The Archdiocese of Agaña (Latin: Archidiœcesis Aganiensis , Spanish: Arquidiócesis de Agaña) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese. It comprises the United States dependency of Guam. The prelate is an archbishop whose cathedral is the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica.
The archdiocese is a member of the Episcopal Conference of the Pacific (CEPAC) and of the Federation of Catholic Bishops Conferences of Oceania, and an observer to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.
History
The first Catholic church was established on Guam on June 15, 1668 by Spanish-Filipino missionaries Diego Luis de San Vitores and Pedro Calungsod. Catholics in Guam were part of the Diocese of Cebu, the Philippines. The United States acquired Guam from Spain after the Spanish–American War of 1898. On September 17, 1902, the Apostolic Prefecture of Mariana Islands was established which included Guam.
On March 1, 1911, the Apostolic Vicariate of Guam was canonically erected. On July 4, 1946, territory was added from the suppressed Vicariate Apostolic of Marianne, Caroline, and Marshall Islands.
On October 14, 1965, the Vatican elevated the apostolic vicariate to the Diocese of Agaña, as a suffragan diocese to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco.
On March 8, 1984, in response to the growth of Catholicism in Guam and its vicinity, the diocese was elevated to a metropolitan see, the Archdiocese and Metropolitan Province of Agaña. The metropolitan province consists of the Archdiocese of Agaña and its suffragan Roman Catholic Dioceses of Chalan Kanoa and of Caroline Islands, and the Roman Catholic Apostolic Prefecture of the Marshall Islands.
Sex abuse scandal and bankruptcy
In 2016, for the first time in the history of the archdiocese, sexual allegations surfaced against its Ordinary (at the time Archbishop Anthony Apuron). Consequently, on June 6, 2016, Pope Francis appointed Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai, S.D.B., as apostolic administrator sede plena, i.e., in charge of the pastoral and administrative governance of the local Church.
On October 31, 2016, after months of an Apostolic Administration, Pope Francis appointed Michael J. Byrnes of the Archdiocese of Detroit to become Coadjutor Archbishop of Agaña with special faculties. Those faculties included complete authority in all pastoral and administrative matters in the Archdiocese, both civilly and ecclesiastically.
On March 16, 2018, Archbishop Apuron was removed from office by a Vatican tribunal after being convicted of undisclosed charges in a canonical penal trial. Apuron appealed the decision, which suspended the verdict. However, the verdict of the First Instance canonical penal trial was upheld by the Apostolic Tribunal of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) on February 7, 2019. A final ruling was then published by the CDF on April 4, 2019, which also upheld the conviction. The final ruling made so Apuron could not only no longer serve as Bishop, but also could no longer wear the "insignia" associated with it, such as a bishop's ring, miter and staff, or dwell in property owned by the Archdiocese of Agana. Despite the bankruptcy filing, the archdiocese had only $45 million in liabilities and had until August 15, 2019, to successfully file a motion for a settlement with the sex abuse victims. The archdiocese afterwards sold its Yona property for $6.1 million to help contribute to the pending settlement. By the time of the August 15 deadline, which also accounted for sex abuse claims, was reached, the number of people suing the Archdiocese for sex abuse had expanded to more than 240, with blame also being directed at the Bishop's residence and office in Hagatna.
Both the Archdiocese and sex abuse survivors negotiated for a settlement between October 30 and 31 2019. However, the October 2019 negotiations, which were mediated by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Hawaii Robert J. Faris, were cut short after the survivors rejected the settlement offers and continued to pursue their lawsuits. However, it remained to be seen if the sex abuse survivors will approve of the new settlement offer. The same day, however, it was revealed in new court documents that a new lawsuit was filed against the Archdiocese of Agana by a former altar boy who claimed that Father Louis Brouillard abused him multiple times from around 1978 to 1979 on the grounds of the Barrigada church and during Boy Scouts of America outings at Lonfit River. In August 2021, court filings which were made public revealed the Apuron had testified in court to deny a former Father Duenas Memorial School student's allegations that Apuron raped and sexually abused him multiple times in the school year 1994-1995 at the then-archbishop's private residence in Agana Heights.
Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
On March 16, 2020, the Archdiocese of Agana suspended Sunday masses along with all parish events until April 18th of that year. During this time, masses were held virtually, with church-goers watching church broadcasts through radio stations and social media platforms, such as Facebook Live.
Post-COVID developments
On March 29, 2023, Archbishop Michael J. Byrnes resigned due to a "life-changing illness", leaving Vicar General Father Romeo Convocar to lead the church in his absence. On July 6th, 2024, Pope Francis appointed Bishop Ryan P. Jimenez as the new Archbishop of Agana. He was Installed on August 15th, 2024.
Ordinaries
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%;"
|-
! No.
