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Pope names new bishop for Biden's Wilmington diocese

U.S. President Joseph Biden has a new bishop

Via AP news wire
Friday 30 April 2021 09:13 EDT
Biden Catholic Bishops
Biden Catholic Bishops (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

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U.S. President Joseph Biden has a new bishop.

Pope Francis on Friday accepted the resignation of Wilmington Delaware Bishop Francis Malooly, who at 77 is two years beyond the normal retirement age for bishops.

Francis appointed the current vicar for clergy in the Rockville Center, New York diocese, Monsignor William Koenig, to replace Malooly.

Koenig, 64, a Queens native, was ordained a bishop in Rockville Center in 1983 and held a series of parish and diocesan positions before being put in charge of the diocese’s clergy last year.

Biden, the second Catholic president of the United States, worships both at his home in Wilmington and in Washington.

Both Malooly and the archbishop of Washington, Cardinal Wilton Gregory, made clear that Biden was welcome to receive Communion at churches they oversee despite his support for abortion rights.

Malooly was to introduce Koenig to his new flock at a press conference Friday, amid questions about Koenig's position on whether Catholic politicians who support abortion rights should be denied Communion.

Koenig’s appointment was one of two in the U.S. announced Friday by the Vatican.

The pope also named Monsignor James Golka, of the diocese of Grand Island, Nebraska, to replace the retiring bishop of Colorado Springs, Colorado, Bishop Michael Sheridan.

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A previous version of this story corrected the spelling of Koenig.

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