Most Reverend David L. Ricken appointed as the 12th Bishop of the Diocese of Green Bay

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:blessyou: Can Anyone tell us about Bishop Ricken?

GREEN BAY, Wis. (July 9, 2008) - The Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, today announced the appointment of the Most Reverend David L. Ricken as the 12th Bishop of the Diocese of Green Bay. Bishop Ricken will take possession of this Diocese at a special ceremony on Thursday, Aug. 28, at a time and location to be determined.

Bishop Ricken, age 55, is the Bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne, Wyoming. A native of Dodge City, Kansas, Bishop Ricken was born Nov. 9, 1952, to George William “Bill” and Bertha (Davis) Ricken. He attended Sacred Heart Cathedral Grade School in Dodge City, and St. Francis Seminary High School in Victoria, Kansas, before entering college at the Pontifical College Josephinum in Worthington, Ohio, (1970-72) and graduating from Conception Seminary College in Conception, Missouri, in 1974 with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy. Bishop Ricken conducted his theological studies for the Diocese of Pueblo at St. Meinrad School of Theology in Indiana and the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium where he earned his STB (master’s equivalent) degree and completed his seminary formation.

Bishop Ricken was ordained a priest on Sept. 12, 1980, by the Bishop of Pueblo, Arthur Tafoya, at La Junta Catholic Parish in southeast Colorado. His first appointment was as associate pastor to the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Pueblo.

Five years later, he was named the administrator of Holy Rosary Parish in Pueblo and vice chancellor of the Diocese. In 1987, then-Father Ricken attended the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome where he received his Licentiate degree (J.C.L.) in Canon Law (church law) in 1989. Upon returning to the diocese, was appointed the vocation director and vicar for ministry formation. Three years later, he added diocesan chancellor to his responsibilities as well as assisting in the Diocesan Tribunal. He served in these positions until Oct. 1, 1996, when he was nominated to be an official of the Congregation for the Clergy at the Vatican where he served through December 1999.

On Jan. 6, 2000, Ricken was ordained to the episcopacy for the Diocese of Cheyenne at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome by His Holiness, Pope John Paul II. The Mass of Welcome to the Diocese of Cheyenne took place on Feb. 11, 2000, in Cheyenne. On Sept. 26, 2001, Bishop Ricken succeeded Bishop Joseph Hart as the leader of the Diocese of Cheyenne.

Bishop Ricken is a member of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the Bishops’ Committee on Catechesis and served on the editorial oversight board for the National Directory of Catechesis. He is the Chairman of the Committee on the American College of Louvain, Belgium, and a member of the Committee for the Protection of Children and Young People. He is currently on the board of trustees for the Our Lady of the New Advent Theological Institute in Denver and for the Catholic Mutual Relief Society. He is a member of the Bishop’s Advisory Council for the Institute for Priestly Formation and serves on the Board of Regents for Conception Seminary College. He is past-President of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference and a past member of the Committee on Home Missions.

Bishop Ricken will become the twelfth Bishop of the Diocese of Green Bay, succeeding the Most Rev. David A. Zubik who served as Green Bay’s Bishop from Dec. 12, 2003, to Sept. 28, 2007. Since September, Archbishop Timothy Dolan of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee has been this Diocese’s apostolic administrator. He will continue in this capacity until the newly appointed Bishop is installed on Aug. 28.
 
Thanks for asking this.
As a member of the GB diocese I am wondering too.

Anyone?
 
Thanks for asking this.
As a member of the GB diocese I am wondering too.

Anyone?
Well, Bishop Ricken was instrumental in starting Wyoming Catholic College. wyomingcatholiccollege.com/

If this is any indication, I believe our diocese is in for some changes as he leads us back towards Rome! I am very glad he is coming to GB!

Maybe someone from Wyoming can comment?
 
He sounds good, in general… but I’d love to get more information about this (which is only from an internet search, granted):

First, I read this story about Bishop Ricken ordering the denial of Holy Communion to an outspoken “lesbian Catholic” couple who had been receiving Holy Communion at St. Matthew’s Parish in Gillette, Wyoming; a bit of double-checking confirmed that the story was corroborated by more sources than I could count. I thought, “Good! We have a solid bishop with a spine coming to Green Bay!”

But then I read this blog entry which portrays a nun from St. Matthew’s “inviting” the lesbian couple back, Bishop Ricken backtracking (and claiming that he instigated the invitation via the nun), apologizing for the prohibition, and welcoming the lesbian couple back, which all culminated in the happy lesbian couple receiving Holy Communion again! [warning: 1.7 MB PDF document!]

