopened as a retreat center in 2003 39 It served as the convent for the Dominican Nuns of the Perpetual Rosary until the community left the diocese in 2023 40 41 St Therese Retreat Center was opened in 1931 42 St Therese now houses the Daughters of Holy Mary of the Heart of Jesus a group ministering to girls and young women Francis appointed Brennan as bishop of the Diocese of Brooklyn in 2021 and then named Reverend Earl K Fernandes of Cincinnati is the current bishop of Columbus appointed by Francis in 2022 Fernandes has continued the Real Presence Real Future process started by Brennan 43 In October 2022 the Diocese of Steubenville announced that the Vatican was considering a merger with the Diocese of Columbus 44 45 However facing strong opposition within Steubenville Bishop Jeffrey Monforton of Steubenville announced a few weeks later that the merger proposal had been put on hold 46 In May 2023 the diocese announced that it would closed 15 parishes as part of the Real Presence Real Future initiative 47 As of 2023 Fernandes is the current bishop of Columbus Bishops editBishops of Columbus edit Sylvester Horton Rosecrans 1868 1878 John Ambrose Watterson 1880 1899 Henry K Moeller 1900 1903 appointed Coadjutor Archbishop and later Archbishop of Cincinnati James Joseph Hartley 1903 1944 Michael Joseph Ready 1944 1957 Clarence George Issenmann 1957 1964 appointed Coadjutor Bishop and later Bishop of Cleveland John Joseph Carberry 1965 1968 appointed Archbishop of Saint Louis elevated to Cardinal in 1969 Clarence Edward Elwell 1968 1973 Edward John Herrmann 1973 1982 James Anthony Griffin 1983 2004 Frederick Francis Campbell 2005 2019 Robert J Brennan 2019 2021 appointed Bishop of Brooklyn Earl K Fernandes 2022 present Auxiliary bishops of Columbus edit Edward Gerard Hettinger 1941 1977 George Avis Fulcher 1976 1983 appointed Bishop of Lafayette in Indiana Other diocesan priests who became bishops edit Nicholas Aloysius Gallagher 1846 1916 appointed Bishop of Galveston in 1892 Francis William Howard appointed Bishop of Covington in 1923Parishes editMain article List of churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus As of 2020 the Diocese of Columbus comprises 103 parishes and two missions The parishes are divided into the following deaneries nbsp Saint Mary of the Assumption Church South Columbus Deanery Center South Columbus Deanery edit Community of Holy Rosary St John the Evangelist Columbus African American 1979 Holy Cross Columbus German 1846 Sts Augustine amp Gabriel Columbus Vietnamese 1925 St Dominic Columbus African American 1889 St Joseph Cathedral Columbus 1866 St Mary of the Assumption Columbus German 1865 St Patrick Columbus Irish 1852 St Thomas the Apostle Columbus 1900 St Leo the Great 1902 nbsp Saint Brigid of Kildare Church Northwest Columbus Deanery Northwest Columbus Deanery edit Our Lady of Victory Marble Cliff 1922 St Agatha Columbus 1940 St Andrew Columbus 1955 Saint Brendan the Navigator Church Hilliard 1956 St Brigid of Kildare Dublin 1987 St Christopher Columbus 1947 St Joan of Arc Powell 1987 St Margaret of Cortona Columbus Italian 1921 St Peter Columbus 1970 St Timothy Columbus 1961 nbsp Saint John the Baptist Italian Catholic Church North High Deanery North High Deanery edit Holy Name Columbus 1905 Immaculate Conception Columbus 1916 Our Lady of Peace Columbus 1946 Parroquia Santa Cruz Columbus Hispanic 1993 Sacred Heart Columbus 1875 St Francis of Assisi Columbus 1892 St John the Baptist Columbus Italian 1895 St Michael the Archangel Worthington 1946 St Thomas More Newman Center Columbus 1906 nbsp Church of the Resurrection Northland Columbus Deanery Northland Columbus Deanery edit Church of the Resurrection New Albany 1983 St Elizabeth Columbus 1967 St James the Less Columbus 1947 St John Neumann Sunbury 1977 St Matthias Columbus 1956 St Paul Westerville 1913 nbsp Saint Joseph Church West Columbus Deanery West Columbus Deanery