Pope Francis has appointed Jesuit Father Michael C. Barber the next bishop of the Oakland, California diocese.
Bishop-designate Barber is currently the Director of Spiritual Formation
at Saint John’s Seminary in Brighton, Mass. and has been serving in
that capacity since 2010.
The announcement of his appointment was made on May 3 by the Holy See’s
press office.
He will succeed Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone who now
leads the Archdiocese of San Francisco.
The bishop-designate entered the Jesuits in 1973 and was ordained a priest in 1985.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy and history at Gonzaga
University in 1978, completed his theological studies at Regis College
at the University of Toronto in 1985, and obtained an ecclesiastical
license in dogmatic theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in
1989.
At 59 years-old, Bishop-designate Barber has served in numerous
capacities, including as a missionary in Western Samoa, an assistant
professor at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, a tutor and
chaplain at the University of Oxford, and as chaplain for the U.S. Navy
Reserve.
During his time at the Gregorian, he taught dogmatic theology and
conducted research on unpublished manuscripts of sermons by Blessed John
Henry Newman.
His time as a military chaplain included being called to active duty in
2003 to serve the 6,000 troops in the 4th Marine Air Wing who
participated in the invasion of Iraq.
He speaks English, Italian, Spanish and Latin.