The Roman Catholic Diocese of Xuân Lá»Âc () is a suffragan Latin diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the Archdiocese of Saigon in southern Vietnam, yet depends on the missionary Dicastery for Evangelization.
Its cathedral episcopal see is Cathedral of Christ the King (Nhàthá» ChÃÂnh toàChúa Giêsu Vua), dedicated to Christ the King, in Long Khánh, ÃÂá»Âng Nai, Southeastern Vietnam. The bishop, since January 16, 2021, is John ÃÂá» VÃÂn Ngân.
History
- It was erected on 14 October 1965, as Diocese of Xuân Lôc / Xuân Lá»Âc (Tiếng Viá»Ât) / æÂ¥ç¥¿ (æÂ£é«Âä¸ÂæÂÂ) / Xuanlocen(sis) (Latin), on territory split off from its Metropolitan, the Archdiocese of Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh city)
- On 22 November 2005, it lost part of its territory to establish the Diocese of Ba Ria.
Statistics
As of 2014, the diocese pastorally served 921,489 Catholics (30.5% of 3,020,800 total) on 5,964 kmò in 246 parishes with 498 priests (359 diocesan, 139 religious), 2,256 lay religious (447 brothers, 1,809 sisters) and 168 seminarians.
Bishops
(all Roman Rite)
Bishops of Xuân Lôc
- Joseph Lê VÃÂn Ấn (14 October 1965 - 17 June 1974)
- Dominique Nguyên VÃÂn Lãng (1 July 1974 - 22 February 1988)
- Paul Marie Nguyá»Â
n Minh NháºÂt (22 February 1988 - 30 September 2004)
- Dominique Nguyá»Â
n Chu Trinh (30 September 2004 - 7 May 2016)
- Joseph ÃÂinh ÃÂức ÃÂạo (7 May 2016 - 16 January 2021)
- John ÃÂá» VÃÂn Ngân (16 January 2021 â present)
Coadjutor Bishops
- Paul Marie Nguyá»Â
n Minh NháºÂt (16 July 1975 â 22 February 1988)
- Joseph ÃÂinh ÃÂức ÃÂạo (4 June 2015 - 7 May 2016)
Auxiliary Bishops
- Thomas Nguyá»Â
n VÃÂn Trâm (6 March 1992 - 22 November 2005), appointed Bishop of BàRá»Âa
- Thomas VÃ
© ÃÂình Hiá»Âu (25 July 2009 - 24 December 2012), appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Bùi Chu and later succeeded
- Joseph ÃÂinh ÃÂức ÃÂạo (28 February 2013 - 4 June 2015), appointed Coadjutor Bishop and subsequently succeeded here
- John ÃÂá» VÃÂn Ngân (2 May 2017 - 16 January 2021), appointed Bishop here
- Dominic Nguyá»Â
n Tuấn Anh (24 August 2024 - present)
Other secular clergy who became bishops
References
Sources and external links