edit Holy Family Church Columbus Irish 1877 Our Lady of Perpetual Help Grove City 1954 Sts Simon amp Jude West Jefferson German Irish 1867 St Agnes Columbus 1954 St Aloysius Columbus 1906 St Cecilia Columbus 1882 St Joseph Plain City 1864 St Mary Magdalene Columbus 1928 St Patrick London German Irish 1866 St Stephen the Martyr Columbus Hispanic 1963 nbsp Saint Catharine of Siena Church East Columbus Deanery East Columbus Deanery edit St John XXIII Canal Winchester 2000 Christ the King Columbus 1946 Holy Spirit Columbus 1947 Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Columbus 1967 St Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish Pickerington 1978 St Catharine of Siena Columbus 1931 St Mary Groveport 1871 St Matthew Gahanna 1959 St Philip the Apostle Columbus 1956 St Pius X Reynoldsburg 1958 nbsp Immaculate Conception Church Marion Deanery Marion Deanery edit Immaculate Conception Kenton 1866 Our Lady of Lourdes Ada 1874 Our Lady of Lourdes Marysville 1866 Sacred Hearts of Jesus amp Mary Cardington 1971 St Mary Delaware 1854 St Mary Marion 1864 nbsp Saint Nicholas Church Perry County Zanesville Deanery Perry County Zanesville Deanery edit Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Mattingly Settlement 1856 Holy Trinity Somerset 1826 St Ann Dresden 1877 St Joseph Somerset 1818 St Nicholas Zanesville German 1842 St Patrick Junction City 1827 St Rose of Lima New Lexington 1867 St Thomas Aquinas Zanesville Irish Italian 1842 nbsp Saint Vincent de Paul Church Knox Licking Deanery Knox Licking Deanery edit Church of the Ascension Johnstown 1912 Church of the Blessed Sacrament Newark 1904 Our Lady of Mt Carmel Buckeye Lake 1928 St Edward the Confessor Granville 1947 St Francis de Sales Newark 1844 St Leonard Heath 1962 St Luke Danville 1823 St Vincent de Paul Mt Vernon 1839 nbsp Sacred Heart Church Tuscawarus Holmes Coshocton Deanery Tuscawaras Holmes Coshocton Deanery edit Holy Trinity Zoar 1995 Immaculate Conception Dennison Irish 1870 Sacred Heart Coshocton 1897 Sacred Heart New Philadelphia 1895 St Joseph Dover German Italian 1848 St Peter Millersburg 1877 nbsp Saint John the Evangelist Church Lancaster Deanery Lancaster Deanery edit St Bernadette Lancaster 1963 St Mary Bremen 1917 St Mark Lancaster 1959 Basilica of St Mary of the Assumption Lancaster 1819 St John the Evangelist Logan 1838 St Joseph Sugar Grove 1892 nbsp Saint Sylvester Church Chillicothe Deanery Chillicothe Deanery edit Holy Trinity Jackson 1880 Sts Peter amp Paul Wellston 1881 St Colman of Cloyne Washington Court House 1881 St Joseph Circleville 1845 St Mary Chillicothe 1837 St Mary Queen of the Missions Waverly 1878 St Peter Chillicothe German 1846 St Sylvester Zaleski Irish 1864 nbsp Saint Mary of the Annunciation Church Scioto County Deanery Scioto County Deanery edit Holy Redeemer Portsmouth Irish 1853 Holy Trinity Pond Creek French 1854 St Mary of the Annunciation German 1850 St Peter in Chains Wheelersburg 1849 Education editMuseum of Catholic Art and History edit The diocese is home to the Museum of Catholic Art and History the largest institution of its kind in the United States 48 It was founded in 1998 as the Jubilee Museum 49 Colleges edit Mount Carmel College of Nursing Columbus Ohio Dominican University Columbus Pontifical College Josephinum Columbus Jurisdiction of the Apostolic Nuncio nbsp The Pontifical College Josephinum Columbus High schools edit Bishop Hartley High School Columbus Bishop Ready High School Columbus Bishop Rosecrans High School Zanesville Bishop Watterson High School Columbus Cristo Rey Columbus High School Columbus Newark Catholic High School Newark Notre Dame High School Portsmouth Saint Charles Preparatory School Columbus St Francis DeSales High School Columbus Tuscarawas Central Catholic High School New Philadelphia William V Fisher Catholic High School Lancaster Closed schools edit Bishop Flaget High School Chillicothe Currently a grade