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With approximately 300 parishioners, St. Boniface Catholic Church is a parish with an urban mission. It is located close to downtown Louisville in a neighborhood that is undergoing tremendous transition – a transition that will be a positive one for the community, the neighborhood, the parishioners and the church.

Located in southeastern Jefferson County, Mercy Academy has served young women since 1885. Since its establishment, more than 6,000 young women have sought the unique blend of excellence, challenge and personalized attention that are the hallmarks of a Mercy education.

Statement of Most Reverend Joseph E. Kurtz, D.D.
June 12, 2007 — With trust in the grace of Jesus Christ and in the Providential Plan of our Heavenly Father, I accept the appointment of His Holiness Benedict XVI as the Archbishop of Louisville with eagerness and joy. Pledging my filial obedience and fraternal affection to our Holy Father, I will seek a pastoral leadership of unity in truth and charity that marks his leadership in his care of the Universal Church.

Deeply grateful for the Grace of Baptism and Holy Orders and for the continued privilege to serve Christ and His faithful as a bishop, I rely on that grace as I firmly and totally commit myself to minister to the need of the people of God in the Archdiocese of Louisville, in collaboration with my brother priests. I am eager to meet all the priests and all those who minister to the faithful of the archdiocese and to love and serve with them, seeking the unity in truth and in charity that echoes the prayer of Jesus as well as the Commonwealth of Kentucky’s motto: “United we stand; Divided we fall.” May the Lord Jesus give me the grace to proclaim the Good News with vigor; to celebrate the Sacred Mysteries, most especially the Holy Eucharist, with reverence, devotion and joy; and to provide pastoral leadership in truth and with pastoral charity. Aware of the deep foundation of Catholicism in the See of Louisville, and its roots in Bardstown, I approach the 200th anniversary of its foundation with joy, gratitude and eagerness for a renewal in Christ.   

I am thankful to Archbishop Kelly for the fraternity and support he has fostered in the seven years in which he has served as my metropolitan. I look forward to showing the same pastoral charity and affection to the people of Louisville as he has shown, always respecting the dignity of each of the faithful. Likewise I seek to foster a unity that is truly ecumenical and one that respects interfaith opportunities. I look forward to making my home in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the beautiful city of Louisville.

I pledge my fraternal support and friendship to my brother bishops of the Province of Louisville and pledge to continue the sterling commitment by Archbishop Kelly to foster unity in Christ.

Giving thanks to Almighty God for the great privilege to serve as bishop of Knoxville, I extend my love and gratitude to the faithful of Knoxville, most especially brother priests, deacons, and the men and women of the consecrated life. These seven years have been blessings to me, and I rely on their prayers and ongoing affection as I pledge my own.
   
With great anticipation, I await my installation as Archbishop on the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 15 August 2007. This date is so apt in that it is the Patronal Feast of the Cathedral and coincides with the Thirtieth Anniversary of Archbishop Kelly’s Episcopal Ordination. May all that we do be entrusted to Mary, our Mother, who never fails to lead us to her Only-begotten Son, our Lord Jesus.

“Take courage and be stouthearted, all you who hope in the Lord.” Psalm 31: 25