Archdiocese of Vancouver Archidioecesis Vancuveriensis |
|
---|---|
Holy Rosary Cathedral main entrances |
|
Location | |
Country | Canada |
Territory | South West British Columbia |
Ecclesiastical province | Metropolitan See of Vancouver |
Metropolitan | 150 Robson St. Vancouver, British Columbia V6B 2A7 |
Statistics | |
Area | 119,439 km2 (46,116 sq mi) |
Population - Catholics |
(as of 2004) 396,898[1] |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 14 December 1863 |
Cathedral | Holy Rosary Cathedral (Vancouver) |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Benedict XVI |
Bishop | David John James Monroe Bishop of Kamloops John Dennis Corriveau Bishop of Nelson Gerald William Wiesner Bishop of Prince George Richard Joseph Gagnon Bishop of Victoria |
Metropolitan Archbishop | John Michael Miller CSB Archbishop of Vancouver |
Website | |
rcav.bc.ca |
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver (Latin: Archidioecesis Vancuveriensis) is a Roman Catholic archdiocese that includes part of the Province of British Columbia. It is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province which includes the suffragan dioceses of Kamloops, Nelson, Prince George, and Victoria. The Archdiocese is led by Archbishop John Michael Miller, CSB.
Contents |
As of 2006, the archdiocese contains 74 parishes, 15 missions, 96 diocesan priests, 93 religious priests, and 429,390 Catholics. It also has 126 religious sisters, 22 religious brothers, and 1 permanent deacon. There are 49 Catholic schools.
On 24 July 1846, the Diocese of Vancouver Island was erected from the Vicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory.
On 14 December 1863, the Vicariate Apostolic of British Columbia was erected. A French priest, by the name Louis-Joseph D'Herbomez, from the order of Oblates of Mary Immaculate, became the first Vicar Apostolic of the newly formed territory. He was later ordained Bishop in 1864 and served the Catholic community until his death in 1890.
In 1890, the Vicariate of British Columbia becomes the Diocese of New Westminster. Another Oblates of Mary Immaculate French Bishop, Pierre-Paul Durieu, took over the responsibilities and served the community until his death in 1899. During his tenure, the territory of Alaska was lost in the creation of the Prefecture Apostolic of Alaska in 1894.
Another French Bishop, Augustin Dontenwill, took governance of the Diocese of New Westminster in 1899 and served the community until he resigned, to become the Superior General of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, in 1908. Under his tenure the Holy Rosery Church was commissioned.
In 1903, the Diocese of Vancouver Island was elevated to Archdiocese of Vancouver Island and in 1904, it changed to the Archdiocese of Victoria. A German born Bishop, Bertram Orth, was appointed Archbishop in 1903 and lead the Archdiocese of Victoria and it’s suffrages until he resigned in 1908.
In September, 1908, the Diocese of New Westminster was elevated to the Archdiocese of Vancouver and in October, 1908, the Archdiocese of Victoria was lowered to the Diocese of Victoria. Father Alexander MacDonald, of Nova Scotia, was quickly appointed and ordained Bishop of Victoria.
For just over one year the Archdiocese of Vancouver had no bishop until Neil McNeil, Bishop of St. George’s, Newfoundland, became the first appointed Canadian Archbishop of Vancouver on 19 January 1910. His tenure was short, as he then went on to become the Archbishop of Toronto on 10 April 1912.
August, 1912, Timothy Casey, Bishop of Saint John in America, New Brunswick, becomes the 5th Archbishop of Vancouver. 1914 World War I breaks out and Archbishop Casey had to battle hard financial times for the Archdiocese. Under his governance, Holy Rosary Church became a Cathedral. He served his community until his death on October 1931.
August 1928, a priest from St. John, New Brunswick, became Coadjutor Archbishop of Vancouver and on 5 October 1931, Bishop William Mark Duke became Archbishop of Vancouver. In his 32 years of service to his community Archbishop Duke had to deal with the Great Depression of the Dirty Thirties and later World War II. His strict disciplinarian beliefs and financial management of the Archdiocese earned him the title “Iron Duke”. The legacy that was left behind when Archbishop William Mark Duke retired in March 1964 is impressive. He helped establish St. Mark’s College at the University of British Columbia, 2 Catholic high schools, 1 non-diocese Catholic high school, 22 Catholic elementary schools, and 3 Catholic hospitals including many new parishes in the diocese alone. During his tenure the Diocese of Nelson was erected in 1936 and the Diocese of Kamloops was erected in 1945. These new diocese helped erect a new high school, new elementary schools & parishes.
The bishop of Nelson, Martin Michael Johnston, became Coadjutor Archbishop of Vancouver, in 1954, to assist Archbishop Duke during the last 10 years of governance. Bishop Johnston became Archbishop of Vancouver on 1964 and retired in 1969. During Archbishop Johnston tenure, the Vicariate of Prince Rupert was elevated to Diocese of Prince George, in 1967.