! Name
! From
! Until
|-
|| 1 || Francisco Xavier Vilá y Mateu, OFMCap || August 25, 1911 || January 1, 1913
|-
|| 2 || Agustín José Bernaus y Serra, OFMCap || May 9, 1913 || September 14, 1913
|-
|| 3 || Joaquín Felipe Oláiz y Zabalza, OFMCap || July 20, 1914 || January 1, 1933
|-
|| 4 || León Angel Olano y Urteaga, OFMCap|| July 9, 1934 || August 20, 1945
|-
|| 5 || Apollinaris William Baumgartner, OFMCap || October 14, 1945 || December 18, 1970
|-
|| 6 || Felixberto Camacho Flores || April 21, 1971 || October 25, 1985
|-
|| 7 || Anthony Sablan Apuron, OFMCap || May 11, 1986 || March 16, 2018
|-
|8 || |Michael J. Byrnes || April 4, 2019 || March 28, 2023
|-
|9 || Ryan Pagente Jimenez || July 6, 2024 || Present
|}
Serra was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Bluefields, Nicaragua in 1913.<br>
Apuron was Auxiliary Bishop (1983-1986); appointed Archbishop here.<br>
Byrnes was Coadjutor Archbishop (2016-2019).
Education
thumb|235px|Bishop Baumgartner Memorial School – Sinajana
<!--ONLY list the schools listed by the ref!!!!-->
Schools operated by the archdiocese include:
- Academy of Our Lady of Guam– Hagåtña – Secondary school for girls
- Bishop Baumgartner Memorial School– Sinajana
- Saint Anthony Catholic School– Tamuning
- Santa Barbara Catholic School– Dededo
Schools previously operated by the archdiocese include:
High schools:
;Northern Region
- Sånta Bernadita - Agafa Gumas, Yigo
- Sånta Barbara - Dededo
- Saint Andrew Kim - Dededo
- Saint Anthony of Padua and Saint Victor - Tamuning
- Blessed Diego Luis de San Vitores - Tumon
- Our Lady of Lourdes - Yigo
;Central I Region
- Dulce Nombre de María Cathedral-Basilica - Agaña (Hagåtña)
- San Vicente Ferrer and San Roke - Barrigada
- Nuestra Señora de la Paz y Buen Viaje - Chalan Pågo
- Sånta Teresita - Mangilao
- Nuestra Señora de las Aguas - Mongmong
- Immaculate Heart of Mary - Toto
;Central II Region
- Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament - Agaña Heights
- Niño Perdido y Sagrada Familia - Asan
- Our Lady of Purification - Maina
- San Juan Bautista - Ordot
- Saint Jude Thaddeus - Sinajaña
- Assumption of Our Lady - Piti
;Southern Region
- Our Lady of Mount Carmel - Agat
- Saint Joseph - Inarajan
- San Isidro - Malojloj
- San Dimas - Merizo
- San Dionisio - Umatac
- Our Lady of Guadalupe - Santa Rita
- San Miguel - Talofofo
- San Francisco de Asis - Yona
Demographics
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! rowspan="2" |Year
! colspan="3" |Population
! colspan="4" |Priests
! rowspan="2" |Deacons
! colspan="2" |Religious
! rowspan="2" |Parishes
|-
!Catholic
!Total
!Percent
Catholic
!Diocesan
!Religious
!Total
!Catholics
per priest
!Male
!Female
|-
|1911
|9,740
|12,240
|79.6%
|0
|10
|10
|974
|0
|13
|n/a
|6
|-
|1950
|32,209
|32,700
|98.5%
|3
|24
|27
|1,192
|0
|44
|120
|17
|-
|1966
|60,046
|62,240
|96.5%
|15
|26
|41
|1,464
|0
|26
|206
|24
|-
|1970
|80,872
|115,000
|70.3%
|23
|55
|78
|1,036
|0
|57
|213
|24
|-
|1976
|111,831
|141,871
|78.8%
|26
|28
|54
|2,070
|18
|36
|148
|31
|-
|1980
|120,659
|129,428
|93.2%
|19
|32
|51
|2,365
|11
|43
|146
|35
|-
|1990
|114,404
|126,169
|90.7%
|19
|27
|46
|2,487
|5
|29
|143
|26
|-
|1999
|122,962
|144,997
|84.8%
|28
|15
|43
|2,859
|9
|20
|120
|24
|-
|2000
|122,962
|144,867
|84.9%
|27
|10
|37
|3,323
|9
|15
|120
|24
|-
|2001
|150,563
|167,292
|90.0%
|31
|16
|47
|3,203
|7
|22
|125
|24
|-
|2002
|125,167
|154,805
|89.9%
|33
|5
|38
|3,293
|9
|21
|120
|24
|-
|2003
|131,430
|154,623
|85.0%
|32
|15
|47
|2,796
|8
|21
|120
|24
|-
|2004
|131,584
|154,805
|85.0%
|32
|15
|47
|2,799
|20
|16
|120
|24
|-
|2006
|132,494
|155,687
|85.1%
|30
|12
|42
|3,154
|20
|12
|103
|24
|-
|2012
|157,000
|184,000
|85.3%
|38
|9
|47
|3,340
|17
|9
|100
|24
|-
| colspan="12" |Sources: 1911: 1950–2012:
|}
See also
- Catholic Church by country
- Catholic Church in the United States
- Ecclesiastical Province of Agaña
- Global organisation of the Catholic Church
- List of Roman Catholic archdioceses (by country and continent)
- List of Roman Catholic dioceses (alphabetical) (including archdioceses)
- List of Roman Catholic dioceses (structured view) (including archdioceses)
- List of the Catholic dioceses of the United States
<!-- please keep entries in alphabetical order -->
References
External links
- Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Agaña
- GCatholic.org
