Roman Catholic Diocese of Lexington

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Diocese of Lexington

Dioecesis Lexingtonensis
CoA Roman Catholic Diocese of Lexington.svg
Location
Country United States
Territory Southeastern Kentucky
Ecclesiastical province Louisville
Metropolitan Joseph Edward Kurtz
Population
- Catholics

45,815 (3.1%)
Information
Denomination Catholic Church
Rite Roman Rite
Established January 14, 1988
Cathedral Cathedral of Christ the King
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Bishop John Stowe
Map
File:Diocese of Lexington.jpg
Website
www.cdlex.org

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Lexington (Latin: Dioecesis Lexingtonensis) is a Roman Catholic diocese in Kentucky founded on January 14, 1988.

Cathedral of Christ the King

Establishment of diocese

Pope John Paul II established the Diocese of Lexington on January 14, 1988 from 43 counties previously of the Diocese of Covington and 7 counties previously of the Archdiocese of Louisville. The formal ceremony establishing the diocese and installing its first bishop, James Kendrick Williams took place on March 2, 1988 at Christ the King Church. With the establishment of the diocese, and the installation of its bishop, Christ the King Church was elevated to the status of cathedral.

Profile of diocese

As of 2004, the diocese covered approximately 16,423 Square Miles (42,520 Square Kilometers), and included nearly 46,000 Catholics (about 3.1% of the total population) in its 64 parishes. At that time, 67 diocesan & religious priests, 33 permanent deacons, 30 male religious, and 138 female religious served in the diocese.

The Diocese of Lexington provides education for approximately 4300 students in its fifteen elementary and two high schools located throughout the diocese, and maintains Newman Centers at eight of Kentucky's colleges and universities.

Bishops

The list of bishops of the diocese and their years of service:

  1. James Kendrick Williams (1988–2002)
  2. Ronald William Gainer (2002–2014)
  3. John Stowe, O.F.M. Conv. (2015–present)[1]

High schools

Arms

Arms of Roman Catholic Diocese of Lexington
CoA Roman Catholic Diocese of Lexington.svg
Notes
Arms was designed and adopted when the diocese was erected
Adopted
1988
Escutcheon
The arms of the Diocese of Lexington are composed of three sections that are in the red, white (silver) and blue. The left side of these arms is red on which is displayed a silver sword. The right side of these arms is silver (white) on which is seen a blue fleur-de-lis. The bottom of these arms is a blue field on which a Gold diadem placed on a silver cross.
Symbolism
Three sections are in red, white (silver) and blue which are in the traditional colors of the United States. The left side of these arms is red on which is displayed a silver sword of St. Paul, the patron of the Diocese of Covington. The right side of these arms is silver (white) on which is seen a blue fleur-de-lis of the Archdiocese of Louisville. These two fields signify that the Diocese of Lexington is carved from territory taken from each of these sees. The bottom of these arms, which comes to a point to represent the mountains of eastern Kentucky, is blue to signify Kentucky, "The Bluegrass State". On this field is a Gold diadem placed on a silver cross to honor Christ, the King, titular of the Cathedral-Church in Lexington.

See also

References

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External links

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