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Diocese of Fall River, Mass.

F riday , July 11, 2014

Pope Francis appoints N.J. Auxiliary Bishop Edgar Moreira da Cunha, S.D.V., as Bishop of Fall River Installation will take place September 24 at St. Mary’s Cathedral

With welcoming words and a hug, torch is passed from one bishop to another

Bishop da Cunha extolled by peers as having ‘heart of a pastor’

By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor

By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

FALL RIVER — At noon, Rome time, on July 3, 6 a.m. eastern time, the Vatican announced that Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, S.D.V., will become the next Bishop of Fall River, taking over the reins from Bishop George W. Coleman, who, following Canon Law, submitted his request for retirement at age 75 this past February. Bishop da Cunha, the first Brazilian-born priest to be made a bishop in the U.S. was an auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Newark, N.J. Bishop Coleman announced the news in a letter to his brother diocesan priests that morning (see page 10), and the formal announcement came at an 11 a.m. press conference in Fall River at the diocesan Office of Communications. Bishop Coleman was first to address the assembled media, thanking them for their presence and explaining Canon Law regarding the resignation of a bishop upon reaching the retirement age of 75. “During the past four months [since his submitting

FALL RIVER — When Bishop John J. Myers first arrived in Newark, N.J. in 2001 to shepherd the archdiocese, he met Father Edgar Moreira da Cunha, S.D.V., who was then serving as pastor of St. Michael’s Parish, and immediately recognized him as having “the heart of a pastor.” “That quality led me to ask then-pope, now St. John Paul II, to appoint him as auxiliary bishop in 2003,” Archbishop Myers said. “Bishop da Cunha has continued to share that heart with the people of the Archdiocese of Newark throughout his episcopal ministry and leadership of our Evangelization and New Energies Parish initiatives, and most recently as vicar general. He knows the people of God, knows the depth of their faith, and he knows the challenges of serving and leading in a Church with many cultural and ethnic traditions.” Pope Francis recently appointed Bishop da Cunha as the eighth Bishop of the Fall River Diocese. He succeeds Bishop George W. Coleman who, in accordance with Canon Law, submitted his letter of resignation

Newly-appointed Bishop of Fall River, Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, S.D.V., addresses the media at a press conference last week in Fall River, as Bishop George W. Coleman looks on. Below, Father John C. Ozug, left, rector of St. Mary’s Cathedral, gives Bishop da Cunha and Bishop Coleman a tour of the diocese’s mother church. (Photos by Kenneth J. Souza)

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New Fall River bishop is member of congregation devoted to vocations, poor Compiled by Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor

FALL RIVER — Fall River Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, is a priest of the Society of Divine Vocations, known as the Vocationists. According to the Society of Divine Vocations website (vocationist.info/), “The Vocationist Fathers and Brothers are a Catholic Religious Congregation that strives to foster vocations to the priesthood and religious life, especially

among the poor. Its main ministry is to identify and guide those who believe they are called to serve God as priests or Brothers.” The congregation was founded by Father Justin Russolillo, a native of Naples, Italy, born on Jan. 18, 1891. He was ordained a priest in 1913. According to the vocationist. info/ website, in 1920, in the parish of St. George in Pianura, Naples, “He

gathered in common life the group of ‘the most faithful ones,’” which became the first community of the Society of Divine Vocations. The Vocationist Fathers gained its first diocesan approval in 1927, and became a congregation of Pontifical right on Jan. 3, 1948. The Vocationist Fathers and Brothers website (vocationist. org) explains that the members “intend

to live in the footsteps of Jesus, following His chaste, poor and obedient way of life. Their first duty is ‘to be with Him.’ “The ultimate goal of the Society of Divine Vocations is to direct and lead all members, and through them all people, to a perfect union with the Divine Persons, through communion with the Sacred Heart of Jesus. “For the achievement of this Divine union, it works for Universal SanctifiTurn to page 11


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07 11 14 by The Anchor - Issuu