WASHINGTON (September 16, 2010) —Pope Benedict XVI has named Bishop J. Peter
Sartain of Joliet, Illinois, 58, to succeed Archbishop Alexander Brunett of
Seattle, 76. At the same time, the pope accepted Archbishop Brunett’s
resignation from the pastoral governance of the Seattle Archdiocese.
The
appointment and resignation were publicized in Washington, September 16, by
Archbishop Pietro Sambi, apostolic nuncio to the United States.
James
Peter Sartain was born in Memphis June 6, 1952. He attended local Catholic
elementary and secondary schools. He studied for the priesthood at St. Meinrad
Seminary, in Indiana, and completed his studies at the North American College,
in Rome, where he attended the Pontifical University of St. Thomas (The
Angelicum). He was ordained a priest for the Memphis Diocese in 1978.
In
the Memphis Diocese he served as director of vocations, secretary for priests
and deacons, vicar for temporal administration and for clergy personnel,
chancellor and moderator of the Curia, and vicar general. He was appointed
Bishop of Little Rock, Arkansas, in 2000, and Bishop of Joliet, in
2006.
Archbishop Brunett, a Detroit native, studied at Sacred Heart
Seminary, Detroit, the Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome, the University of
Detroit, and Marquette University, Milwaukee. He was ordained a priest for the
Detroit Archdiocese in 1958.
He worked in ecumenical relations and was
co-founder and first president of the Ecumenical Institute for Jewish-Christian
Studies in Detroit and is a past president of the National Association of
Diocesan Ecumenical Officers.
He was appointed bishop of Helena, Montana
in 1994, and archbishop of Seattle in 1997.
Seattle was established as a
diocese in 1850, and created an archdiocese in 1951. It comprises 28,731 square
miles of the State of Washington. It has a population of 5,202,500 people, with
579,500, or 11 percent, of them Catholic.
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