Roman Catholic Church in The United States - Clergy, Lay Ministers and Employees

Clergy, Lay Ministers and Employees

There are 19 U.S. cardinals.

Five cardinals currently lead U.S. archdioceses

  • Daniel Nicholas Cardinal DiNardo - Galveston-Houston
  • Timothy Michael Cardinal Dolan - New York
  • Francis Eugene Cardinal George - Chicago
  • Seán Patrick Cardinal O'Malley - Boston
  • Donald William Cardinal Wuerl - Washington

Three cardinals are not currently diocesan bishops:

  • Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke - Prefect, Apostolic Signatura
  • James Michael Cardinal Harvey - Archpriest of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
  • Edwin Frederick Cardinal O'Brien - Pro-Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem

Eleven cardinals are retired:

  • William Wakefield Cardinal Baum - Major Penitentiary Emeritus of the Apostolic Penitentiary and Archbishop Emeritus of Washington
  • Edward Michael Cardinal Egan - Archbishop Emeritus of New York
  • William Henry Cardinal Keeler - Archbishop Emeritus of Baltimore
  • Bernard Francis Cardinal Law - Archpriest Emeritus of Basilica of Saint Mary Major, Rome and Archbishop Emeritus of Boston
  • William Joseph Cardinal Levada - Prefect Emeritus, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
  • Roger Michael Cardinal Mahony - Archbishop Emeritus of Los Angeles
  • Adam Joseph Cardinal Maida - Archbishop Emeritus of Detroit
  • Theodore Edgar Cardinal McCarrick - Archbishop Emeritus of Washington
  • Justin Francis Cardinal Rigali- Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia
  • James Francis Cardinal Stafford - Major Penitentiary Emeritus of the Apostolic Penitentiary
  • Edmund Casimir Cardinal Szoka - Former President, Pontifical Commission for Vatican City and Archbishop Emeritus of Detroit

There are 454 active and retired Catholic bishops in the United States:

270 active bishops:

  • 5 Cardinal Archbishops
  • 28 Archbishops
  • 155 Diocesan Bishops
  • 74 Auxiliary Bishops
  • 7 Apostolic or Diocesan Administrators

184 retired bishops:

  • 11 retired Cardinal Archbishops
  • 21 retired Archbishops
  • 105 retired Diocesan Bishops
  • 47 retired Auxiliary Bishops

The Church has over 41,406 diocesan and religious-order priests in the United States; over 30,000 lay ministers (80 percent of them women); 17,000 men who are ordained as permanent deacons in the United States (a permanent deacon is a man, either married or single, who is ordained to the order of deacons, the first of three ranks in ordained ministry; they assist priests in administrative and pastoral roles); 63,032 sisters; 5,040 brothers; 16 US cardinals; 424 active and retired US bishops; and 5,029 seminarians enrolled in the United States. Overall, it employs more than one million employees with an operating budget of nearly $100 billion to run parishes, diocesan primary and secondary schools, nursing homes, retreat centers, diocesan hospitals, and other charitable institutions. Catholic schools educate 2.7 million students in the United States, employing 150,000 teachers.

Leadership in the Church in the United States falls to its bishops. They are the shepherds of particular cities and their surrounding areas, called dioceses or sees. There is one non-territorial diocese in the United States for Catholics in the armed forces. There are approximately 430 bishops and archbishops who shepherd the nation's 195 dioceses and archdioceses. Each diocese is led by one bishop, known as its ordinary. Some dioceses (usually those that are larger) also have auxiliary bishops who help the ordinary. Some also have a retired bishop still in residence. It is possible for a diocese to be temporarily without a bishop (called a "vacant see") if the ordinary is transferred to a new diocese or dies without a named successor. Dioceses are grouped together geographically into provinces, usually within a state, part of a state, or multiple states together (see map below). A province comprises several dioceses which look to one ordinary bishop (usually of the most populous or historically influential diocese/city) for guidance and leadership. This lead bishop is their archbishop and his diocese is the archdiocese. The archbishop is called the 'metropolitan' bishop who oversees his brother 'suffragan' bishops. The subordinate dioceses are likewise called suffragan dioceses. There are currently 33 metropolitan archbishops in the United States. According to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops's website, there are 270 active Catholic bishops in the United States (5 Cardinal Archbishops, 1 Coadjutor Archbishop, 154 Diocesan Bishops, 73 Auxiliary Bishops, and 9 Apostolic or Diocesan Administrators) and there are 180 retired Catholic bishops in the United States (10 retired Cardinal Archbishops, 24 retired Archbishops, 94 retired Diocesan Bishops, 52 retired Auxiliary Bishops). Also according to the USCCB's website, there are 19 U.S. cardinals (five cardinals currently lead U.S. archdioceses, three cardinals are not currently diocesan bishops, and eleven cardinals are retired).

Some bishops are created Cardinals by the pope. These are usually conferred upon bishop of influential or significant dioceses - or upon bishops who have distinguished themselves in a particular area of service. As of August 2011, there are 19 American cardinals. Not all reside in the United States or are diocesan ordinaries. Five are sitting archbishops: of Boston, Chicago, Galveston-Houston, New York and Washington. Eleven are retired Archbishops emeritus: of Baltimore, Boston, Denver, Detroit (two), Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Washington (two). Three work in Rome with the Roman Curia, and one is retired from service in Rome without serving as a diocesan ordinary in the US.

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