Early in January 2001, I was working in my office in the Pastoral Center in Washington, D.C. It was about nine in the morning when I was told that the Nuncio, the Pope’s personal representative to the United States, was on the line. He asked if I would meet with him at the Nunciature at four that same afternoon. I agreed, of course, and hanging up the phone, I was pretty sure I’d be packing my bags.
I like to think that I trust in God’s Providence and that I am a loyal son of the Church. On that day, however, I was also a curious son. So I checked to see which dioceses were expecting the appointment of a new bishop. Two stood out: Fairfield, Connecticut and Fairbanks, Alaska. I said a little prayer that it might be the former. I’m just not that good at ice fishing and flying a Cessna.
The rest, as they say, is history. The Nuncio told me that the Holy Father wished me to serve as the Fourth Bishop of Bridgeport and I happily accepted the appointment. Shortly after I met with the Nuncio, I was in Rome where I had an opportunity to thank Pope John Paul II for naming me to such a wonderful diocese. On the long plane ride home, I also read his newly published letter, On the Third Christian Millennium. In that letter, the saintly Pope, advanced in years and ailing, expressed his hope for a new springtime in the life of the Church.
Somewhere over the Atlantic, it occurred to me that my installation as Bishop of Bridgeport would take place just a few days before spring, on March 19th, the Feast of St. Joseph. I thus concluded that my installation homily should echo the Holy Father’s hope for a new springtime, his hope for a new season of life, grace, and vitality in the Church’s life. Even as I began writing my homily, however, I knew that the Pope’s vision of the future was not the idle wish of a dreamer. It was the well-founded hope of an experienced, courageous, and saintly leader who discerned the Providence of God amid global adversity and human weakness. How many times he echoed the words of Jesus, "Be not afraid!" Countless people, especially the young, responded to his proclamation of Christ, his teaching of the faith, and his defense of human dignity. As we prepare for Pope John Paul II’s beatification on May 1st, let us also take heart from the courage and love of his successor, Pope Benedict XVI, a Shepherd who leads the Universal Church with extraordinary holiness, grace, and intelligence.
March, of course, is a month that often brings cold weather, snow storms, and high winds. Yet it is also a month filled with the hope of spring as the days lengthen and first signs of new life appear. Just as I began here in March 2001 amid many challenges and opportunities, so now in March 2011, I recognize with you that this new springtime in the Church’s life continues to require of us assiduous prayer, holiness of life, wholeness of faith, unflagging hope, and dogged perseverance in love. With St. Paul we must strain forward to what lies ahead (Philippians 3:13).
To Give Thanks, To Assess, To Look Ahead
Anniversaries are a time to give thanks, to assess, to look ahead, and to ask for the grace of renewed fidelity and generosity in living one’s vocation. On this 10th anniversary of my service as Bishop of Bridgeport, I ask your kindness in taking a few moments to join me in doing those very things – giving thanks, assessing, looking ahead, and asking for the grace to serve the Lord’s Church with renewed love – so that, together, we may grow as One Body in Christ.
In his encyclical on hope, Pope Benedict writes: “Our lives are involved with one another, through innumerable interactions they are linked together. No one lives alone. No one sins alone. No one is saved alone. The lives of others continually spill over into mine, into what I think, say, do, and achieve. And conversely, my life spills over into that of others, for better or for worse” (Spe Salvi, no. 48). Our lives are linked together not merely because we live in Fairfield County, or travel the same roads, or shop in the same stores, but rather, because we are baptized members of Christ’s Body, which is the Church. St. Paul puts it this way: “For as in one body we have many members, and not all the members have the same function, so we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually members of one another” (Rom. 12:4-5).
In Christ, we are brothers and sisters who claim God as our Heavenly Father even as we seek to do his will “on earth as it is in heaven.” It is by taking part in the Eucharistic Liturgy, by sharing in Christ’s redeeming sacrifice and receiving His Body and Blood, that we are truly bound together as One Body in Christ, a local incarnation of the Church Universal here in Fairfield County, the Diocese of Bridgeport. As is the case in every diocese or “particular church,” here the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church of Christ is truly present and operative (Christus Dominus, no. 11).
Along Redemption’s Road
It would be foolish for us to imagine that, on our own, we can bring about a new springtime, a new season of life and vitality in the life of the Diocese. As the One Body of Christ we rely on the grace of Christ, the Head. And while we already have been redeemed by the Death and Resurrection of Christ, still, His saving love has yet fully to take root in our hearts, which are beset by sin and unruly inclinations to sin. So, while the Church herself is holy and endowed with the means of holiness, we, the members of the Church, are often plagued by sin. Thus, we experience the need for redemption in our individual lives and as members of the Body of Christ. In fact, the purpose of the annual Lenten Penance Campaign is not only to give individual penitents ample opportunity to go to confession but also to acknowledge our common need for repentance and for the forgiveness Christ offers us in the Sacrament of Penance. I am very grateful to the priests serving in this Diocese for their pastoral generosity and charity as confessors and for their devotion to the “ministry of reconciliation” (2 Cor. 5:18).
Just as we find attractive the goodness of people on their way toward holiness, so too, we can be discouraged by the failings and sins of those who have not lived up to their high callings, including members of the clergy who have abused children and young people. This has deeply wounded the Body of Christ and has called for responses of healing and reform. The past ten years have been marked by strenuous efforts to remove offenders from ministry, to create a truly safe environment for our children and young people, and to reach out to victims.
These years also witnessed the misuse of parish funds in a small number of instances. This spurred on the development of a nationally recognized, state-of-the-art parish finance system. In addition to a revised parish finance and administration manual and a clear chart of accounts, parish finances are managed on a uniform and secure on-line program. Parishes with incomes exceeding $400,000 are reviewed by external auditing firms; quarterly and annual financial reports to parishioners are also mandated. A similar system has been instituted for Catholic schools throughout the Diocese. While these measures and others are good and necessary, they do not absolve any of us, me especially, from continuing to ask the mercy and protection of God as we look to the future.
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