Roman Catholic Diocese of Auckland
(Redirected from Vicar Apostolic of Western Oceania)
The Diocese of Auckland is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in New Zealand. It was one of two dioceses in the country that were established on 20 June 1848. Auckland became a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Wellington in 1887.[1] A large area of the diocese south of Auckland was split from the diocese on 6 March 1980 to form the Diocese of Hamilton. As of 2021[update], almost 40 per cent of New Zealand’s 471,000 Catholics lived within the diocese of Auckland.[2]
Diocese of Auckland Dioecesis Aucopolitana | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | New Zealand |
Territory | New Zealand |
Ecclesiastical province | Wellington |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 13 May 1836 |
Cathedral | St Patrick's |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Stephen Marmion Lowe, Bishop of Auckland |
Auxiliary Bishops | Michael Andrew Gielen |
Bishops emeritus | Patrick James Dunn |
Ordinaries of Auckland
editTenure | Incumbent | Life |
---|---|---|
1836–1842 | Jean-Baptiste-François Pompallier (Vicar Apostolic of Western Oceania); see below | 1802–1871 |
1842–1848 | Jean-Baptiste-François Pompallier (Vicar Apostolic of New Zealand); see above & below | |
1848–1869 | Jean-Baptiste-François Pompallier (1st Bishop of Auckland); see above | |
1870–1874 | Thomas Croke | 1824–1902 |
1879–1881 | Walter Steins SJ, Archbishop (personal title) | 1800–1881 |
1882–1896 | John Luck OSB | 1840–1896 |
1896–1910 | George Lenihan OSB | 1858–1910 |
1910–1929 | Henry Cleary | 1859–1929 |
1929–1970 | James Liston, Archbishop (personal title) in 1953 | 1881–1976 |
1970–1974 | Reginald John Delargey (future Cardinal) | 1914–1979 |
1974–1983 | John Mackey | 1918–2014 |
1983–1994 | Denis Browne | Born 1937 |
1994–2021 | Patrick Dunn | Born 1950 |
2021–present | Stephen Lowe | Born 1962 |
Delargey was appointed Archbishop of Wellington in 1974 (Cardinal in 1976).
Browne was appointed Bishop of Hamilton in New Zealand in 1994.
Other bishops
editAuxiliary bishops
edit- Reginald John Delargey (1914–1979) (Priest: 19 Mar 1938; Auxiliary Bishop: 25 Nov 1957; Bishop: 1 Sep 1970 to 25 Apr 1974); later Cardinal.
- Edward Gaines (Auxiliary Bishop: 28 Oct 1976 to 6 Mar 1980), appointed Bishop of Hamilton.
- John Hubert Macey Rodgers SM (1915–1997) Vicar Apostolic of Tonga (1953–1957), Vicar Apostolic of Tonga and Niue (1957–1966) Bishop of Tonga (1966–1973), Bishop of Rarotonga (1973–1977), Auxiliary Bishop of Auckland (1977–1985), Superior of the Mission, Funafuti, Tuvalu (1986).
- Patrick Dunn (Priest: 24 Apr 1976; Auxiliary Bishop: 10 Jun 1994; Bishop: 19 Dec 1994 to 17 Dec 2021).
- Michael Gielen (born 2 June 1971), Auxiliary Bishop of Auckland (2020–2022); Bishop of Christchurch (2022-present)
Coadjutor bishop
edit- James Michael Liston (1920–1929).
Bishop assistant
edit- Robin Walsh Leamy SM (1934 – 2022), Bishop Emeritus of Rarotonga, Cook Islands, (Bishop Assistant in Auckland: 1996–2009)[3])
Other priests of this diocese who became bishops
edit- Matthew Joseph Brodie, appointed Bishop of Christchurch in 1915
- Peter Thomas McKeefry, appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Wellington in 1947; Cardinal from 1969
- Owen Noel Snedden, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Wellington in 1962
Current bishops
edit- Stephen Lowe, 12th Bishop of Auckland (17 December 2021 - present)[2]
- Patrick Dunn, Emeritus Bishop of Auckland
- Denis Browne, Emeritus Bishop of Hamilton
Cathedral
editParishes
editThe parish churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Auckland:
- Auckland City, Cathedral St Patrick & St Joseph
- Avondale, St Mary of the Immaculate Conception
- Balmoral, Good Shepherd
- BeachHaven, Maria Assumpta
- Blockhouse Bay, St Dominic
- Clover Park, St Peter Chanel
- Coromandel Peninsula & Hauraki Plains
- Dargaville, Sacred Heart
- Devonport, St Francis de Sales & All Souls
- East Coast Bays Parishes
- Ellerslie, Immaculate Conception
- Epsom, Our Lady of the Sacred Heart
- Flat Bush, St Luke
- Glen Eden, Our Lady of Lourdes
- Glen Innes, St Pius X
- Glendowie, Mother of Perpetual Help
- Glenfield, St Thomas More
- Grey Lynn, St Joseph
- Helensville, St Joseph
- Henderson, Holy Cross
- Hibiscus Coast
- Hillsborough, St John Vianney
- Howick, Our Lady, Star of the Sea
- Kaitaia, Holy Family
- Kerikeri, Holy Family
- Korean Parish, Holy Family
- Mangere Parishes
- Manurewa, St Anne
- Massey, St Paul
- Meadowbank, Our Lady of Fatima
- Mid-North Parishes
- Mt Albert, St Mary
- Mt Wellington, St Bernadette
- Newton, St Benedicts
- Northcote, St Mary
- Onehunga, Our Lady of the Assumption
- Orakei, St Joseph
- Otahuhu, Ss Joseph & Joachim
- Owairaka, Christ the King
- Pakuranga, St Mark
- Papatoetoe, Holy cross parish
- Waiheke Island, St Peter
- Warkworth, Holy Name
- Wellsford, St Mary
- Whangarei, St Francis Xavier
See also
editSecondary schools
edit- Baradene College, Remuera, Auckland
- Carmel College, Milford, Auckland
- De La Salle College, Mangere East, Auckland
- Hato Petera College, Northcote, Auckland
- Liston College, Henderson Auckland
- Marcellin College, Royal Oak, Auckland
- Marist College, Mt Albert, Auckland
- McAuley High School, Otahuhu, Auckland
- Pompallier Catholic College, Maunu, Whangarei
- Rosmini College, Takapuna, Auckland
- Sacred Heart College, Glen Innes, Auckland
- Sancta Maria College, Howick, Auckland
- St Dominic's College, Henderson, Auckland
- St Ignatius of Loyola Catholic College, Drury, Auckland
- St Mary's College, Ponsonby, Auckland
- St Paul's College, Ponsonby, Auckland
- St Peter's College, Grafton, Auckland
References
edit- ^ "Original NZ dioceses celebrate birthdays", NZ Catholic, June 1998.
- ^ a b Bishop Lowe is the new bishop of Auckland, NZ Catholic, 18 December 2021 (Retrieved 18 December 2021)
- ^ "Bishop Bob Leamy releases his autobiography", Society of Mary website (Retrieved 15 January 2019)
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Roman Catholic Diocese of Auckland.
- Auckland Catholic Diocese
- "Diocese of Auckland". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 2007-01-07.