The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Perez 1st Hispanic to lead Phila. archdioces­e

- By Corey Perrine and Nicole Winfield

PHILADELPH­IA >> The bishop of Cleveland will become the new leader of the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia, the Vatican announced Thursday, making him the first Hispanic archbishop to lead the region’s 1.3 millionmem­ber flock.

Nelson Perez, who spent most of his early pastoral career in the Philadelph­ia area, was introduced Thursday in a news conference at the archdioces­e’s Philadelph­ia headquarte­rs. He will succeed Archbishop Charles Chaput, a conservati­ve culture warrior who is stepping down after turning 75 last year, the traditiona­l retirement age for Catholic bishops.

Chaput welcomed Perez to his new post, which he will assume Feb. 18. He called his successor “a man who already knows and loves the church in Philadelph­ia.”

Perez shared his enthusiasm for the city, saying “it’s awesome to be back in Philadelph­ia with people who are faith-filled, who love the Lord, love the church.” Perez also praised Chaput’s tenure in the diocese, saying he faced challenges in Philadelph­ia with “great courage and steadfastn­ess.”

Perez, 58, attended the diocesan seminary in Philadelph­ia in the 1980s and served in a number of Philadelph­ia parishes before being named as an auxiliary bishop in Rockville Centre, New York, and then bishop of Cleveland in 2017.

On Thursday, Perez also addressed church sex abuse victims, telling them “I, and we, continue to pray for your healing and support and hold you deep within our hearts — those who have been hurt. It should have never happened, and we are sorry.”

Perez has had to deal with that issue while in Cleveland. The diocese last year made public a list of 22 previously unidentifi­ed priests and other clergy it said had been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors. Perez said in a letter announcing the release of the names that a committee assembled by the diocese determined that the accusation­s against the clerics were “more likely than not to be true.”

Perez had pledged in 2018 to follow the lead of other dioceses and release the names of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse, past and present. The Cleveland diocese in 2002 began publishing the names of priests who were accused from that year forward.

Chaput, for his part, faced a difficult task trying to restore credibilit­y in the Philadelph­ia hierarchy following revelation­s of clergy sexual abuse and cover-up by his predecesso­rs that were revealed in 2005 and 2011 grand jury investigat­ions.

Appointed in 2011, Chaput was very much in favor under conservati­ve Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, named to participat­e in important Vatican missions even while being denied the cardinal’s red hat that his predecesso­rs enjoyed.

Chaput, a member of the Cappuchin order, has denied he is a critic of Pope Francis, and he hosted the Argentine pope when he visited Philadelph­ia in 2015 for a big family rally. The visit, including a Mass that drew a reported 1 million people, gave Francis a much more positive impression of the U.S. than he had going into the trip.

But the two clashed. After Francis opened the door to letting divorced and civilly remarried Catholics receive Communion in 2016, Chaput closed the door in Philadelph­ia by saying they must abstain from sex if they want the sacrament.

Chaput was also one several U.S. bishops who praised the integrity of leading Francis critic, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano. The former Vatican ambassador to the U.S. in 2018 called for Francis to resign for allegedly rehabilita­ting ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, alleging he was part of a two-decade conspiracy of cover-up.

In his letter, Vigano implied Francis opposed Chaput’s conservati­vism, quoting the pope as telling him in 2013 that U.S. bishops must not be ideologica­lly driven, “they must not be right-wing like the archbishop of Philadelph­ia.”

Francis has said he doesn’t remember details of the 2013 meeting.

While Francis quickly accepted Chaput’s resignatio­n, this week he formally told another 75-yearold prelate to stay on indefinite­ly. Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the archbishop of Vienna, is a strong Francis supporter and helped draft the final document at the controvers­ial Amazon Synod, where bishops called for married priests in the Amazon.

Perez said he learned he would be changing jobs again when he got a call Saturday while visiting his mother in Florida.

“I was shocked, just absolutely shocked,” Perez said. “Once a Philadelph­ia priest, always a Philadelph­ia priest. I come back really with a sense of great gratitude and joy to serve alongside great bishops.”

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 ?? COREY PERRINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cleveland Bishop Nelson Perez speaks during a news conference Thursday at the Archdioces­an Pastoral Center in Philadelph­ia. Perez was introduced as the new leader of the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia, making him the first Hispanic archbishop to lead the region’s 1.3 million-member flock.
COREY PERRINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cleveland Bishop Nelson Perez speaks during a news conference Thursday at the Archdioces­an Pastoral Center in Philadelph­ia. Perez was introduced as the new leader of the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia, making him the first Hispanic archbishop to lead the region’s 1.3 million-member flock.
 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Philadelph­ia Archbishop Charles Chaput celebrates Mass with inmates at the Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility in Philadelph­ia. The Vatican announced Thursday Chaput, who will step down after turning 75 last year, the traditiona­l retirement age for Catholic bishops, will be replaced by bishop of Cleveland Nelson Perez.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Philadelph­ia Archbishop Charles Chaput celebrates Mass with inmates at the Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility in Philadelph­ia. The Vatican announced Thursday Chaput, who will step down after turning 75 last year, the traditiona­l retirement age for Catholic bishops, will be replaced by bishop of Cleveland Nelson Perez.
 ?? MICHAEL BRYANT — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, left, and Archbishop-elect Nelson J. Perez, right, share a happy moment after they embraced during the press conference announcing Perez as the Archbishop­elect of Philadelph­ia on Thursday.
MICHAEL BRYANT — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, left, and Archbishop-elect Nelson J. Perez, right, share a happy moment after they embraced during the press conference announcing Perez as the Archbishop­elect of Philadelph­ia on Thursday.

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