school Corpus Christi School Columbus Father Wehrle High School Columbus Holy Family School Columbus Holy Name School Columbus Holy Rosary Grade School amp High School Marion Catholic High School Marion St Aloysius Academy New Lexington St Ladislas School Columbus St Leo School Columbus St Mary Chillicothe St Mary High School Columbus St Peter Chillicothe St Rose of Lima New Lexington closed 2021 50 St Thomas the Apostle Grade School Columbus Elementary schools edit All Saints Academy Columbus Bishop Fenwick Zanesville Bishop Flaget Chillicothe Blessed Sacrament Newark Holy Spirit Whitehall Holy Trinity Somerset Immaculate Conception Columbus Immaculate Conception Dennison Notre Dame Elementary Portsmouth Our Lady of Bethlehem Columbus Our Lady of Peace Columbus Our Lady of Perpetual Help Grove City Sacred Heart Coshocton St Agatha Columbus St Andrew Columbus St Anthony Columbus St Bernadette Lancaster St Brendan Hilliard St Brigid of Kildare Dublin St Catharine Columbus St Cecilia Columbus St Francis de Sales Newark St James the Less Columbus St John Logan St Joseph Montessori Columbus St Mary Elementary Lancaster St Mary Magdalene Columbus St Mary Columbus St Mary Delaware St Mary Marion St Matthew Gahanna St Matthias Columbus St Michael Worthington St Patrick London St Paul Westerville St Pius X Reynoldsburg St Timothy Columbus St Vincent de Paul Mt Vernon Sts Peter and Paul Wellston Trinity Elementary Columbus Tuscarawas Central Catholic Elementary School DoverHospitals editCurrent hospitals edit Genesis HealthCare System Zanesville combination of Good Samaritan Hospital and Bethesda Hospital Good Samaritan Hospital began in 1900 and is co sponsored by the Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity of Manitowoc Wisconsin Mt Carmel Hospitals Columbus Mt Carmel East Mt Carmel West St Ann Westerville Mt Carmel opened in 1886 by the Sisters of the Holy Cross from St Mary s Indiana In 1972 Mt Carmel East opened to serve the suburbs Also St Ann s Hospital was bought by Mt Carmel in 1995 At one time St Ann s was operated by the Sisters of St Francis of Penance and Christian Charity Trinity Hospital Twin City Dennison Bought by the Sisters of St Francis of Sylvania in May 2011 Closed hospitals edit Mercy Hospital Mt Vernon 1919 1975 Owned by the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth This hospital closed and merged with the local public hospital of Mt Vernon Mercy Hospital Portsmouth 1917 1981 This hospital was owned by the Sisters of St Francis of the Congregation of Our Lady of Lourdes from Rochester Minnesota It was sold to the community hospital in the city San Antonio Hospital Kenton 1897 1963 The Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati owned the facilities St Anthony s Hospital Columbus 1891 1991 Also operated by the Sisters of the Poor of St Francis The original building was razed in 1971 and was finally sold in 1991 It is now part of the Ohio State University hospital system St Francis Hospital Columbus 1862 1955 Operated by the Sisters of the Poor of St Francis The building was razed in 1957 and today it is the site of Grant Hospital Religious institutes edit nbsp Entrance to the Dominican Province of St Joseph at St Patrick Church in Columbus nbsp Saint James the Less Church in Columbus Religious men edit Religious Order Location Served Apostles of Jesus 51 Congregation of the Holy Spirit 51 Congregation of Clerics Regular of the Divine Providence Theatines 50 St Joseph Dover Holy Trinity ZoarChrist the King Columbus Fathers of Mercy 51 Glenmary Home Missioners 51 Heralds of the Good News 52 St John Neumann Sunbury 40 Church of the Resurrection New Albany 40 Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest ICKSP St Leo Merion Village 53 Institute of the Incarnate Word 51 Missionaries of the Precious Blood St James the Less Columbus 51 Missionary Servants of the Word 50 St Stephen the Martyr Columbus St Agnes