New bishop of Plymouth

Filed in News by on January 29, 2014 0 Comments

Mgr-Mark-O-Toole_medium http://www.catholicnews.org.uk/Home/News/New-Bishop-of-Plymouth

In his homily at the Episcopal Ordination of Mgr Mark O’Toole in Plymouth yesterday, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor spoke of his confidence that the priests and people of the Diocese of Plymouth were “receiving a bishop who will watch over the flock and imbue hope.”

The Cardinal said that Bishop Mark O’Toole “will be the kind of bishop Pope Francis” spoke of in his address to Papal Nuncios about the human and spiritual qualities needed in new bishops-to-be.

The Holy Father, in June 2013, said that candidates should be pastors who are close to the people “gentle, patient and merciful, animated by inner poverty, the freedom of the Lord and also by simplicity and austerity of life.”

The Cardinal also highlighted how the three readings chosen by Bishop O’Toole for his Episcopal Ordination “contained in them a plea for your prayers and your support that he may become the kind of bishop that you want and that the diocese needs.”

He said that today we “pray for Bishop Mark and for his ministry in the years ahead, that it will be fruitful in ways that are beyond all our expectations.”

Bishop Mark O’Toole, the 9th Bishop of Plymouth, served as Private Secretary to Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor for six years from 2002-2008.

To read the full homily see here.

Source: CCN

At the end of the ordination Bishop O’Toole gave this speech:

Thank you, your Excellency, for your kind words, for being here today, and for your goodness to me over these months.   Through you, I express my fidelity to His Holiness, Pope Francis, Successor of St Peter.  I pray that I be given the grace to mirror something of Pope Francis’ open heart in Shepherding this beautiful Diocese of Plymouth.

There is much that fills my heart today.  Overwhelmingly, there is a sense of immense gratitude to God for his faithfulness.  I know that I am a sinner, yet I experience the love and mercy of Jesus in this deeper call to service in His Church.

I pray that I be a worthy successor to Bishop Christopher.  We all thank you, Bishop Christopher, for your whole-hearted dedication to the diocese over the past twenty-eight years.  We pray for God’s blessing on this next stage of your ministry.

Especially on this first occasion of speaking as your Bishop in this Cathedral I warmly greet the family of the Diocese – laymen and women, religious, seminarians, deacons, and priests.  Thank you for the kind and hospitable welcome that you have already shown me.   To all the priests of the diocese, I want to say how much I look forward to meeting you personally and getting to know you; know that you always have my support.  The fact that I am your bishop will not prevent us, I hope, from being brothers.  I know I will need that, particularly as I make my home among you.  Thank you for the gift of this beautiful crozier, this pastoral staff.  It is a reminder to us that at the heart of our vocation is the service of God’s people.  That means, as Pope Francis has reminded us, that we have “the smell of the sheep”.

It is a great joy to have our diocesan seminarians with us; you are a sign of hope and of the generosity of our young people.  I am convinced that there are many more, who with the right encouragement, can be helped to make life commitments in the Church whether that be to marriage, religious life, the permanent diaconate, or the priesthood.  Let us all continue to pray and work in promoting these vocations.

In our Catholic understanding a Bishop is sent to a diocese.  I am aware that I come to you as someone who, like Solomon, feels he does not know how to go out or come in.  I definitely do not know the road to Penzance or to Poole!  I  have been asked to step out into something new.  This new call that I experience in my life is a reminder of the kind of stepping out that we, as the whole Church, need to do in order that Jesus be better known and loved.

From the age of 17, Jesus has exerted an attraction over my heart; no other can match the magnetic pull of His love, or the peace that His friendship brings.  We believe that each person is made for such experience, for each of us is a beloved child of the Father, and called to be with Him forever.  We put our belief in Jesus, and our love of Him, at the service of those most in need in our society – the poor, the sick, the vulnerable, those who feel alienated from God.

We need to reach out to those who have turned away from the practise of the faith, many of whom are in our own families and parish communities.  How can we walk with them in a way that will help them to see once more the beauty of following Jesus?  Especially, we are called to step out from the doors of the Church to those who do not know God or who have never known the power of Jesus’ love. There are many in our society who search for truth, beauty and goodness, who need to know the touch of God’s mercy and the love of Jesus.

This is our mission, and it’s task, Jesus entrusts to us all.  I know that there is much that I need to become familiar with in the diocese, many to listen to, and alot to learn.  There is much I do not know.  But one thing I do know.  From all eternity, in the boundless mystery of His merciful love, God has destined Mark O’Toole to be Bishop of Plymouth.  He has prepared me for you, and He has prepared you for me.  So let us begin to walk together.

And as we begin this path we seek the loving intercession of Our Blessed Lady and our Diocesan patrons.

Our Lady, star of the Sea…..Pray for us
St Boniface…Pray for Us
St Cuthbert Mayne…Pray for us

Thank you and God Bless you all.

Tags: ,

About the Author ()

These unsigned articles are prepared by different members of the Jericho Tree team

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *