Military Ordinariate of Ecuador
Military Ordinariate of Ecuador Obispado Castrense del Ecuador | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Ecuador |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 30 March 1983 (41 years ago) |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | vacant |
The Military Ordinariate of Ecuador (
Ecuadorian Armed Forces
and their families.
Statistics
As of 2014[update], the ordinariate had 118 missions with 60 priests (50 diocesan, 10 religious) and 10 lay religious (brothers).
History
It was established as Military vicariate of Ecuador on 30 March 1983, with the first military vicar appointment on 5 August 1983.
It was elevated to Military ordinariate on 21 July 1986, the incumbent accordingly promoted.
Ordinaries
(all Roman Rite) [1]
- Military Vicar of Ecuador
- Cellæ in Proconsulari (1969.05.17 – 1980.06.28), next Bishop of Ibarra(Ecuador) (1980.06.28 – 1983.08.05)
- Military Ordinaries of Ecuador
- Coadjutor Archbishop of Guayaquil(Ecuador) (1988.03.25 – 1989.12.07); next succeeded as Metropolitan Archbishop of Guayaquil (1989.12.07 – retired 2003.05.07), died 2006
- S. Maria in Via(2010.11.20 [2010.11.28] – ...)
- Miguel Angel Aguilar Miranda (14 February 2004 – retired 18 June 2014); previously Bishop of Guaranda (Ecuador) (1991.04.11 – 2004.02.14)
- Segundo René Coba Galarza (18 June 2014 – 12 December 2019), also Secretary General of Episcopal Conference of Ecuador (2014.05.08 – ...); previously Titular Bishop of Vegesela in Byzacena (2006.06.07 – 2014.06.18) as Auxiliary Bishop of above Quito (2006.06.07 – 2014.06.18); next Bishop of Ibarra (2019.12.12 - ...)
See also
References
Sources and external links
- GCatholic - Obispado Castrense del Ecuador with incumbent bio links
- Military Ordinariate of Ecuador (Catholic-Hierarchy)