Columbus Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mercy Mercerdarians Holy Family Columbus 54 Order of Friars Minor 51 Order of Preachers Dominicans Holy Trinity Somerset 51 Pontifical College Josephinum 55 Ohio Dominican UniversitySt Joseph Somerset 51 St Patrick Columbus 51 Society of the Catholic Apostolate Pallottines Sacred Heart Columbus 52 St Christopher 40 Sons of the Immaculate Conception Congregation Mt Carmel Hospitals St Elizabeth Columbus 56 Religious sisters edit Bridgettine Sisters Order of the Most Holy Savior Holy Family Church Columbus 50 Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm Columbus 50 Daughters of Holy Mary of the Heart of Jesus 40 Dominican Sisters of Mary Mother of the Eucharist St Michael School Worthington 57 Dominican Sisters of Peace Columbus Dominican Sisters of the Immaculate Conception Columbus 58 Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity Zanesville Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 59 Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary from Kerala St Peter Chillicothe 60 Leaven of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Portsmouth 40 Little Servant Sisters of the Immaculate Conception Columbus St John Paul II Education Center 61 Salesian Sisters of Don Bosco St Francis DeSales High School Columbus 50 62 Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati Columbus and Mount Vernon Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur Columbus Sisters of the Good Shepherd Columbus Sisters of the Holy Cross Columbus Sisters of St Francis of Penance and Christian Charity Columbus Third Order of St Francis Joliet Columbus nbsp St Gabriel Radio office and studioCatholic media editRadio edit There are two stations in the diocese listed below including WFOT at 89 5 FM licensed to Lexington and serving the Mansfield area Annunciation Radio airs programming from EWTN Global Catholic Radio WFOT broadcasts as a simulcast of WNOC WVSG 820 AM Saint Gabriel Radio the former WOSU AM There are two other stations also reaching the diocese listed below including WNOP Sacred Heart Radio 720 AM licensed to Newport Kentucky and based in Cincinnati which also airs local and EWTN programming plus an FM sister WHSS 89 5 in Hamilton WULM Radio Maria 1600 AM in Springfield Radio Maria USA is based at originating station KJMJ 580 AM in Alexandria Louisiana Newspaper edit The Catholic Columbian was the first official newspaper of the diocese created in 1875 by Bishop Sylvester Rosecrans and Father Dennis Clarke 63 In 1939 the newspaper announced it would no longer associate with the diocese but continued to publish until 1940 when it was replaced by The Columbus Register 63 In 1951 the diocese established The Catholic Times replacing The Columbus Register and is still in use today 63 Clergy abuse scandal editMain article Catholic Church sex abuse cases History edit In 1993 Bishop Griffin removed Reverend Phillip Jacobs from his parish due to allegations that he had sexually abused a teenage boy The boy s family requested that the police not be notified but years later Griffin made the notification When the Diocese of Victoria in British Columbia was considering hiring Jacobs Griffin informed the diocese about the allegations against him The Diocese of Victoria hired Jacobs anyway In 2010 Jacobs was arrested in Victoria British Columbia for sexual abuse of minors 64 Jacobs was convicted in 2013 and sentenced to five months of home detention 65 In August 2018 Bishop Campbell and the diocese were named in a 2 million lawsuit by Kevin Heidtman a former student at St Charles Preparatory School in Columbus Heidtman alleged that he was sexually molested on at least six occasions at the school by Reverend Thomas Bennett between 2002 and 2003 Bennett died in 2008 The lawsuit alleged that Campbell and the diocese became aware of Bennett s molestation of Heidtman but failed to take any action 