United States Bishops' Conference

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dioceses and ecclesiastical provinces of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States

The Bishops' Conference of the United States ( English United States Conference of Catholic Bishops ) (USCCB) is an association of Roman Catholic Bishops of all dioceses in the United States .

The organization is based in Washington, DC with its secretariat and commissioner . The current chairman is the Archbishop of Los Angeles , José Horacio Gómez .

history

American Bishops' Conference in Washington, DC

Until the American War of Independence , the Vicariate Apostolic of the Archdiocese of Westminster was responsible for the Catholics in British North America . After independence, the first diocese in the United States was the diocese of Baltimore in Maryland , where the Apostolic Prefecture was located from 1789 . On April 8, 1808, the diocese of Baltimore was raised to an archdiocese .

In 1966, the bishops of the United States founded their own episcopal conference with a double structure:

  • as the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (NCCB) to coordinate internal church issues
  • as the United States Catholic Conference (USCC) to represent the Catholic Church in US society and to the government, members of Congress , etc.

In 2000 the NCCB and USCC merged to form the USCCB. The supreme body of the American bishops' conference is the general assembly of members.

Chairperson

See also

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Patrick W. Carey: Catholics in America. A history . Praeger, Westport 2004, ISBN 0-275-98255-6 , p. 240.