Reports: Blase Cupich to be next archbishop of Chicago.

CHICAGO (IL)
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho September 19, 2014

Atlanta — Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will succeed Cardinal Francis George as archbishop of Chicago, according to an Associated Press report. Earlier this evening the Archdiocese of Chicago announced it would hold a press conference for tomorrow morning at 9:30 Central. A spokesperson for the archdiocese would not confirm the purpose of the event, and Cupich did not respond to a request for comment. The AP report cites one anonymous source, which confirms rumors that began circulating this evening among several journalists who have gathered here this weekend for the Religion Newswriters Association conference. It’s not clear whether these rumors stem from the same source.

The appointment of George’s successor was widely considered to be Pope Francis’s most significant decision for the church in the United States. If true, the decision to tap Cupich to lead Chicago–the third largest U.S. diocese–signals a major change for the American church.

In 1997, Pope John Paul II selected George to be the eighth archbishop of Chicago. He was the first Windy City native to serve as archbishop, and he followed Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, a leading liberal churchman beloved of his people. Before long, Chicago Catholics would learn just how different George was from his predecessor. Highly regarded for his intellect, George never shied away from taking sides in the culture wars, most recently as a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act over its abortion-funding mechanism and the contraception mandate.

By contrast, Cupich is widely considered a moderate who has not always been in step with his more conservative colleagues in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. For example, he has expressed skepticism about the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops strategy of opposing Obamacare, and urged bishops to . And when the bishops were considering a draft of a statement on the economy, Cupich criticized it with vigor: “I don’t see that I would share this with anybody, or that it would make any difference.” He has expressed great enthusiasm for Pope Francis, praising the pontiff’s preferance for episcopal governance. He wrote:

Rather than limiting our consultation to those with financial and legal abilities, we also need to listen to those who work side by side with the poor each day, and who are on the frontlines in health care, education and other fields of ministry. We diminish our effectiveness when we do not call on these brothers and sisters to gain insight before making decisions in these areas. But, even more importantly, we pass up the chance to see how God is working through them and to more fully know God’s will.

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