1 2 3 66 After Heidtman filed suit two other students came forward with accusations again Bennett In March 2019 the diocese released a list of 36 clergy with credible accusations of sexual abuse of children 67 and updated the list to number nearly 50 in September of the same year 68 In August 2020 the diocese paid a 1 million settlement to Heidtman 69 Until 2020 the diocese was one of only three dioceses in the nation to have a priest serve as victim assistance coordinator Victim advocates criticized this practice saying it can re traumatize survivors and discourage the reporting of abuse 70 The diocese hired an outside licensed counselor in July 2020 coinciding with the formation of a Safe Environment Task Force by Bishop Brennan 71 List of credibly accused clergy edit Living clergy with credible accusations Name Ordained Status Ronald Atwood 1969 Deceased Thomas Brosmer 1969 Removed from ministry R Michael Ellifritz 1967 Laicized Roger Emmert 1962 Deceased Joseph Fete 1974 Laicized Michael Hanrahan 1971 Laicized deceased James Hutson 1982 Deceased Philip Jacobs 1974 Laicized Raymond Lavelle 1957 Deceased Frederick Loyd 1970 Laicized Robert Luchi 1957 Left ministry Kevin Lutz 1978 Removed from Ministry Dean A Matthewson 1973 Administrative Leave Bernard McClory 1953 Deceased Thomas McLaughlin 1956 Laicized deceased Samuel Ritchey 1973 Laicized deceased Francis Schaefer 1955 Deceased George Tumeo 1965 Laicized Martin Weithman 1980 Laicized Deceased clergy with credible accusations Name Ordained Status Robert Brown 1939 Deceased Harry Estadt 1932 Deceased John Gamba 1942 Deceased John Geiger 1957 Deceased Louis Hoffman 1943 Deceased John Ryan 1959 Deceased Robert Schmidt 1943 Deceased Ted Spires 1961 Laicized deceased Alan Sprenger 1960 Deceased John Tague 1951 Deceased Living clergy with credible accusations from outside the diocese Name Ordained Status Carl Drake 1964 Removed from ministry Extern or religious clergy from outside the diocese with credible accusations Name Ordained Status Hector Bellinato 1935 No longer in Diocese David Heimann 1958 Deceased Gabriel Hernandez 2008 Dismissed from the Josephinum laicized Robert Hunt 1954 Deceased Timothy Keane 1950 Deceased Extern or religious clergy from the diocese with credible accusations elsewhere Name Ordained Status Pierre Albalaa 1995 Removed from ministry Frank Benham 1963 Left ministry Aaron J Cote 1986 Deceased Kenneth France Kelly 1981 Deceased Joseph Herlihy 1939 Deceased Walter Horan 1945 Deceased Stephan Johnson 1981 No longer in ministry James Kilkenny 1936 Deceased Francis Masserella 1941 Deceased Thomas McCarthy 1960 Deceased Richard J McCormick 1970 Incarcerated Joseph McGuiness 1939 Deceased Robert Pelkington 1968 Deceased John Powers 1952 Deceased Francis Sweeney 1961 Deceased John Walsh 1940 Deceased References edit Parishes Diocese of Columbus Retrieved 2022 08 24 Our History Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved 2009 03 30 Freedom of Religion Comes to Boston Archdiocese of Boston www bostoncatholic org Retrieved 2023 02 25 a b c d Clarke D A 1918 Diocese of Columbus the history of fifty years 1868 1918 Columbus Diocese of Columbus p 42 Shearer Donald June 1933 Pontificia Americana A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES 1784 1884 Franciscan Studies 11 11 343 JSTOR 41974134 via JSTOR Shearer Donald June 1933 Pontificia Americana A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES 1784 1884 Franciscan Studies 11 11 343 JSTOR 41974134 via JSTOR Bishop John Ambrose Watterson Catholic Hierarchy org The Right Reverend John Ambrose Watterson D D Bishop 1880 1899 Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Archived from the original on 2009 01 03 Retrieved 2009 08 18 Cheney David M Archbishop Henry Moeller Catholic Hierarchy org The Bishops of Columbus Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Archived from the original on 2009 01 03 Retrieved 