Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Bishop Ricard Offers Resignation to Pope Benedict XVI


Over a year since suffering a significant stroke, Bishop John Ricard of Pensacola-Tallahassee has submitted his resignation to Pope Benedict. A former chair of Catholic Relief Services and perennial key leader of the these shores' 5 million African-American Catholics, the 70 year-old Josephite underwent multiple surgeries following both his original stroke in December 2009 and a subsequent collapse at a funeral Mass early last year.
The Pensacola News Journal quoted diocesan officials in reporting Ricard's move. Though bishops younger than 75 who can't effectively function in office are "earnestly requested" by canon law to submit their walking papers ahead of the normal schedule, when the impediment is health-related, it's become the case that Rome often seeks a medical analysis before granting a prelate's release from office.
A Louisiana native who oversaw Baltimore's inner-city parishes for 13 years as an auxiliary in the Premier See, Ricard has served at the helm of the Gulf Coast diocese since 1997. Prior to being given the high-hat at the young age of 44, the bishop pastored three parishes in Washington alongside earning a doctorate from the Catholic University of America.
The expected opening would be the fourth diocese in Florida to see a transition within the last year. Last April, Wenski was returned to his hometown as metropolitan; Miami auxiliary John Noonan was dispatched to Orlando in October in succession to the archbishop, and Bishop Victor Galeone of St Augustine marked his 75th last September and awaits his successor. All this, of course, lies atop the archbishop's need for additional auxiliaries for the 1.3 million-member Miami fold, now the Southeast's largest local church.
We pray for Bishop Ricard.

No comments: