Boston Sunday Globe

Thomas Gumbleton, Catholic bishop who promoted social justice; 94

- By Trip Gabriel

Thomas J. Gumbleton, a Roman Catholic bishop from Detroit whose nationally prominent support of liberal causes often clashed with church leadership, but who grounded his views in the 1960s Vatican reforms that promoted social justice, died April 4 in Dearborn, Mich. He was 94.

His death was announced by the Archdioces­e of Detroit, where he had served for 50 years.

Bishop Gumbleton protested the United States’ involvemen­t in the Vietnam War and US foreign policy regarding Central America in the 1980s. He opposed fellow Catholic bishops by speaking out in favor of same-sex marriage and the ordination of women. He championed victims of clergy sexual abuse and blamed that advocacy for his ouster as pastor of St. Leo Catholic Church in Detroit in 2007, a contention that the archdioces­e disputed.

As a laborer for the sick and the poor, Bishop Gumbleton visited more than 30 countries, including Haiti, where he celebrated his 80th birthday in a pup tent after delivering medical supplies following a devastatin­g earthquake in 2010. In El Salvador, he bore witness to the condition of villagers during the civil war there in the 1980s. He later protested outside the School of the Americas in Georgia, an Army facility that trained Salvadoran military leaders tied to death squads.

In the preface to a biography about him, “No Guilty Bystander: The Extraordin­ary Life of Bishop Thomas Gumbleton” (2023), by Frank Fromherz and Suzanne Sattler, Bishop Gumbleton wrote of a formative experience visiting Egypt as a young priest.

While looking for a place where Catholic tradition held that Mary and Joseph took Jesus after fleeing to Egypt, he entered a neighborho­od in Cairo teeming with people living in the street, dressed in rags and hungry and thirsty. “I grew up in Michigan during the Depression,” he wrote. “It was a struggle for my parents to pay their bills and keep us dressed and fed. But our poverty was nothing like that which I experience­d that day.

“This was the first opening I had to the idea of trying to do justice in the world,” he added.

Bishop Gumbleton in 1972 became the first president of Pax Christi USA, a Catholic peace movement that promotes nonviolenc­e and rejects preparatio­n for war. In the preceding years, he urged the National Conference of Catholic Bishops to pass a resolution condemning the Vietnam War, but the majority opposed him.

“Obviously, for one who would follow the earliest Christian tradition, supporting the Vietnam War is morally unthinkabl­e,” he wrote in an opinion essay in The New York Times in 1971.

He was later arrested at antiwar demonstrat­ions, in 1999 protesting NATO bombing in Yugoslavia and in 2003 opposing the Iraq War. National Catholic Reporter regularly published his sermons in a column called “The Peace Pulpit.”

In 1979, Bishop Gumbleton was one of three US clergymen who traveled to Tehran for a Christmas Eve meeting with captive Americans in the US Embassy during the Iranian hostage crisis. They held religious services and sang carols.

Despite his globe-trotting, Bishop Gumbleton considered himself an introvert and lived a spartan existence. He would often stay at a local YMCA when traveling to church meetings. At St. Leo’s church, he had a bed on the floor in a room next to his office. In his car, he kept cash in the visor to give to homeless people.

Thomas John Gumbleton was born Jan. 26, 1930, in Detroit, the sixth of nine children of Vincent and Helen (Steintrage­r) Gumbleton. His father worked for a manufactur­er of car and truck axles. Thomas and three brothers attended Sacred Heart Seminary, a secondary school, though only Thomas continued on to become a priest. A sister, Irene Gumbleton, who survives him, became a nun, according to the National Catholic Reporter.

Thomas was ordained in 1956 after completing collegelev­el work at St. John’s Provincial Seminary in Plymouth, Mich. In 1961, the Detroit diocese sent him to study in Rome, where he earned a doctorate in canon law. In 1968, at age 38, he was named an auxiliary bishop, the youngest bishop in the country at the time.

Detroit Catholic, a digital church publicatio­n, wrote of Bishop Gumbleton after his death that his “early life and ministry were significan­tly influenced by the Second Vatican

Council, which called upon the laity to take up a greater role in the church, and for the church to take a greater role in speaking out against injustice.”

His pacifism and other views were part of a progressiv­e tradition in the Catholic Church. He was one of five bishops who, in 1983, drafted a landmark statement by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops that excoriated nuclear weapons.

But in later years his views diverged more acutely from the church mainstream, and he stopped attending the annual bishops’ conference­s. He was never promoted above auxiliary bishop.

His views on gay and lesbian people, which he acknowledg­ed had been stamped with the homophobia of his time, evolved faster than church doctrine, beginning when his youngest brother, Dan, came out as gay in the 1980s in a letter to family members. At first, Bishop Gumbleton feared that having a gay brother might affect his standing in the church, he told PBS in 1997, and he threw the letter aside without reading it to the end.

But when his mother asked him if her gay son would go to hell, Bishop Gumbleton said no, and he began a journey of acceptance that led him to speak to NPR about “the beauty of gay love” and to urge the church to accept same-sex marriage.

In the early 2000s, as scandals over sexual abuse of children by clergy convulsed US Catholicis­m, Bishop Gumbleton spoke out for victims and criticized church leaders for not openly confrontin­g the problem. In 2006, he endorsed a bill in the Ohio Legislatur­e that would extend the statute of limitation­s for sex-abuse victims to file lawsuits.

Ohio’s bishops opposed the legislatio­n, in line with Catholic leaders across the country who had resisted similar measures; they feared financial ruin, knowing that California dioceses were inundated with more than 800 lawsuits in 2003 during a one-year extension of limits on old sex-abuse claims.

In his testimony, Bishop Gumbleton revealed that as a teenager in high school he had been “inappropri­ately touched” by a priest.

“I don’t want to exaggerate that I was terribly damaged,” he told The Washington Post in 2006. “It was not the kind of sexual abuse that many of the victims experience.” But he said it had made him understand why young victims did not come forward for years.

In January 2007, during his last Mass as the pastor of St. Leo’s, Bishop Gumbleton told parishione­rs that he had been forced to step down in retaliatio­n for speaking out.

The Detroit Archdioces­e disputed that assertion, saying that he had been removed because all bishops were required to submit a resignatio­n at age 75, and that his had been accepted the previous year, though he had asked to continue as pastor of St. Leo’s. Replacing Bishop Gumbleton, a diocese spokespers­on said at the time, was not related to his political activity.

“I did not choose to leave St. Leo’s,” Bishop Gumbleton told the parishione­rs of the largely Black congregati­on. “It’s something that was forced upon me.”

In a statement, Bishop John Stowe of Lexington, Ky., the current president of Pax Christi, the peace group, said Bishop Gumbleton had “preferred to speak the truth and to be on the side of the marginaliz­ed than to toe any party line and climb the ecclesiast­ical ladder.”

 ?? VICTOR R. CAIVANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 1999 ?? Bishop Gumbleton traveled to Honduras in 1999 to investigat­e the case of the Rev. James Francis Carney, who was last seen there in 1982. Below, at the White House, the bishop held a letter for President Clinton, protesting his war action in Kosovo.
VICTOR R. CAIVANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 1999 Bishop Gumbleton traveled to Honduras in 1999 to investigat­e the case of the Rev. James Francis Carney, who was last seen there in 1982. Below, at the White House, the bishop held a letter for President Clinton, protesting his war action in Kosovo.
 ?? GERALD MARTINEAU/WASHINGTON POST VIA GETTY IMAGES/FILE 1999 ??
GERALD MARTINEAU/WASHINGTON POST VIA GETTY IMAGES/FILE 1999

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