2009 04 02 Piux XII 21 October 1944 Constituto Apostolica Cincinnatensis et Columbensis PDF Acta Apostolicae Sedis xxxvii 6 153 155 via Vatican a b c d e The Bishops of Columbus Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Archived from the original on 2009 01 03 Retrieved 2009 03 20 Sag Rule in Ohio TIME Magazine 1951 11 05 Archived from the original on June 12 2009 Bishop Clarence George Issenmann Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved 2022 06 17 BISHOPS APPOINTED FOR TWO DIOCESES timesmachine nytimes com Retrieved 2022 06 17 ISSENMANN CLARENCE G Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Case Western Reserve University 2018 05 11 Retrieved 2022 06 17 John Joseph Cardinal Carberry Catholic Hierarchy org self published source a b c d The Bishops of Columbus Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Archived from the original on 2018 04 08 Retrieved 2010 05 28 New Bishop for St Louis TIME Magazine 1968 03 01 Archived from the original on October 29 2010 Bishop Clarence Edward Elwell Catholic Hierarchy org a b c The Most Reverend Clarence Edward Elwell S T D Bishop 1968 1973 Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Archived from the original on 2009 01 03 Retrieved 2009 08 18 Bishop Edward John Herrmann Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved 2022 08 29 a b The Most Reverend Edward John Herrmann D D Diocese of Columbus a b Most Reverend James Anthony Griffin J D J C L Catholic Diocese of Columbus Retrieved 2021 11 03 Resignations and Appointments 14 10 2004 Press release Holy See Press Office October 14 2004 Retrieved January 31 2019 Bishop Frederick Francis Campbell Catholic Hierarchy org Provance Jim December 26 2005 Church proposes molestation registry The Toledo Blade King Danae Ohio s abuse laws backward The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2021 12 09 Bishop says opening window for old abuse cases isn t fair The Blade Retrieved 2021 12 09 Columbus Diocese Takes Heat for Firing Lesbian Teacher NCR 2013 04 25 Retrieved 2023 07 08 Diocese gay teacher settle lawsuit Sunny 95 Retrieved 2023 07 08 Resignations and Appointments 31 01 2019 Press release Holy See Press Office January 31 2019 Retrieved September 29 2021 Pope names Long Island auxiliary as bishop of Columbus Catholic News January 31 2019 Archived from the original on February 1 2019 Retrieved September 30 2021 Orozco Jackie March 29 2019 New York Bishop officially installed as 12th Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Columbus WSYX Retrieved September 30 2021 Diocese of Columbus announces Real Presence Real Future Strategic Initiative to Plot Future Real Presence Real Future Retrieved 2022 04 24 Project to address needs of Catholics in central Ohio waiting on new bishop NBC4 WCMH TV 2022 03 29 Retrieved 2022 04 24 King Danae 12 October 2021 Hallmark of his time as bishop Brennan hopes diocese reorientation continues without him The Columbus Dispatch Archived from the original on 28 April 2022 Retrieved 28 April 2022 Catholic Life May June 1957 Vol 4 Iss 3 Internet Archive P I M E Missionaries May 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Puet Tim 9 February 2020 Two diocesan retreat centers to close PDF The Catholic Times of Columbus p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2023 Retrieved 22 August 2022 Alt URL a b c d e f Puet Tim 18 August 2022 More priests sisters from orders come to diocese The Catholic Times of Columbus Archived from the original on 22 August 2022 Retrieved 22 August 2022 Local News and Events Cloistered Dominican nuns no longer in diocese PDF The Catholic Times of Columbus 16 July 2023 p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 24 July 2023 Retrieved 24 July 2023 King Danae 21 February 2020 Catholic Diocese to close spiritual retreat centers The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 22 August 2022 Final draft models for parishes