Diocese of Metuchen Dioecesis Metuchenis | |
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St. Francis of Assisi Cathedral | |
![]() Coat of Arms of the Diocese of Metuchen | |
Location | |
Country | ![]() |
Territory | ![]() |
Ecclesiastical province | Metropolitan Province of Newark |
Coordinates | 40°32′32.8″N74°21′45.96″W / 40.542444°N 74.3627667°W |
Statistics | |
Area | 3,688 km2 (1,424 sq mi) |
Population
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Parishes | 90 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | November 19, 1981, incorporated December 31, 1981 |
Cathedral | Saint Francis of Assisi Cathedral |
Patron saint | Queenship of Mary [1] |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Leo XIV |
Bishop | Sede Vacante |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Cardinal Joseph Tobin |
Bishops emeritus | Paul Gregory Bootkoski |
Map | |
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Website | |
diometuchen |
The Diocese of Metuchen (Latin : Dioecesis Metuchenis) is a diocese of the Catholic church in the borough of Metuchen in New Jersey in the United States. It was established on November 19, 1981. The mother church is Saint Francis of Assisi Cathedral in Metuchen.
The Diocese of Metuchen encompasses the New Jersey counties of Middlesex, Somerset, Hunterdon and Warren.
The French envoy François Barbé-Marbois, writing from Philadelphia in 1785, estimated the Catholic population in the new States of New York and New Jersey at approximately 1700, with over half of them living in New Jersey. Priest traveled to New Jersey from St. Peter's Parish in New York City to provide ministry. The opening of mines, furnaces, glass works, and other industries attracted more Catholic immigrants to New Jersey. [2]
In 1789, after the American Revolution, Pope Pius VI elevated the Apostolic Prefecture of the United States to the new Diocese of Baltimore, including all of the new United States. [3] On April 8, 1808, Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of Philadelphia and the Diocese of New York, taking their territory from the Diocese of Baltimore. [4]
Responding to the population growth in New Jersey, the Vatican in 1853 erected the Diocese of Newark, taking its territory from Philadelphia and New York. In 1881, the Diocese of Trenton was canonically erected: its territory came from the Diocese of Newark. The Metuchen area would remain part of the Diocese of Trenton for the next 100 years. [5]
On November 18, 1981, Pope John Paul II erected the Diocese of Metuchen, taking Middlesex, Somerset, Hunterdon and Warren Counties from the Diocese of Trenton. [6] The pope named Auxiliary Bishop Theodore McCarrick of New York as the first bishop of the new diocese.
During his tenure, McCarrick erected new parishes in Perth Amboy, Califon, Skillman, Old Bridge, and Three Bridges. [7] He also oversaw the development of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, and the Bishop's Annual Appeal McCarrick also established ministries for African-Americans, Hispanics, anti-abortion rights activities, and the disabled. [7] He became archbishop of Newark in 1986.
Auxiliary Bishop Edward Hughes of Philadelphia replaced McCarrick as the second bishop of Metuchen. [8] Hughes retired in 1997.
John Paul II in 1997 appointed Vincent Breen from the Diocese of Brooklyn as the next bishop of Metuchen. [9] In 1998, the diocese launched its website. The diocese in 2001 opened Immaculate Conception School in Annandale for pre-K through fourth grade. The following school year, the school expanded enrollment through eighth grade. Also in 2001, the diocese dedicated the St. John Neumann Pastoral Center in Piscataway.
After Breen resigned in 2003, Auxiliary Bishop Paul Gregory Bootkoski of Newark succeeded him. [10] In 2006, Bootkoski launched the diocese's first synod. In January 2010, the diocese opened a new Catholic Center at Rutgers University.
After Bootkoski retired in 2016, Pope Francis appointed James Checchio, rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome, as the new bishop of Metuchen. [11]
In August 1997, police arrested Michael Santillo, who served at St. Mary's Church in Perth Amboy before leaving the priesthood in 1992. [12] Santillo pleaded guilty in June 1999 to one count of aggravated sexual assault and was sentenced later that year to 10 years in prison. [13]
John M. Banko from Mary Mother of God Parish in Hillsborough was charged in August 2001 with first-degree aggravated sexual assault and child endangerment. The police investigation revealed other allegations of Banko improperly touching children. [14] He was convicted of sexual assault in December 2002 and sentenced to 15 years in prison. [15] [16]
In 2003, Bishop Bootkoski established the Office of Child and Youth Protection and implement the Protecting God's Children program. That same year, he approved an $800,000 financial settlement to ten victims of sexual abuse by five clerics, including Santillo and Banko. [17] According to Cardinal Donald Wuerl, nobody from the Diocese of Metuchen informed him of these settlements, even after the retired McCarrick began living on the grounds of a seminary in the Archdiocese of Washington. [18]
Tomasz Adam Zielinski, from Christ the King Parish in Manville, was arrested on sexual assault charges in July 2008. A 16-year-old girl who had been sitting next to Zielinski on a flight from Poland to the United States accused him of fondling her and attempting to unzip her pants. [19] He pleaded guilty and was sentenced in January 2009 to one year in federal prison. [20]
In July 2018, former priest Robert Ciolek, in an interview with the New York Times, accused McCarrick of sexually molesting him in the 1980s when Clolek was a seminarian and McCarrick was bishop of Metuchen. McCarrick had been removed from ministry in June 2018 when the Archdiocese of New York determined that an accusation of him sexually abusing a 16-year-old boy 50 years earlier was credible. It was revealed that in 2005 and 2007, the Diocese of Metuchen, along with the Archdiocese of Newark, secretly paid financial settlements to Clolek and another priest abused by McCarrick. [18]
In September 2018, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops announced an investigation of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Metuchen along with the other New Jersey dioceses. It was widely assumed that the McCarrick allegations had triggered this move by the bishops. [21] McCarrick, already removed from ministry, was laicized in 2019.
In February 2019, the diocese released a list of 11 clergy with credible accusations of sexual abuse against minors. These clergy had been reported to law enforcement agencies. [22]
In December 2019, the New Jersey Legislature passed a law allowing a two-year legal lookback window, enabling sexual abuse lawsuits that were previously barred by the statute of limitations. [23] [24] That same month, James Grein, a New York resident, sued the diocese. He claimed McCarrick started abusing him as a minor when McCarrick was a priest in New York. As an adult, Grein later moved to the Diocese of Metuchen, where he alleged that McCarrick resumed the abuse. Grien accused the diocese of committing gross negligence. [24] [25] [26]
In 2020, the diocese updated its list of accused clergy to add seven more names. In July 2020, an anonymous man sued the diocese, claiming he had been sexually abused by McCarrick. The plaintiff, then a student with the Archdiocese of Newark, [27] maintained that McCarrick started abusing him when he was 14 in 1982 with the assistance of other priests. [28] The plaintiff revealed that the Diocese of Metuchen owned a beach house in Sea Girt on the Jersey Shore where McCarrick and other priests engaged in “open and obvious criminal sexual conduct”. The diocese allegedly covered up this illegal activities. [27] [28] The lawsuit stated that boys were assigned different rooms in the house and paired with adult clergymen. [28] The plaintiff also named three other diocesan priests as sexual abusers. [28] The diocese in 1988 sold the beach house to the Archdiocese of Newark.
The diocese has the following healthcare and social institutions as of 2025:
The coat of arms for the Diocese of Metuchen contains two silver qrants and two blue qrants. The four qrants are separated by a blue cross. One gold qrant contains a blue crowned M, the second gold qrant contains a red tongue of fire.