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Roman Catholic Diocese of Mayagüez

Coordinates: 18°12′04″N 67°08′18″W / 18.2011°N 67.1383°W / 18.2011; -67.1383
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Diocese of Mayagüez

Dioecesis Maiaguezensis

Diócesis de Mayagüez
Coat of arms
Location
TerritoryWestern coast of Puerto Rico[1]
Ecclesiastical provinceProvince of San Juan de Puerto Rico
Statistics
Area1,635 km2 (631 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2004)
491,518
376,000 (76.5%)
Parishes29
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established1 March 1976 (48 years ago)
CathedralCatedral Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopÁngel Luis Ríos Matos
Bishops emeritusAlvaro Corrada del Rio, S.J.
Map
Map of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Mayagüez.
Website
diocesisdemayaguez.org

The Diocese of Mayagüez (Latin: Dioecesis Maiaguezensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in the United States and consists of the western part of the island of Puerto Rico, an American commonwealth. The diocese is led by a prelate bishop, who pastors the motherchurch in the City of Mayagüez, Catedral Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria in front of the Plaza Colón.

The See of Mayagüez was canonically erected on March 1, 1976, and is a suffragan diocese of the Metropolitan Province of San Juan de Puerto Rico. The Diocese is subdivided into 29 Parishes: 17 originally located at the Diocese of Ponce, eight formerly at the Diocese of Arecibo, and four new parishes. Its jurisdiction includes the municipalities of Aguadilla, Rincón, Aguada, Moca, San Sebastián, Añasco, Mayagüez, Las Marías, Maricao, Hormigueros, Cabo Rojo, San Germán, and Sabana Grande.[2]

As of July, 2011 the bishop of the See of Mayagüez was Alvaro Corrada del Rio, SJ. He retired on May 9, 2020, and Ángel Luis Ríos Matos was appointed at that time to succeed him.

Ordinaries

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The list of the Bishops of Mayagüez (Latin rite) and their tenures of service:

  1. Bishop Ulises Aurelio Casiano Vargas (March 4, 1976 – July 6, 2011)
  2. Bishop Alvaro Corrada del Rio, S.J. (July 6, 2011 – May 9, 2020)
  3. Bishop Ángel Luis Ríos Matos (August 1, 2020 - )

Schools

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  • Colegio San Agustin, Cabo Rojo, Grades: PK-12
  • Colegio San Benito, Mayagüez, Grades PK-12
  • Colegio San Carlos, Aguadilla, Grades: PK-12 (Closed)
  • Academia Inmaculada Concepcion Elemental, Mayaguez, Grades: PK-6
  • Academia Inmaculada Concepcion - Superior, Mayagüez, Grades: 7-12
  • Colegio San José, San German, Grades: K-12
  • Academia San Luis, Lajas, Grades: K-12
  • Colegio La Milagrosa, Mayagüez, Grades:PK-12
  • Academia San Sebastian Martir, Grades: K-9
  • Academia Santa Rosa de Lima, Rincón, Grades PK-6 (closed around 2000).
  • Colegio Nuestra Señora de la Monserrate, Moca, Grades PK-8
  • Escuela Catolica de la Salle, Añasco, Grades: 1-9
  • Colegio San Agustin y Espiritu Santo, Sabana Grande, Grades: Pre-PreK-8

Statistics

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By the year 2004 its population consisted of 491,518 people, of which 376,000 were baptized, being 76.5% of the total population.

Year Population Priests Deacons Religious Parishes
  baptised total % number secular regular baptised
per priest
  men women  
1976 352.356 ? ? 56 21 35 6.292 4 105 25
1980 374.000 469.000 79,7 66 21 45 5.666 54 115 25
1990 426.000 519.000 82,1 74 40 34 5.756 2 39 149 29
1999 360.000 491.518 73,2 77 47 30 4.675 3 32 143 58
2000 360.000 491.518 73,2 71 41 30 5.070 3 32 135 58
2001 360.000 491.518 73,2 70 40 30 5.142 3 32 134 58
2002 360.000 491.518 73,2 68 38 30 5.294 4 32 133 58
2003 376.000 491.518 76,5 67 37 30 5.611 4 32 133 29
2004 376.000 491.518 76,5 70 40 30 5.371 4 32 114 29

San Juan Archdiocese bankruptcy

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On 7 September 2018, Judge Edward Godoy ruled that the bankruptcy filed by the Archdiocese of San Juan would also apply to every Catholic diocese in Puerto Rico, including Mayagüez, and that all would now have their assets protected under Chapter 11.[3][4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Diocese of Arecibo. Accessed 23 March 2019.
  2. ^ Diocesis de Ponce. Accessed 12 July 2021.
  3. ^ "Federal judge decides that bankruptcy filing applies to all of Puerto Rico's Roman Catholic churches". Pasquines. 27 September 2018. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  4. ^ "Judge: Bankruptcy applies to all Puerto Rico Catholic churches". Caribbean Business. 7 September 2018.
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18°12′04″N 67°08′18″W / 18.2011°N 67.1383°W / 18.2011; -67.1383