Salvatore Ronald Matano

Wappen von Salvatore Matano

Salvatore Ronald Matano (* 15. September 1946 in Providence) ist ein US-amerikanischer Geistlicher und Bischof von Rochester.

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Der Rektor des Päpstlichen Nordamerika-Kolleg, James Aloysius Hickey, weihte ihn am 17. Dezember 1971 zum Priester.

Papst Johannes Paul II. ernannte ihn am 3. März 2005 zum Koadjutorbischof von Burlington. Der Apostolische Nuntius in den USA, Gabriel Montalvo Higuera, spendete ihm am 19. April desselben Jahres die Bischofsweihe; Mitkonsekratoren waren Sean Patrick O’Malley OFMCap, Erzbischof von Boston, und Kenneth Anthony Angell, Bischof von Burlington. Als Wahlspruch wählte er In Unitatem Fidei.

Nach der Emeritierung Kenneth Anthony Angells folgte er ihm am 9. November 2005 als Bischof von Burlington nach.

Am 6. November 2013 ernannte ihn Papst Franziskus zum Bischof von Rochester. Die Amtseinführung erfolgte am 3. Januar des folgenden Jahres.

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VorgängerAmtNachfolger
Kenneth Anthony AngellBischof von Burlington
2005–2013
Christopher Coyne
Matthew Harvey ClarkBischof von Rochester
seit 2013
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Coat of arms of Salvatore Matano.svg
(c) I, SajoR, CC BY-SA 2.5
Coat of arms of the U.S. bishop Salvatore Ronald Matano, Bishop of Rochester.

Episcopal Motto: “In Unitatem Fidei”

Bishop Matano adopted the phrase “In Unitatem Fidei” from the Latin scriptural passage of Saint Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians (4:13) and translated as “In the Unity of Faith.” By choosing this motto, Bishop Matano embraces the Apostle’s conviction that Jesus Christ desires that the entire family of God’s children, working together, strive to attain their fullness of maturity in the unity of the one Faith and the knowledge of the Son of God.

The Heraldic Description of the Coat of Arms of Bishop Matano

The right side of the shield (in the heraldic shield, the right and left are exchanged from the observer’s point of view, since it is customary to consider the right and the left side from the perspective of the soldier who, in ancient times, held his own shield), represents the Coat of Arms of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester. Upon the gold (or) field we see the Cross of Saint Andrew, (saltire) in heraldry, red (gules) with a silver (argent) crescent in the center. The diocesan shield was designed in the 1930’s by Mr. Pierre de Chaignon LaRose. The Cross of Saint Andrew was taken from the heraldry of the Diocese of Rochester in England, of which Saint Andrew was the principal Patron. It was in the See of Rochester, England, where the saintly Bishop, and later Cardinal, John Fisher faithfully exercised his episcopal ministry, unto the shedding of his own blood in martyrdom. In honor of Saint John Fisher’s fidelity, he became the patron of the Diocese of Rochester, New York. LaRose distinguished or “differenced” the new heraldry from the original, however, by replacing a scalloped shell in the center with the crescent, a symbol of the Blessed Virgin Mary, patroness of the United States of America, under her title of the Immaculate Conception.

The color red is the color of love and of blood, and is therefore representative of the Martyrdom of Saint Andrew, the first-called by Jesus Christ among the holy Apostles, and of Saint John Fisher, both of whom heroically held to the truth and authentically handed on the Catholic and Apostolic Faith as preachers, pastors, and constant intercessors before the throne of the Triune God. Gold, the most noble of all metals, is the symbol of the primary virtue of Faith, which enabled Saint Andrew and Saint John Fisher to believe all that God revealed through His Holy Church – and the ultimate commitment of their belief in the Son of God.

The left side is occupied by the personal heraldry of Bishop Matano; upon a blue (azure) field is displayed a silver moline cross taken from the heraldry of His Excellency’s native Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island; a golden star with seven points simultaneously recalls the Divine institution of the Seven Sacraments and the Seven Sorrows of Our Lady. The liturgical memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows is observed on the 15th day of September, the day of Bishop Matano’s birth.

Issuant from the base are seven silver hills on which the Eternal City of Rome – the city of the Bishop’s priestly formation and graduate education – and the City of Providence – the city of the Bishop’s birth and preliminary education – are said to be built.

The blue background symbolizes the ascent of the human soul towards God, with whom each of us was created to dwell in unapproachable light. The pontifical hat, also called a “saturno,” a “cappello romano,” or a “galero,” with its six tassels in three rows on either side of the shield, all in green, completes the design. These are the insignia proper to the heraldry of a prelate of the rank of Bishop, by instruction of the Holy See, on March 31, 1969.

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