John Joseph Nevins Explained

Type:Bishop
John Nevins
Bishop of Venice
titular bishop of Rusticiana
Church:Catholic Church
See:Diocese of Venice
Term:July 17, 1984 -
January 19, 2007
Predecessor:None
Successor:Frank Joseph Dewane
Ordination:May 23, 1959
Consecration:March 24, 1979
Consecrated By:Edward A. McCarthy
Birth Date:January 19, 1932
Birth Place:New Rochelle, New York, US
Death Place:Venice, Florida, US
Previous Post:Auxiliary Bishop of Miami
1979 to 1984
Honorific Prefix:His Excellency, The Most Reverend
Education:Tulane University
Catholic University of America

Bishop John Joseph Nevins (January 19, 1932 – August 26, 2014) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Miami in Florida from 1979 to 1984 and as the first bishop of the new Diocese of Venice in Florida from 1984 until 2007.

Biography

Early life

John Nevins was born on January 19, 1932, in New Rochelle, New York. He received an early education from the Irish Christian Brothers, but was forced to transfer to a seminary for the Fathers of Mercy when the Irish Brothers disbanded. Nevins received a master's degree at Tulane University in New Orleans, then attended Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.[1]

Nevins was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Miami on June 6, 1959 when he was 27 years old.[2]

Auxiliary Bishop of Miami

On January 25, 1979, Nevins was appointed by Pope John Paul II as auxiliary bishop of Miami and as titular bishop of Rusticiana. He was consecrated on March 24, 1979 by Archbishop Edward A. McCarthy, Bishop René Gracida, and Bishop John Fitzpatrick.

Bishop of Venice

On July 17, 1984, Nevins was appointed by John Paul II as the first bishop of the Diocese of Venice in Florida. Nevins was a member of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre. In 1992, he sponsored a special collection to help Croatians and Bosnians who were suffering from the Bosnia War. In August 2003, three Florida siblings sued the diocese and Nevins alleging sexual molestation by William Romero, a former priest in the diocese. Between 1979 and 1982, while in an improper relationship with their mother, Romero sexually abused the three siblings in Hobe Sound, Florida.[3] In November 2005, a St. Petersburg, Florida man filed a lawsuit against Nevins and the diocese, claiming that he was sexually abused as a minor by George E. Brennan, a diocesan priest. The plaintiff claimed to have been sodomized in 1984 four times at Incarnation Catholic Church in Sarasota. The suit said that Nevins covered up the alleged crime.[4]

Pope Benedict VI accepted Nevin's resignation as bishop on January 19, 2007. John Nevins died in Venice on August 26, 2014. The Bishop Nevins Academy in Sarasota, Florida, is named after him.

Viewpoints

Gambling

Nevins opposed efforts in 1994 to amend the Florida State Constitution to allow casinos and riverboat gambling, concerned about the potential side effects on people who gambled.

Abortion

In a 1992 pastoral letter, "Reverence for God and the Human Person," Nevins condemned abortion rights for women Although Americans "live in a pluralistic society," he said, there are not two standards of morality -- there is only one."

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2014-09-02 . Bishop Nevins, founding bishop of Venice, Fla., dies at 82 . 2022-08-22 . National Catholic Reporter . en.
  2. Web site: Bishop John Joseph Nevins [Catholic-Hierarchy] ]. 2022-08-22 . www.catholic-hierarchy.org.
  3. Web site: Siblings sue 3, including Bishop Nevins . 2022-08-22 . Sarasota Herald-Tribune . en-US.
  4. Web site: Former altar boy claims sex abuse . 2022-08-22 . Tampa Bay Times . en.