Now… I’ve seen no corroboration of this second story… but I’ve seen no denials, either. Could someone from the great state of Wyoming clarify, for me?

In Christ,
Brian
 
Well, I just hope that he is a good and holy bishop and that he leads the diocese closer to Rome.

Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us and lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. Amen. :signofcross: :gopray2:
 
I moved to Cheyenne Wyoming from the east coast a few months after Bishop Ricken was ordained to be Bishop of Cheyenne in 2000. Let me assure you that based on the 8 years I have seen him in action and gotten to know him, he is a great Bishop.

I could run down a list of the few things I know personally that he did to restore/revitalize the Diocese of Cheyenne (which, by the way, encompasses the entire state of Wyoming!!) but it probably would be too boring and too long. The most important thing is that he is a firmly orthodox Catholic bishop and a holy man.

Over my lifetime, I have come to know several bishops and many priests and can say that Bishop Ricken ranks very high amongst them. Everyone in my family is sad to hear that he will leave us. Our hope is that he will be replaced by someone as good as Bishop David Ricken.
 
Well, I just hope that he is a good and holy bishop and that he leads the diocese closer to Rome.
Bp. Banks was quite exceptional at this task during his episcopate.

I have heard that many people in the GB Diocese are most upset that his installation has been scheduled the same night as a home Packers game on 8/28. :rolleyes:
 
Originally Posted by Holly3278 forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_cad/viewpost.gif
Well, I just hope that he is a good and holy bishop and that he leads the diocese closer to Rome.
Bp. Banks was quite exceptional at this task during his episcopate.

I moved to the GB Diocese less than a year ago so I was not privileged to see Bishops Banks or Zubik in action but I do recognize them as holy men. Coming from the Harrisburg, PA diocese, I am very surprised at just how theologically liberal the GB diocesan office is, so if Bishop Banks drew it closer to Rome, it must have been WAY out there before 1990.

To understand just how far we moved away from Rome over the past 50 years since Vatican II (I should say the misinterpretation of Vatican II) in the GB Diocese, I recommend the book, The Signs of the Times by Richard W. Gilsdorf (Author), Patrick F. Beno (Editor)

:tiphat:
 
I grew up in the NW corner of the diocese, albeit far from Green Bay, but under the leadership of a theologically accurate pastor, and a moderate in most things. He celebrates Mass very much in line with the conservative ideal of V2 (although he celebrates in English and versus populum). He does not omit things, he does not add things, and the only wording change he makes is here: “Remember our brothers and sisters who have gone to their rest in the hope of rising again, especially (n.) and all those for whom we pause to pray in silence,” the addition, I believe is an option when EPII is used for funeral Masses. Otherwise the Mass is straight out of the book as written.

From my perspective, the Diocese was very close to Rome under both Cardinal Maida and Bishop Banks’s leadership.
 
Bishop Ricken is a wonderful shepherd who will be a great blessing to the diocese of Green Bay.
Last year our family attended the Marian Eucharistic Conference at Jackson Hole, WY, where Bishop Ricken was very visible. He ministered at a healing service where he brought the Blessed Sacrament to every person in attendance.
Bishop Ricken was the homilist at our Chrism Mass last year here in Helena, Montana - what a delightful servant of God!
We lost our beloved Bishop Morlino to the diocese of Madison a few years ago.
Wisconsin is receiving our best - take good care of them!
 
Bishop Ricken is a wonderful shepherd who will be a great blessing to the diocese of Green Bay.
Last year our family attended the Marian Eucharistic Conference at Jackson Hole, WY, where Bishop Ricken was very visible. He ministered at a healing service where he brought the Blessed Sacrament to every person in attendance.
Bishop Ricken was the homilist at our Chrism Mass last year here in Helena, Montana - what a delightful servant of God!
We lost our beloved Bishop Morlino to the diocese of Madison a few years ago.
Wisconsin is receiving our best - take good care of them!
Thank you shatzi for the update and thank you for your Holy Bishops. We are very excited and we are praying for a Catholic revival to take place here, as it has in WY!
 
I live in Wyoming, and have met Bishop Ricken. Beyond that, I don’t know him nor any details.

Sorry. Wish I could be more helpful. He treated me nicely.
 
