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Pope
Picks Brooklyn Priest to Lead Albany Diocese
By Bob Gardinier Albany Times Union February
11, 2014
http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Pope-picks-Brooklyn-priest-to-lead-Albany-diocese-5223855.php
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Rev. Msgr. Edward B.
Scharfenberger will be introduced later Tuesday as the new
Bishop for the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese
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ALBANY - The Rev. Edward
B. Scharfenberger, a 65-year-old monsignor and lawyer who played
a significant role in how the Brooklyn diocese handled child sex
abuse complaints, is Pope Francis' choice to succeed Bishop Howard
Hubbard as the leader of the Albany Roman
Catholic Diocese.
Scharfenberger will be introduced at an 11 a.m. news
conference at the diocese's Pastoral
Center in Albany.
He will be the tenth bishop of the Albany diocese. At
65, Scharfenberger will only serve a fraction of Hubbard's
37-year tenure. Hubbard is leaving after reaching the mandatory
retirement age of 75.
"How grateful I am to His Holiness Pope Francis for the
awesome privilege to serve as pastor of all the wonderful people
in the Diocese of Albany. I am touched by the warm welcome of
Bishop Hubbard who has served the Church
in Albany with love and dedication for 37 years," Scharfenberger
said in a statement released at 6 a.m. by the Albany diocese.
"My heart is full of gratitude to God for my loving
family, especially my ninety-three years old parents who were
generous enough to welcome me, my two brothers and two sisters
into this world. They taught us how to pray, to trust God and to
know Jesus as our friend. Their continuous example shows us that
the essence of love is sacrifice."
The new bishop, who graduated summa cum laude from the Pontifical
Gregorian University in 1972, is also a lawyer. He went to
Fordham Law School, passing the state bar in 1991. He is
multilingual and has been in the forefront of the church's
dealings with sex abuse scandals.
He served as Promoter of Justice for the Diocese of
Brooklyn and was a member of the Diocesan
Review Board for Sexual Abuse of Minors and coauthor of the 2009
report, "From Shadow to Light and from Scandal to Healing: The
Experience of the Diocese of Brooklyn with the Sex
Abuse Scandal."
The board that crafted the report was established in
2002 after the clergy sexual abuse scandal in Boston. It has
examined more than two dozen cases in Brooklyn and Queens.
That board and Scharfenberger have their critics. David
Clohessy, head of the St. Louis chapter of the Survivors
Network of Those Abused by Priest criticized the choice on
Tuesday, calling Scharfenberger one of the most secretive in
dealing with predator priests.
"For a decade, Scharfenberger has been heavily involved
in pedophile priest cases yet we've seen not a single hopeful
move in the Brooklyn diocese regarding this scandal," Clohessy
said. "That diocese, like many, does only the absolute bare
minimum in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases, and only then
because it's required to do so by the U.S.
church's vague, weak and rarely enforced abuse policy."
A group of local Catholics launched www.albanybishopsearch.org
to ask participants their thoughts on the major needs of the
diocese and what they wanted to see in a new bishop. Bill
Halligan, a member of the group and a parishioner at St.
Vincent DePaul in Albany, he was pleased with the pope's pick.
"We never thought the group would be consulted,"
Halligan said. "We just wanted to express our thoughts and urge
people to express theirs to the Apostolic Delegate
in Washington."
Halligan said he was impressed with the depth of
Scharfenberger's educational and spiritual background.
"I look forward to having a person who will lead the
Albany Diocese in a progressive and open way so we can all draw
closer to God," Halligan said.
Scharfenberger was born in Brooklyn's Bushwick section
on May 29, 1948. He is the son of Edward and Elaine
Scharfenberger of Warwick.
Since 2002 he has served as Pastor of St. Matthias
Church in Ridgewood, a multi-ethnic parish with a large German
congregation. The church offers service and hears confessions in
German. His most recent assignments also included Vicar for
Strategic Planning, and Episcopal Vicar for Queens.
"It is humbling when I think that I soon will be counted
among the successors of the Lord's Apostles. I am not worthy of
this office and I hope that our priests, deacons, religious and
lay people will pray for me often as, together, we continue along
our journey of faith," Scharfenberger said.
"What else do I ask for? What do I hope for? I ask the
priests, deacons, religious and laity to help me to be myself –
my best self. I promise to love and respect all of you by letting
you be who you are and to bring out the best in you. Let's do
this for one another. I will spend every talent that God has
given to me, and every ounce of energy, for the Church
in Albany."
"I commend myself and my ministry to Our Lady of the
Immaculate Conception, patroness of our Diocese."
Scharfenberger was ordained a priest on July 2, 1973 in
St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, by Bishop James
A. Hickey, later Cardinal-Archbishop of Washington D.C.
Hubbard welcomed the announcement.
"Bishop-Elect Scharfenberger has a rich background as
both a canon and civil lawyer, as the head of the Judicial
Tribunal in Brooklyn, and as pastor for 12 years in St. Matthias
in Ridgewood, a multi-ethnic parish, where he has gained fluency
in a multitude of languages, which I am sure will serve him well
in our Diocese and will be most appreciated by our growing
Hispanic speaking community," Hubbard said.
"So we are most grateful that our Holy Father, Pope
Francis, has graced us with such a gifted shepherd and we pledge
him our prayers, loyalty, support and love."
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