Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Jeffrey S. Grob, who grew up on a farm just
west of Madison in Cross Plains, will be installed as the 12th
archbishop of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, the Vatican announced
Monday.
Grob, 63, will succeed Jerome E. Listecki, who gave his
notice of retirement on March 12, as bishops are required to do when
they turn 75. Listecki has been Milwaukee's archbishop since 2010.
Ordained a bishop in the Archdiocese of Chicago in November 2020,
Grob (pronounced "Graab") will be installed as archbishop of Milwaukee
on Jan. 14. Listecki will continue in his position until then.
"While
still recovering from the surprise of the Holy Father's appointment, I
am deeply grateful for the opportunity to take up this new role in my
home state," Grob said in a statement. "And trusting deeply in the
Lord's goodness, I commit myself to the service of the people of the
Archdiocese of Milwaukee. I am excited to get to know them and look
forward to growing together in faith."
Once installed, Grob will
face a range of issues: a shrinking Catholic population, empty and
underused buildings, an ongoing need for more priests, and divisions
over social and cultural issues. This year’s election season has
exacerbated those social and cultural divisions, particularly the
Church’s opposition to abortion, birth control, in vitro fertilization,
and full LGBTQ+ acceptance. Grob will also be called on to maintain
Catholic schools' enrollment numbers and continue reaching out to Milwaukee's large poor and vulnerable population.
Almost
all mainline Christian faiths have seen precipitous drops in the pews,
but the smaller presence of Catholicism is particularly evident in
Milwaukee, where Catholic churches historically have anchored
neighborhoods and acted as virtual community centers.
Today,
the Archdiocese of Milwaukee tallies 184 parishes, a nearly 30% drop
from 60 years ago, when a building boom was underway. It counts about
530,000 Catholics, a 23% drop over the same period. Increasingly,
priests serve multiple parishes through collaborative arrangements, and
more collaborations and mergers are expected in coming years.
Three of five state dioceses now led by natives of Wisconsin
The
Milwaukee archdiocese covers Milwaukee, Waukesha, Ozaukee, Washington,
Sheboygan, Fond du Lac, Dodge, Walworth, Racine and Kenosha. There are
five Catholic dioceses in Wisconsin; Milwaukee is the archdiocese
because of its size and historical importance.
Once Grob is installed,
three of those dioceses will be led by bishops who are Wisconsin
natives.
The Madison diocese is led by Bishop Donald J. Hying, who is
from West Allis, and the Superior diocese in led by Bishop James Powers,
who is from Baldwin. The two other Wisconsin dioceses are La Crosse,
under Gerard Battersby from Detroit, and Green Bay, under David Ricken
from Dodge City, Kansas.
A native of the south side of Chicago and
both a civil and canon lawyer, Listecki was the bishop of La Crosse
when he was appointed to the Milwaukee position.
He became known
as a straightforward communicator who reinforces church teachings and
has good relationships with priests and parishioners.
As he headed
toward retirement, Listecki said he took pride in boosting enrollment
at the roughly 100 schools in the archdiocese.
He also touted the
archdiocese's return to worship and in-person schooling after the start
of the COVID-19 pandemic as one of the earliest in the country. And he
said Mass attendance has rebounded to pre-pandemic levels.
This spring, nine men were ordained to the priesthood in
Milwaukee, the most since 1992. The St. Francis de Sales Seminary is
full, he said, with a total of 86 men studying, a sevenfold increase
from when Listecki became archbishop, and there were 12 men in the
seminary.
Listecki also led the archdiocese through a painful
process of responding to victims of clergy sex abuse. In 2015, the
archdiocese agreed to pay $21 million to compensate victims of abuse.
That settlement allowed the church to emerge from bankruptcy filings.
The period left some grateful to Listecki for turning the diocese around
and putting it on the road to healing. It left others bitter and
dissatisfied that the church had done all it could to be transparent.
Grob is a lifelong Badgers fan, a learned priest
Born
in 1961, Grob went to St. Francis Xavier Grade School in Cross Plains,
and Holy Name High School Seminary in Madison. He received his
bachelor’s in religious studies from Pontifical College Josephinum in
Columbus, Ohio, and his master’s in divinity from University of St. Mary
of the Lake in Mundelein, Illinois. He has two doctorates: one in canon
law from St. Paul University in Ottawa, Ontario, and one in philosophy
from University of Ottawa in Ottawa, Ontario.
He was ordained to
the priesthood in 1992 in Chicago, at age 31. In addition to two parish
assignments, he held a number of leadership positions in the Chicago
Archdiocese — assistant to the chancellor, associate vicar for canonical
services, judicial vicar and chancellor. He was appointed an auxiliary
bishop of Chicago on Sept. 11, 2020, and ordained two months later.
His
episcopal motto is "Jesus is the vine," which refers to the Bible
verse, "I am the vine, you are the branches." Grob is said to be a
lifelong Wisconsin Badgers football and hockey fan, and enjoys movies,
German food and walking.
In his four years as auxiliary bishop, he
has been the vicar – or leader – of churches in Lake County, Illinois,
and portions of northern Cook County. That territory, known as a
vicariate, includes Des Plaines, Elk Grove Village, Lake Forest, Mount
Prospect, Mundelein, Schaumburg and Waukegan.
Grob lives at the
University of St. Mary of the Lake, the location of Mundelein Seminary,
where some Wisconsin priests have studied. At a press conference Monday,
Grob said he received the news of his move to Milwaukee on Oct. 15
He will be installed as the new archbishop by the papal nuncio to the United States, Cardinal Christophe Pierre.