Bishop Ricken is a wonderful shepherd who will be a great blessing to the diocese of Green Bay.
Last year our family attended the Marian Eucharistic Conference at Jackson Hole, WY, where Bishop Ricken was very visible. He ministered at a healing service where he brought the Blessed Sacrament to every person in attendance.
Bishop Ricken was the homilist at our Chrism Mass last year here in Helena, Montana - what a delightful servant of God!
We lost our beloved Bishop Morlino to the diocese of Madison a few years ago.
Wisconsin is receiving our best - take good care of them!
It sounds like Green Bay is receiving a wonderful Bishop. As for Bp Morlino … as far as the folks in Madison are concerned, you can have him back. The sooner, the better.
 
It sounds like Green Bay is receiving a wonderful Bishop. As for Bp Morlino … as far as the folks in Madison are concerned, you can have him back. The sooner, the better.
That’s disrespectful!
 
I suppose, as an outsider, you might feel that way. However, I live in the Diocese of Madison right now. I’ve seen the way his behaviors and leadership have torn apart this Diocese and sent it on the path to ruin. If Helena wants him back, there are a lot of people who would agree with me that they can have him back. Bp. Bullock was no saint, but Bp. Morlino certainly has not been an improvement.
 
When Bishop Morlino came to Helena, many of our complacent sisters and brothers ran like hell out of our cathedral. They couldn’t take his teaching, either in content or energy. And Bishop Robert Morlino didn’t suffer fools. He was politically incorrect, but theologically authentic; and he would not compromise one for the other. Sounds like he still doesn’t.
I would ask my then 8-year-old daughter to point out to me the holes made by these people who left. As many as would leave, many, MANY more came in. Our vocations grew, and we still are bearing the good fruit from the gift that this obedient servant of God gave us.
I would always point out to his detractors that Bishop Morlino was obedient to the faith and teaching of the Church, and that was all he was asking us to be.
A very good priest once taught that the reason our faith gets shaken is so the things that aren’t faith can be shaken off.
Jesus shook up people, too.😃
 
I suppose, as an outsider, you might feel that way. However, I live in the Diocese of Madison right now. I’ve seen the way his behaviors and leadership have torn apart this Diocese and sent it on the path to ruin. If Helena wants him back, there are a lot of people who would agree with me that they can have him back. Bp. Bullock was no saint, but Bp. Morlino certainly has not been an improvement.
I have also been in the greater Dane County area and agree with it. His style seems to be too overbearing, he has met lots of resistance from his priests. During '06 his threats to parish priests to play his recorded homily or else was seen as a abuse of power by me and many other people who were in the Madison Diocese at the time. The division comes from a “my way or the highway” approach which always divides and never unites. His abrasive style leads to spirituality withering on the vine in the diocese.
 
I have also been in the greater Dane County area and agree with it. His style seems to be too overbearing, he has met lots of resistance from his priests. During '06 his threats to parish priests to play his recorded homily or else was seen as a abuse of power by me and many other people who were in the Madison Diocese at the time. The division comes from a “my way or the highway” approach which always divides and never unites. His abrasive style leads to spirituality withering on the vine in the diocese.
And I’m sure, good people that you are, that you are praying for your shepherd and your diocese.
 
I have also been in the greater Dane County area and agree with it. His style seems to be too overbearing, he has met lots of resistance from his priests. During '06 his threats to parish priests to play his recorded homily or else was seen as a abuse of power by me and many other people who were in the Madison Diocese at the time. The division comes from a “my way or the highway” approach which always divides and never unites. His abrasive style leads to spirituality withering on the vine in the diocese.
In other words he adheres to the teachings of the Church?
 
When Bishop Morlino came to Helena, many of our complacent sisters and brothers ran like hell out of our cathedral. They couldn’t take his teaching, either in content or energy. And Bishop Robert Morlino didn’t suffer fools. He was politically incorrect, but theologically authentic; and he would not compromise one for the other. Sounds like he still doesn’t.
I would ask my then 8-year-old daughter to point out to me the holes made by these people who left. As many as would leave, many, MANY more came in. Our vocations grew, and we still are bearing the good fruit from the gift that this obedient servant of God gave us.
I would always point out to his detractors that Bishop Morlino was obedient to the faith and teaching of the Church, and that was all he was asking us to be.
A very good priest once taught that the reason our faith gets shaken is so the things that aren’t faith can be shaken off.
Jesus shook up people, too.😃
Sounds like a great Shepherd. Hope everyone prays for him.
 
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