schools coming Aug 31 The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 08 25 Coppen Luke The Pillar 10 October 2022 Steubenville diocese to face merger with neighbor Columbus diocese The Pillar Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 King Danae 10 October 2022 Possible merger between Steubenville and Columbus dioceses to be discussed among bishops The Columbus Dispatch Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 Retrieved 10 October 2022 CNA New diocesan merger halted one week before vote at U S bishops meeting Catholic News Agency Retrieved 2023 07 08 Columbus Diocese closes 15 parishes amid initiative to move from maintenance to mission Catholic Review 2023 05 30 Retrieved 2023 07 08 King Danae Columbus museum of Catholic art artifacts reopening with new name location The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2022 04 28 King Danae Jubilee Museum to reopen Downtown in first Wendy s location The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2022 04 28 a b c d e f 2021 diocesan year in review Bishop led the news The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 04 30 a b c d e f g h i j Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus Real Presence Real Future Final Draft Model Recommendations PDF Real Presence Real Future p 75 Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2022 Alt URL a b King Danae Columbus bishop aims to enrich Catholic parishes with more religious order priests The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2022 04 28 Diocese of Columbus Welcomes Institute New Oratory to Open in October www institute christ king org Retrieved 2022 04 24 Mercedarian friars coming to Holy Family Church The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 04 24 Faculty Pontifical College Josephinum Archived from the original on 1 September 2022 Parish History St Elizabeth Catholic Parish Retrieved 2022 08 22 Dominican Sisters of Mary St Michael School stmichael cdeducation org Saint Michael School Worthington Ohio Retrieved 2022 05 02 Catholic Foundation Dominican Sisters of the Immaculate Conception Province PDF Once again religious sisters reside in Our Lady of Peace convent The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 08 18 Sister Guardians St Peter Roman Catholic Church Chillicothe 4020 Retrieved 2022 05 02 Local priests nuns have ties to Poland Ukraine The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 05 02 CATHOLIC SCHOOLS WEEK Salesian Sisters a perfect partner in DeSales mission The Catholic Times Retrieved 2022 08 18 a b c The Catholic Columbian JSTOR Retrieved 29 December 2023 Staff Writer Ousted Columbus priest arrested The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2021 12 15 Victoria priest given conditional sentence for sex charges CBC Retrieved July 8 2023 Former St Charles Student Files Lawsuit Alleging Sexual Abuse WOSU News August 16 2018 Retrieved 2021 12 09 List of Credibly Accused Clergy Diocese of Columbus Retrieved 2022 04 24 Columbus Diocese Adds Eight Names To List Of Clergy Accused Of Abuse WOSU News 2019 09 09 Retrieved 2022 04 24 King Danae Columbus Catholic Diocese settles priest sexual abuse case for 1 million The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved 2020 09 18 King Danae 17 March 2019 Columbus diocese has a priest take abuse reports The Columbus Dispatch Archived from the original on 8 May 2021 Retrieved 8 May 2021 King Danae 2 July 2020 Columbus Diocese hires counselor to speak with victims priest no longer working with survivors The Columbus Dispatch Archived from the original on 28 April 2022 Retrieved 28 April 2022 External links editDiocesan website nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article Diocese of Columbus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus amp oldid 1223944380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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