Auxiliary Bishop, James Francis Carney, became Archbishop of Vancouver in 1969. Archbishop Carney became the first Vancouver born bishop to be appointed to the Archdiocese. During his tenure Archbishop Carney saw the need to rebuild many of the parishes, schools and hospitals that were showing their age. Project Advance was introduced into the community that required the parishes to raise funds. These funds went back into the community to help rebuild their parishes & schools and also to build new facilities, like Archbishop Carney Regional Secondary School, which was built in the Archbishop’s honour, after he died in 1990.
The archdiocese concluded a nine-year synod in December 2006. Lay and religious representatives from every parish, Catholic school, religious community, the local seminary, and Catholic organizations took part, as well as non-Catholic observers who were invited to the process.
Although it formally ran from October 2002 to October 2003, extensive preparation went into the synod as far back as 1998 during the period leading up to the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000. The synod’s aim was to bring the Church of Vancouver into the 21st century, from the “maintenance” mode it was in to more of a mission-driven model, as former Archbishop Emeritus Adam Exner, OMI, put it.
On December 3, 2006, at Holy Rosary Cathedral, Archbishop Raymond Roussin, SM, officially declared the synod closed, officially setting in motion the initiatives proposed.
According to the archdiocesan newspaper The B.C. Catholic, the first 20 declarations from the synod were to come into effect almost immediately. "Among the highlights are initiatives to encourage pastors to delegate more duties to the laity, to promote the faith formation of teachers, to initiate an adult faith formation strategy, to establish an office and vicar for evangelization, and to initiate a support group for priests."
More information about the synod can be found at http://www.rcav.org/synod.
The B.C. Catholic's coverage of the synod can be found at: http://bcc.rcav.org/06-12-11.
The following are the Diocese under the direction of the Archdiocese of Vancouver:
The following is a list of the resident bishops of Vancouver and their terms of service:
The churches offer masses in the following languages: Arabic, Chinese (Cantonese), Chinese (Mandarin), Croatian, English, French, German, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Laotian, Traditional Latin, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Spanish, Tagalog, and Vietnamese.
Vancouver
Burnaby
Coquitlam New Westminster
North Vancouver
Richmond Surrey |
Abbotsford
Agassiz
Aldergrove
Bella Coola
Boston Bar
Bowen Island Chilliwack
Crescent Beach
Delta Gibsons Hope Langley Maple Ridge Mission Port Coquitlam Port Moody Powell River Sechelt Squamish
West Vancouver White Rock |
School | City | Est. | Website | Enrollment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Holy Cross Regional High School | Surrey | 1982 | http://www.holycross.bc.ca/ | ~780 (co-ed) |
St. Thomas Aquinas Regional Secondary School | North Vancouver | 1953 | http://www.aquinas.org/ | ~600 (co-ed) |
Archbishop Carney Regional Secondary School | Port Coquitlam | 1994 | http://www.acrss.org/ | ~750 (co-ed) |
St. Patrick's Regional Secondary | Vancouver | 1928 | http://www.stpats.bc.ca/ | ~500 (co-ed) |
St. Thomas More Collegiate (non-diocese) | Burnaby | 1960 | http://www.stmc.bc.ca/ | ~660 (co-ed) |
St.John Brebeuf Regional Secondary | Abbotsford | 1992 | http://www.stjohnbrebeuf.ca/ | ~335 (co-ed) |
Notre Dame Regional Secondary School | Vancouver | 1953 | http://www.ndrs.org/ | ~600 (co-ed) |
St. Ann's Academy (high school re-established 1981) | Kamloops | 1910 | http://www.stannsacademy.bc.ca/ | ~600 (co-ed) |
Vancouver College (non-diocese) | Vancouver | 1922 | http://www.vc.bc.ca/ | ~600 (boys) |
Little Flower Academy (non-diocese) | Vancouver | 1927 | http://www.lfabc.org/ | ~470 (girls) |
School | City | Est. | Website |
---|---|---|---|
Assumption School | Powell River | 1961 | http://www.assumpschool.com/ |
Blessed Sacrament | Vancouver | 1954 | http://www.ess.vancouver.bc.ca/ |
Cloverdale Catholic | Surrey | 1954 | http://ccsunited.ca/ |
Corpus Christi | Vancouver | 1957 | http://www.corpuschristi-school.ca |
Holy Cross | Burnaby | 1959 | http://www.holycrosselementary.ca/ |
Holy Trinity | North Vancouver | 1955 | http://www.holytschool.org/ |
