Honorific-Prefix: | His Excellency, The Most Reverend |
Steven Robert Biegler | |
Bishop of Cheyenne | |
Archdiocese: | Denver |
Diocese: | Cheyenne |
Appointed: | March 16, 2017 |
Enthroned: | June 5, 2017 |
Predecessor: | Paul D. Etienne |
Ordination: | July 9, 1993 |
Ordained By: | Charles J. Chaput |
Consecration: | June 5, 2017 |
Consecrated By: | Samuel J. Aquila, Robert Dwayne Gruss, and Paul D. Etienne |
Birth Date: | 22 March 1959 |
Birth Place: | Mobridge, South Dakota, US |
Motto: | Shepherd in compassion |
Steven Robert Biegler | |
Dipstyle: |
Steven Robert Biegler (born March 22, 1959) is an American prelate of the Catholic Church who was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne in Wyoming in 2017.
Steven Biegler was born on March 22, 1959, in Mobridge, South Dakota. He is one of 13 children of Alfred and Mary Biegler. He attended Timber Lake High School in Timber Lake, South Dakota, then entered South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (SDSM&T) in Rapid City, South Dakota. After one year in college, Biegler went to work on the family farm for the next eight years. He then spent time in a construction crew filling in abandoned coal mines around Glenrock, Wyoming.[1]
By 1986, Biegler had decided to enter the priesthood. He entered Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary and started course work at Saint Mary's University of Minnesota, both in Winona, Minnesota. Biegler graduated from Saint Mary's in 1989 with a Bachelor of Philosophy degree. After finishing at St. Mary's, he entered the Pontifical North American College in Rome while studying at the Pontifical Gregorian University. He received a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree in 1993 from the Gregorian.
Biegler was ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Rapid City on July 9, 1993, by Archbishop Charles Chaput at Holy Cross Church in Timber Lake. After his ordination, Biegler had numerous pastoral assignments in South Dakota parishes:
In addition to his pastoral assignments, Biegler served on the college of consultors and the presbyteral council for the diocese. In 2003, Biegler returned to Rome to serve as director of apostolic and pastoral formation at the North American College, serving there until 2006. He remained in Rome until 2007, working as the assistant to the rector of the Casa Santa Maria, a residence for priests at the college. Biegler returned to Rapid City in 2007 to assume several posts:
In 2009, Biegler resumed his work on the college of consultors and the, presbyteral council. He gave up his chaplaincy and pastoral assignments in 2010 to serve for one year as diocesan administrator after the departure of Bishop Blase J. Cupich. With the installation of a new bishop, Biegler was appointed pastor of Our Lady of the Black Hills Parish in Piedmont, South Dakota. Bishop Robert Gruss named Biegler as vicar general for the diocese in 2013. He was moved from Our Lady in 2015 to become pastor of the Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish and of St. Michael Parish.
Pope Francis appointed Biegler as the ninth bishop of Cheyenne on March 16, 2017.[2] [3] On June 5, 2017, Biegler was consecrated during an installation mass at the Cheyenne Civic Center in Cheyenne. Archbishop Samuel J. Aquila was his consecrator, with Gruss and Bishop Paul D. Etienne serving as co-consecrators. Biegler is a member of the Jesus Caritas, a fraternal organization for priests.[4]
Soon after taking office, Biegler ordered the diocese to reexamine sexual abuse allegations against Bishop Emeritus Joseph Hart, a former bishop of Cheyenne. [5] In 2019, Biegler announced that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican was investigating Hart, who denied all the accusations.[6] In 2021, the Congregation exonerated Hart of several charges and said it had insufficient evidence to prove several others. It reprimanded Hart for bad decision-making. Local prosecutors declined to indict Hart on any crimes.[7] After the Congregation's decision, Biegler stated that he believed the victims.[8]
In the 2019 Fall meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), Biegler said that priests needed to refocus their efforts on being pastors, to rebuild trust in the church in the wake of the sexual abuse scandals.[9]
In 2022, after the Wyoming Legislature passed a bill severely limiting access to abortion procedures in that state, Biegler called on state legislators to provide more assistance to needy pregnant mothers and their children.[10]