René Henry Gracida Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific-Prefix:His Excellency, The Most Reverend
René Henry Gracida
Bishop Emeritus of Corpus Christi
titular bishop of Masuccaba
Church:Catholic Church
Diocese:Corpus Christi
Appointed:May 19, 1983
Enthroned:June 11, 1983
Retired:April 1, 1997
Predecessor:Thomas Joseph Drury
Successor:Roberto González Nieves
Ordination:May 23, 1959
Consecration:January 25, 1972
Consecrated By:Cardinal John Francis Dearden
Birth Date:9 June 1923
Birth Place:New Orleans, Louisiana, US
Motto:Abyssus abyssum invocat
(Deep calls to deep)
Education:University of Houston
St. Vincent Seminary
Ordained By:Bishop Hugh L. Lamb
René Henry Gracida
Dipstyle:
Offstyle:Your Excellency

René Henry Gracida (born June 9, 1923) is an American Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Corpus Christi from 1983 to 1997. He previously served as Bishop of Pensacola-Tallahassee (1975–1983) and as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Miami (1971–1975).

Early life

Born in New Orleans, Louisiana, on June 9, 1923, Gracida was the second child of Enrique J. Gracida Carrizosa, a Mexican architect and engineer, and Mathilde Derbes, a fifth-generation French-American. His great uncle was a vicar general of a diocese in Mexico. As a teenager, René Gracida was fascinated with the Jesuit martyrs portrayed in the novel The Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper.

During World War II, Gracida flew 32 missions in the US Army Air Corps first as a tail-gunner, then as a flight engineer, in the 303rd Air Expeditionary Group.[1] After the war, he entered the University of Houston, where he earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree. After graduation, Gracida worked as an architect for several years.

In 1951, Gracida entered the Order of St. Benedict and went into Saint Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. This move upset his father, who disliked Catholic clergy. Required to choose a religious name, Gracida selected René Goupil, a French Jesuit lay missionary.[2] Gracida took his simple vows in 1953 and his solemn vows in 1956. He was ordained a deacon in 1958.[3] During this period, Gracida attended St. Vincent College and Saint Vincent Seminary in Latrobe. At Saint Vincent Seminary, he earned a Masters of Divinity degree.

Priesthood

Gracida was ordained into the priesthood for the Order of St. Benedict on May 23, 1959 by Bishop Hugh L. Lamb. In 1961, after a dispute over plans for a new residence for the Order, the archabbot told Gracida that he was no longer welcome in the order. That same year, Gracida was incardinated, or transferred, from the Benedictine Order to the Archdiocese of Miami.

Auxiliary Bishop of Miami

On December 6, 1971, Gracida was appointed by Pope Paul VI as auxiliary bishop of Miami and titular bishop of Masuccaba. Gracida was consecrated on January 25, 1972 by Cardinal John Dearden, with Archbishop Coleman Carroll and Bishop Paul Tanner serving as co-consecrators.[4] During this period, Gracida got a pilot's license and rented small planes to serve parishes in the archdiocese.

Bishop of Pensacola-Tallahassee

Pope Paul VI appointed Gracida as the first bishop of Pensacola-Tallahassee on October 1, 1975; he was installed on November 6, 1975.[5] In 1978, he was granted a Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) from St. Leo College in St. Leo, Florida.

Bishop of Corpus Christi

On May 19, 1983 Pope John Paul II appointed Gracida as the bishop of Corpus Christi. He was installed on July 11, 1983.

Gracida and the diocese were sued in 1988 by a couple who claimed that John J. Feminelli, a diocese priest, had engaged in private "wrestling matches" with their teenage son. The couple claimed that diocese officials slandered the boy, prompting him to recant his testimony in a court case. In 2019, Feminelli was listed with other priests in the diocese with credible allegations of sexual abuse of minors.[6]

In January 1989, Gracida called for a boycott of all Pepsi-Cola products because of one of their commercial series. The commercials used the "Like a Prayer" music video by the singer Madonna that Gracida and other religious leaders considered sacrilegious. Pepsi eventually withdrew the ads and canceled its contract with Madonna.[7]

In June 1990, Gracida excommunicated two parishioners in the diocese who were providing legal abortion services for women, citing canon law. They were Rachel Vargas, a women's health clinic director, and Dr. Eduardo Aquino, an obstetrician. In an interview, Aquino noted that he had recently won a $800,000 legal settlement against the anti-abortion group South Texas for Life, whose protestors had been picketing his house. Vargas ran her clinic for eight years and did not receive any notices from Gracida until she was interviewed on local television.[8]

Retirement and later life

Pope John Paul II accepted Gracida's resignation on April 1, 1997. On September 25, 2017, Gracida posted on his blog and publicly signed a "Filial Correction" of Pope Francis, being the first bishop to sign the document.

On June 13, 2018, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops approved a resolution condemning the immigration policies of the Trump Administration. Bishop Edward Weisenburger of the Diocese of Tucson suggested canonical penalties, which could include excommunication, for federal officials who separate children from families of undocumented immigrants.[9] In a 2018 interview, Gracida rejected the idea of excommunicating these officials, saying, “It's scandalous for the bishop to say that! They did not write the law but are enforcing it [...] it's absurd and it's idiotic.”[10]

Following Gracida's tenure as bishop of the Diocese of Corpus Christi, that diocese released a list of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse, much of which occurred while Gracida was bishop there.[11]

Gracida turned 100 on June 9, 2023.[12]

Works

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Charles Collins. September 26, 2017. Retired Texas bishop signs "filial correction" of Pope Francis. Crux. February 14, 2019.
  2. News: Graves . Jim . January 11, 2016 . Airman, Monk, Priest, Bishop: An interview with Bp. Rene Henry Gracida . . February 14, 2019.
  3. Web site: Bishop René Henry Gracida [Catholic-Hierarchy]]. 2022-01-20. www.catholic-hierarchy.org.
  4. Colorful rites mark ordination of Bp. Gracida. January 28, 1972. XIII. 47. 3A–8A.
  5. News: A Bishop's Job Is Hardly Ordinary. Jim Graves. National Catholic Register. August 26, 2015. February 14, 2019.
  6. Web site: Rodriguez. Alexandria. What we know about the priests accused of sexual abuse of minors in Corpus Christi. 2022-01-20. Caller-Times. en-US.
  7. News: Belkin. Lisa. Times. Special To the New York. 1990-07-07. In Texas City, Newcomer Brings Abortion Turmoil. en-US. The New York Times. 2022-01-20. 0362-4331.
  8. News: Ari L. Goldman. June 30, 1990. Bishop Excommunicates 2 In Texas for Abortion Stance. The New York Times.
  9. Web site: Jenkins . Jack . 2018-06-13 . Catholic bishops rebuke Trump's asylum changes, suggest 'canonical penalties' . 2022-01-20 . Religion News Service . en-US.
  10. News: Hudson . Deal . June 20, 2018 . Bishop Gracida Calls Excommunication Over Immigration Policy "Scandalous" . The Christian Review . February 14, 2019.
  11. Web site: Diocese of Corpus Christi releases names of priests 'credibly accused' of sexual abuse.
  12. Web site: 2023-06-09 . Second oldest bishop emeritus in the world turns 100 . 2023-06-09 . Aleteia — Catholic Spirituality, Lifestyle, World News, and Culture . en.