Immaculate Conception | Delta | 1959 | http://www.icdelta.com/ |
Immaculate Conception | Vancouver | 1926 | http://www.icschoolvancouver.com/ |
Our Lady of Fatima | Coquitlam | 1947 | http://www.fatimaschool.ca/ |
Our Lady of Good Counsel | Surrey | 1957 | http://www.ourladyofgoodcounselschool.ca/ |
Our Lady of Mercy | Burnaby | 1959 | http://www.ourladyofmercy.ca/ |
Our Lady of Perpetual Help | Vancouver | 1927 | http://www.olphbc.ca/ |
Our Lady of Sorrows | Vancouver | 1926 | http://www.ourladyofsorrows.ca/ |
Our Lady of the Assumption | Port Coquitlam | 1982 | http://www.assumptionschool.com/ |
Queen of All Saints | Coquitlam | 1996 | http://www.queenofallsaintsschool.ca/ |
Sacred Heart | Delta | 1944 | http://www.shsdelta.org/ |
St. Andrew's | Vancouver | 1937 | http://www.standrewschool.ca/ |
St. Anthony of Padua | Vancouver | 1997 | http://www.stanthonyofpaduaschool.ca/ |
St. Anthony's | West Vancouver | 1958 | http://www.saswv.ca/ |
St. Augustine's | Vancouver | 1921 | http://www.staugschool.ca/ |
St. Bernadette's | Surrey | 1986 | http://www.stbernadetteparish.ca/ |
St. Catherine's | Langley | 1986 | http://www.stcatherines.ca/ |
St. Edmund's | North Vancouver | 1911 | http://www.stedmunds.ca/ |
St. Francis de Sales | Burnaby | 1954 | http://www.stfrancisdesalesschool.ca/ |
St. Francis of Assisi | Vancouver | 1946 | http://sfaschool.ca |
St. Francis Xavier | Vancouver | 1940 | http://www.sfxschool.ca/ |
St. Helen's | Burnaby | 1923 | http://www.sthelensschool.ca/ |
St. James | Abbotsford | 1985 | http://www.stjameselementary.ca/ |
St. Joseph's | Vancouver | 1922 | http://www.stjoesschool-vancouver.org/ |
St. Joseph the Worker | Richmond | 1988 | http://stjo.richmond.bc.ca/ |
St. Jude's | Vancouver | 1955 | http://www.stjudevancouver.com/ |
St. Mary's | Chilliwack | 1948 | http://www.stmarysschoolchwk.com/ |
St. Mary's | Vancouver | 1931 | http://www.stmary.bc.ca/ |
St. Michael's | Burnaby | 1957 | http://www.stmichaelschool.ca/ |
St. Patrick's | Maple Ridge | 1955 | http://www.stpatsschool.org |
St. Patrick's | Vancouver | 1922 | http://stpatselementary.net/ |
St. Paul's | Richmond | 1960 | http://www.stpaulschool.ca/ |
St. Pius X | North Vancouver | 1996 | http://www.saintpius.ca/ |
Star of the Sea | White Rock | 1981 | http://www.starofthesea.bc.ca/school/ |
Vancouver College | Vancouver | 1922 | http://www.vc.bc.ca/ |
At present there are no Catholic universities, but, as per Archdiocesan Synod, there are plans to build one in the future.
College | City | Est. | Website | Enrollment |
---|---|---|---|---|
St. Mark's College (UBC) | Vancouver @ University of British Columbia | 1956 | http://www.stmarkscollege.ca/ | ~30 (co-ed) |
Corpus Christi College (UBC) | Vancouver @ University of British Columbia | http://www.corpuschristi.ca/ | (co-ed) | |
Redeemer Pacific College | Langley @ Trinity Western University | 1999 | http://www.rpcollege.bc.ca/ | (co-ed) |
Seminary of Christ the King | Mission | 1931 | http://www.sck.ca/pages/home.htm | (men only) |
Religious communities of men
|
Religious communities of women
|
The Gardens of Gethsemani Cemetery & Mausoleum (Est. 1965), 15800 - 32nd Avenue, Surrey, B.C.
Health Care
On March 31, 2000, St. Paul’s Hospital, Holy Family Hospital, & CHARA Health Care Society were consolidated into one legal entity and formed Providence Health Care, with eight sites in the city of Vancouver.
Although the Archdiocese is responsible for the creation of the hospitals & care facilities. It no long has direct control of these facilities as they are governed by a Board of Directors, the Congregation of Sisters & Providence Senior Leadership Team. Providenc Health Care continues to provide Catholic health care.
Providence Health Care is presently developing the Legacy Project, which is to renew St. Paul’s Hospital into a state of the art research and teaching facility.
Hospital | City | Est. | Order | Beds |
---|---|---|---|---|
St. Paul's Hospital (Vancouver) | Vancouver | 1894 | the Sisters of Providence | 500 |
St. Vincent's Hospital (Vancouver) | Vancouver | 1939 | the Sisters of Charity | 650 |
Mount Saint Joseph Hospital (1946) | Vancouver | 1921 | the Missionary Sisters | 208 |
Holy Family Hospital | Vancouver | 1947 | the Sisters of Providence | 218 |
Youville Residence | Vancouver | 1931 | the Grey Sisters | 152 |
Family support
Overseas assistance
Shelters
Social support
Publications
Retreats
|
|