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The Diocese of Dallas (Latin: Diœcesis Dallasensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Catholic Church in North Texas in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of San Antonio.
St. Rita Catholic School (Dallas) - The school opened in 1964, and after that the building was added on to seven times. [ 3 ] St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School (Dallas) - It has separate facilities for grades Pre-Kindergarten through 2 (lower school) and grades 3-8 (upper school): [ 4 ] the upper school is in Wilshire Heights , [ 5 ] while the ...
Diocese of Victoria in Texas Diocese of Amarillo: Patrick James Zurek: Bishop of Amarillo (2008–present), former auxiliary bishop of San Antonio (1998–2008) Diocese of Austin Diocese of Dallas: Edward J. Burns: Bishop of Dallas (2017–present) Diocese of Pittsburgh: John Gregory Kelly: Auxiliary Bishop of Dallas (2016–present) Diocese of ...
The school was established in 1958 and is named for Thomas Kiely Gorman, the fourth bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas from 1954 to 1964. At the time of its founding, the school was within the boundaries of the Diocese of Dallas. The eastern portion of the Diocese of Dallas was ceded to the Diocese of Tyler, which was established in ...
The Diocese of Dallas may refer to: Texas. Episcopal Diocese of Dallas; Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas This page was last edited on 28 ...
At the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, the safety and well-being of everyone is of paramount importance,” the Diocese said in a statement. Reyes Mata is being held at the Garland Detention Center on ...
On August 22, 1969, Pope Paul VI suppressed the Diocese of Dallas-Fort Worth, erecting the Diocese of Fort Worth and the Diocese of Dallas. [4] He named Auxiliary Bishop John Cassata of Dallas-Fort Worth as the first bishop of Fort Worth. [5] When Cassata became bishop, the Catholic population of the new diocese was 67,000. Cassata retired in 1981.
The dioceses of Dallas is opposed to the ordination of gay clergy but has chosen to stay within the Episcopal Church. The Diocese of Dallas approved, at its 2006 diocesan convention, an amendment to the diocesan constitution that it would break with the Episcopal Church only if that body were no longer part of the worldwide Anglican Communion. [1]