Bishop headed to Vatican, will miss ‘beautiful people, culture’ of Dallas

DALLAS—The importance of the vocation of marriage and the family is at the core for the future of not only the Catholic Church, but of society, Bishop Kevin J. Farrell of Dallas said at a news conference Aug. 17.

Earlier in the day the Vatican announced that Pope Francis has appointed the bishop to lead a new Vatican office for the laity, family and life. Cre­ation of the office is a continu­ation of the pontiff’s quest to overhaul the Curia for more efficiency and transparency and to highlight the growing and important role of the laity among the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

At the news conference and in a letter to priests of the diocese and the pastoral center staff, Bishop Farrell thanked the pope for having confidence in him to lead the new office, but said he also welcomed the appoint­ment with mixed emotions.

“Dallas has been my home for 10 years and, from the beginning, I quickly grew to love the beautiful people and the culture here,” he said in the letter. “The strong faith, kind­ness and generosity of the people in the Diocese of Dallas surpassed all of my expectations.

“A bishop can get nothing of sig­nificance done in a diocese without the hard work and cooperation of pastors, priests, his senior staff and diocesan employees,” he said. “Together, I believe we have accom­plished many goals and put others in motion that have improved and enhanced service and ministry to the good people we serve.”

Bishop Farrell became the seventh bishop of the Diocese of Dallas when he was appointed March 6, 2007, by Pope Benedict XVI and was installed at the Cathedral Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe in downtown Dallas May 1, 2007.

When he became the chief shep­herd of the diocese, there were approximately 947,000 Catholics, compared to the current 1.3 mil­lion, thanks in part to the arrival of immigrants from across the United States and abroad.

On Sept. 1, the new Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life officially begins its work. It merges the cur­rent Pontifical Council for the Laity and the Pontifical Council for the Family; the Pontifical Academy for Life will remain as a separate unit but will report to the new dicastery.

Pope Francis, in a brief apostolic letter formally establishing the new “Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life,” said the office should respond “to the situations of our age and adapt to the needs of the universal church.”

The church, as an “attentive mother,” must show special care and concern for the lay faithful, for fami­lies and for the sacredness of human life, he wrote in the letter, which was released Aug. 17. “We want to offer them support and help so that they would be active witnesses of the Gospel in our age and an expression of the goodness of the Redeemer.”

Statutes for the new office, pub­lished in June, said it was being established “for the promotion of the life and apostolate of the lay faithful, for the pastoral care of the family and its mission according to God’s plan and for the protection and sup­port of human life.”

Bishop Farrell was scheduled to travel to Rome in the coming days to open the office and meet with his new staff, which will include a secre­tary and three lay undersecretaries.

He will celebrate his 69th birthday Sept. 2. He will return to Dallas for a few days in September before relo­cating permanently to Rome a few weeks later.

Upon Bishop Farrell’s departure, Auxiliary Bishop Gregory Kelly will lead the diocese until Pope Francis appoints a successor.

During his tenure in Dallas, Bishop Farrell has been outspoken on abortion and the death penalty as well as on gun control, immigration and religious liberty. This year, dur­ing the Year of Mercy, he has spoken about love, mercy and charity.

At the news conference, as part of the life issue, he reiterated that the Texas bishops have sent Texas Gov. Greg Abbott a letter requesting clemency for Jeff Wood, who was scheduled for execution Aug. 24 for his capital murder conviction in the shooting death of a store clerk in Kerrville in 1996.

Wood, who was not in the store at the time of the shooting and claimed he did not know a passenger in his truck was going to rob and kill the attendant, also is said to have an IQ of about 80, which supporters said should have disqualified him from standing trial, based on his mental competency.

“We have sympathy for the family of the victims,” Bishop Farrell told reporters, “but kill­ing someone doesn’t solve the problem, especially when that person was not even there.”

He also addressed the acri­mony brought on by violence, saying that people must under­stand commonalities beyond their differences.

“We need to build bridges, not walls,” he said.

In Rome, Bishop Farrell will join his brother, Bishop Brian Farrell, who is secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promot­ing Christian Unity. When asked at the news conference if maybe his brother had put in a good word for him with the pope, Bishop Farrell said, “I doubt it.” It will be the first time the two brothers have ministered in the same city.

Bishop Farrell serves as the chancellor of the University of Dallas in Irving and is on the board of trustees of the Papal Foundation, Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, The Catho­lic University of America, St. Luke Institute, all in Washington.

He currently serves on the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Ex­ecutive Committee, and he is USCCB treasurer.

Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz of Louisville, Kentucky, who is presi­dent of the USCCB, said the bishops will miss Bishop Farrell as member of their conference, where as trea­surer “his leadership set the highest standards of good stewardship.”

By David Sedeno  |  Catholic News Service

 

CNS photo/Courtesy The Texas Catholic: Pope Francis greets Bishop Kevin J. Farrell of Dallas in Washington, D.C., in September 2015. Pope Francis named the Texas bishop to head the Vatican’s new office for laity, family and life.