By Ana Rodriguez Soto - The Archdiocese of Miami
Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC
Archbishop Thomas Wenski and Miami's new auxiliary bishop-elect, Msgr. Peter Baldacchino of the Archdiocese of Newark, speak to the media after the official announcement was made.
Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC
Miami's auxiliary bishop-elect, Msgr. Peter Baldacchino, 53, smiles broadly after making his statement during the press conference where his appointment was announced.
If any priest is suited to serve in Miami, it seems Msgr. Peter Baldacchino, 53, comes ready-made. And that perhaps is what Pope Francis thought when he appointed the Newark priest to be Miami�s 10th auxiliary bishop.
The appointment was announced at a press conference Feb. 20 at the archdiocesan Pastoral Center. Msgr. Baldacchino�s ordination is set for March 19, the feast of St. Joseph, at St. Mary Cathedral.
�He�s been in the trenches. He�s not a bureaucrat,� Archbishop Thomas Wenski said after making the announcement. �I think it reflects one of the priorities of Pope Francis but also it fits with me.�
- Msgr. Peter Baldacchino was born Dec. 5, 1960 in Sliema, Malta, the second oldest of four children � three boys and a girl. His sister, Pauline is older but he is the eldest of the boys. He has 11 nieces and nephews. His father, Rinaldo, is still alive but his mother, Leonida, died in September 2001.
- His family joined the Neocatechumenal Way when he was 13. He obtained licenses in electrical installation and worked as a technical manager for Canada Dry Bottling Company in Malta before studying philosophy at the University of Malta.
- His vocation to the priesthood emerged after he attended the 1989 World Youth Day in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, and heard Pope John Paul II say, �Do not be afraid to be holy.�
- The desire to pursue the vocation to priesthood led him to the Archdiocese of Newark, where he studied at the Neocatechumenal Way�s Redemptoris Mater Seminary. He was ordained for the Archdiocese of Newark May 25, 1996 and served as parochial vicar at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Ridgewood, N.J., until 1999.
- Since 1999, he has served as chancellor of Our Lady of Divine Providence Mission in Turks and Caicos Islands, a �missio sui juris� (independent mission) for which the Archbishop of Newark is responsible.
- He became pastor of Our Lady of Divine Providence Church there in 2002 and in 2009 was named a Chaplain to His Holiness, with the honorary title of monsignor.
�He is a good fit for Miami because of his life experience,� Archbishop Wenski said.
He added that Miami � with more than one million Catholics � is a macrocosm of the multicultural microcosm the bishop-elect lived in the Turks and Caicos, whose entire population is about 37,000. Less than a third are Catholics.
�I was happy to serve in the Archdiocese of Newark; I was glad to serve in building the Roman Catholic Mission in Turks and Caicos Islands. I look forward to serving the Archdiocese of Miami,� Bishop-elect Baldecchino said at the press conference.
�We do everything. We wash the plates, we wash the laundry,� he explained, holding up his calloused hands.
�He�s a missionary priest,� said Father Emanuele De Nigris, pastor of St. Cecilia Parish in Hialeah who, like Msgr. Baldacchino, studied for the priesthood at the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Newark, N.J.
Redemptoris Mater seminaries are directed by the Neocatechumenal Way, �an itinerary of Catholic formation� for individuals and families that emphasizes �missionary zeal� in spreading the Gospel in today�s world � or as Pope John Paul II called it, the �new evangelization.�
�He built the church (in Turks and Caicos) from scratch,� Father De Nigris said, pointing out that in 15 years the mission territory has grown from no Catholic churches to two churches � another one in Grand Turk � and one school. Weekly Mass attendance has grown from about 40 in the early years to more than 1,000 today.
Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC
Msgr. Peter Baldacchino, 53, auxiliary bishop-elect of Miami, speaks to local media after his appointment was announced.
Bishop-elect Baldacchino said his appointment to Miami �opens up a lot of possibilities for evangelization.�
Asked if he had any ideas about what he would first do here, he replied humbly: �I am trying not to have first ideas. I�m trying to follow rather than lead at the moment. The will of God is not my will. I need to learn to submit my will to the will of God.�
He called Miami a �new chapter� in his life and said, �I really look forward to the surprises that God has for me � for us.�
The bishop-elect will remain in Miami until Saturday, when he will return to the Turks and Caicos to sign the paperwork necessitated by his departure and pack up his belongings.
�There�s not much,� he said.
He will then return to Miami for good. �This is home now,� he added.
Before his ordination, he will go on a week-long retreat. Then, in Archbishop Wenski�s words, �he�ll hit the ground running, because we have a busy season ahead of us.�
Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC
From left: Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski, Auxilary Bishop-elect Peter Baldacchino and archdiocesan chancellor Msgr. Chanel Jeanty await the start of the press conference.
Comments from readers
Thank you for the wonderful things you have done for the parish. It's been our 10th year & we have been blessed by it. The parishioners in Turks & Caicos Islands will surely miss your presence!
Love & prayers,
Alvin, Windy, & Breanna Macion
Maltese people rejoiced at the news. We love you and pray for you!
May God Bless you Peter!!
May He let you you see and follow His will!!
Keep you in my prayers (even from Spain)!!
We rejoice at your nomination and assure you of our prayers!
Mario Audrey and the kids:
Naomi Gabriel Matthias MaryJO and Mariana
all the way from Guam