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  New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan

By Lauren E. Bohn
Time
February 26, 2009

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1881861,00.html

New New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan of Milwaukee (R), and Cardinal Edward Egan, the outgoing archbishop of New York.

A beloved Milwaukee priest known for his jocular demeanor (he once said Mass in a bright orange Wisconsin 'cheese-head' hat) and for restoring the Archdiocese's reputation following a sex scandal, Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan, 59, is set to be the next Archbishop of New York, perhaps the nation's most prominent pulpit. Dolan inherits the second-largest Archdiocese in the United States, home to 2.5 million Catholics in nearly 400 churches, on April 15. Known as a staunch defender of church orthodoxy, he is succeeding retiring Cardinal Edward Egan at a crucial time: the church in New York faces a bleak economic future and is dealing with the fallout from a spate of controversial church and school closings. His resume indicates he's well-suited for the challenge: Dolan helped unite the fragmented Catholic community in Milwaukee and staved off bankruptcy amid costly lawsuits stemming from the Catholic church's sex abuse scandals of the 1990s.

Though the burly, ruddy-faced "guy's guy" is known to speak warmly of his love for the Milwaukee Brewers during his home-spun homilies and has a penchant for whiskey and beer (typically Miller), he's a devoted enforcer, albeit genial, of Rome's conservative ideologies. On matters of doctrine, Dolan adheres to the course laid out firmly by Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict — one that includes unflinching support for policies concerning priestly celibacy, abortion, birth control, divorce and gay marriage.

His orthodox theology is tempered by extroversion and charisma, a stark contrast to his predecessor, whom New York Catholics widely viewed as distant. Dolan promises to "engage" rather than confront politicians who are in favor of abortion rights and foster much-needed ecumenical dialogue with the city's diverse community. He has already committed to keeping Catholic schools open and bringing vigor to the church's recruitment efforts. And he naturally plans to shift his baseball allegiance to the Yankees.

Fast Facts:

• Born on Feb. 6, 1950, the oldest of five children. In 1964, he entered St. Louis Preparatory Seminary South in Shrewbury, Mo., and graduated from Cardinal Glennon College with a degree in philosophy.

• Ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Louis on June 19, 1976. He earned his doctorate in American Church history at the Catholic University of America in Washington in 1983. His dissertation was on Archbishop Edwin V. O'Hara, a founder of the Catholic Biblical Association of America.

• In 1987, Father Dolan was appointed to a five-year term as secretary to the Vatican's diplomatic mission in Washington (He speaks fluent Italian). Returning to St. Louis in 1992, he was appointed vice rector of Kenrick-Glennon Seminary.

• In 1994, he was appointed rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome, where he also taught at Pontifical Gregorian University and the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas.

• Wrote a book in 2000, "Priesthood in the Third Millennium," which is used in some seminaries in the U.S. Composed mainly of a series of lectures he gave while in Rome, it lays out the challenges currently facing Catholic priests and seminarians.

• Named auxiliary bishop of St. Louis in 2001 after another priest, former Archbishop Rembert Weakland, resigned after acknowledging that the archdiocese paid a $450,000 out-of-court settlement to a man who claimed Weakland had sexually assaulted him.

• In Milwaukee, he has received good grades for reaching out to young people (occasionally over a beer or two) and recruiting new seminarians; the Milwaukee archdiocese expects to ordain six men in 2009, as opposed to a mere single ordination just a few years ago.

• A Herculean fund-raiser, Dolan helped his Archdiocese avoid bankruptcy amid the lawsuits that followed the priest sexual abuse scandal. He effectively closed a $3 million budget deficit in 2008 and also started a fund-raising campaign that he claims has raised $57.5 million in pledges, more than halfway to its goal.

• Knows only a bit of Spanish, the mother tongue of one-third of Catholics in the New York Archdiocese.

Quotes By:

"I come before you in awe, and I admit some trepidation knowing that I've got an awful lot to learn."

— Addressing the diocese at a news conference following a Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan.

Los Angeles Times, Feb. 24, 2009

"This is the time we priests need to be renewing our pledge to celibacy, not questioning it."

— Responding to claims that celibate commitment is to blame for clerical sexual abuse.

New York Times, Sept. 5, 2003

"I'd prefer a bit of Jameson's, but Milk will do."

— Responding to a woman's inquiry on how the Archbishop takes his coffee.

New York Times, Feb. 23, 2009

"Does it haunt me? Yes it does. And I'm not afraid to admit that."

— On his handling of the sex abuse scandal, calling the issue the most challenging of his tenure in Milwaukee.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Feb. 24, 2009

"I've already learned how to order a hot dog from the cart outside the cathedral."

— On getting used to his new hometown.

New York Daily News, Feb. 23, 2009

"Happiness attracts."

— On his strategy for increasing recruitment to the priesthood.

New York Times, Feb. 23, 2009

Quotes About:

"He gives religion a good name."

— Msgr. Thomas J. Shelley, a priest and a historian at Fordham University who has known the archbishop for 25 years.

New York Times, Feb. 23, 2009

"A choice for the center-right with a human face."

— John L. Allen Jr., the National Catholic Reporter's veteran Vatican correspondent on Archbishop Dolan's appointment.

The Times Online, Feb. 23 2009

"He is with Rome on the big issues and on the little ones. But he does not do so in a dictatorial fashion."

— William J. Thorn, journalism professor at Marquette University in Milwaukee

New York Times, Feb. 24, 2009

"I was at the vespers when he was installed and there's a party where the bishop knocks on the door. Most do it timidly. Tap, Tap. Not him — 'Bang! Bang!'' It echoed through the cathedral and let everyone know that Timothy Dolan was there."

— Rev. Steven M. Avella, a history professor at Marquette University in Milwaukee

New York Times, Feb. 24, 2009

 
 

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