HIS EXCELLENCY
THE MOST REVEREND EDWARD K. BRAXTON, PH.D., S.T.D.
Bishop of Belleville , Illinois
Biographical Background
Bishop Edward K. Braxton was born on June 28, 1944 in Chicago ,
Ill. , the third of five children of Mr. and Mrs. Cullen L. Braxton
Sr. He was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago on May
13, 1970 by John Cardinal Cody, Archbishop of Chicago. Bishop Braxton
was ordained a bishop in the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis by
Archbishop (now Cardinal) Justin Rigali on May 17, 1995 , the 25
th anniversary of his First Mass. Bishop Braxton served as Pastor
of St. Catherine of Siena Parish in Oak Park , Ill. , for five years
prior to his appointment to St. Louis . His parents, Evelyn and
Cullen Braxton, were residents of Oak Park and active members of
this unique, urban and suburban parish. His mother continues to
reside in the parish.
The future Bishop studied for the priesthood at Quigley Preparatory
Seminary, Niles College Seminary and St. Mary of the Lake Seminary
, Mundelein , Ill. , in the Archdiocese of Chicago, where he earned
his BA, MA, S.T.B. and S.T. L. degrees. He served as a deacon at
St. Raymond De Penafort Parish in Mount Prospect , Ill. , and spent
his first year in the priesthood as Associate Pastor of Holy Name
Cathedral. He was Associate Pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Winnetka
Ill. , from 1971-1973. There he was deeply influenced by his Pastor,
the renowned liturgist and pastoral pioneer, Msgr. Reynold Hillenbrand,
one of the founders of the Christian Family Movement, which urged
the Christian faithful to become genuinely involved in the life
of the Church. He was a graduate student at the Catholic University
of Louvain in Belgium from 1973 to 1975 where he earned a Ph.D.
in Religious Studies and an S.T.D. in Systematic Theology summa
cum laude . The focus of his studies was on the pastoral implication
of the concepts of sacrament, myth, symbol, metaphor, and metaphysics
in the theological methodology of the influential Jesuit theologian
Bernard J.F. Lonergan and their relationship to the teachings of
the Second Vatican Council. While at Louvain , he continued to do
parish ministry at American military bases in Germany and at Our
Lady of Mercy Parish, the American Parish in Brussels
Returning to Chicago , Fr. Braxton served as Associate Pastor of
St. Felicitas Parish on the south side while pursuing a Post-Doctoral
Fellowship with Fr. David Tracy, Langdon Gilkey and Mercia Eliade
at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago . Krister Stendahl,
the Dean of Harvard University Divinity School invited him to fill
the William A. Coolidge Chair of Ecumenical Thought at Harvard from
1976 to 1977. While at Harvard he lived at Lowell House and did
pastoral ministry at St. Paul 's Parish in Cambridge . The next
year he was a visiting professor of theology at the University of
Notre Dame. The future Bishop became Chancellor for Theological
Affairs to Bishop James A. Hickey of Cleveland in 1978 at the request
of the Apostolic Delegate, Belgian Archbishop Jean Jadot, who knew
him from Louvain . He continued this work as Special Assistant for
Theological Affairs when Bishop Hickey became the Archbishop (later
Cardinal) of Washington DC in 1980. He served as the Cardinal's
personal theologian, research assistant, and theological resource
person for the Diocesan Curia.
He was one of the first priests to be appointed to this type of
collaborative work with a bishop on a full-time basis. During this
time, he lived at St. John the Baptist Church in Silver Spring ,
Md. , where he was actively involved in parish ministry. He became
the Scholar in Residence at the North American College , the U.S.
Bishops' seminary in Rome in 1983 at the recommendation of Cardinal
Hickey.
When Bishop Braxton returned from Rome , Cardinal Bernardin appointed
him to serve as the Director of Calvert House, the Catholic Student
Center at the University of Chicago , from 1983 to 1986. He served
as a peritus for the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa
and Madagascar in Kinshasa , Zaire (now Congo ) during the summer
of 1984. In August of 1985 he addressed the 43rd International Eucharistic
Congress in Nairobi , Kenya on the topic "The Eucharist and the
Catholic Family."
When the late John Cardinal O'Connor convened the National Symposium
On Black Catholics in New York in September of 1985, he invited
the future Bishop Braxton to give the keynote address, "Black Catholics
in America: Where Do We Go From Here?" (Later published in America
) In August 1986, he was one of five American priests selected to
represent the priests of the United States at the International
Symposium on the Priesthood sponsored by the National Federation
of Priests' Councils in the United States , Canada , Australia ,
England and Wales . Priests from fifteen English-speaking countries
around the world participated in the Symposium held in Chicago .
From 1986 to 1992 the Bishop worked full time as Official Theological
Consultant to William H. Sadlier Inc., a New York based leading
publisher in the field of Catholic Religious Education. He worked
with the authors of all catechetical texts to ensure that they faithfully
expressed the teachings of the Catholic Church while giving numerous
presentations for Sadlier on the Catechism of the Catholic Church
. His office was in the shadow of the World Trade Center where
he knew people who perished in the terrible events of September
11, 2001 . During his years in New York , he lived at St. Joseph
's Church in Greenwich Village and at Notre Dame Parish on the campus
of Columbia University and he was actively involved in the pastoral
life of both parishes. Cardinal Bernardin called him back to Chicago
and appointed him Pastor of St. Catherine of Siena Parish in August
1992. Shortly afterwards he was elected a member of the Senate of
Priests of the Archdiocese.
Throughout his ministry the Bishop has frequently been invited
to preach in major Catholic and Protestant pulpits, such as the
National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, St. Mary's Cathedral,
San Francisco , the Sage Memorial Chapel at Cornell University ,
The Memorial Church at Harvard University , and The Rockefeller
Chapel at The University of Chicago. He has preached many retreats
for priests, deacons, religious, and lay people around the United
States , as well as in Canada , Central and South America , Europe
and Africa . He has been the keynote speaker at many national Catholic
gatherings, such as the National Catholic Education Association.
His writings on a wide range of theological and pastoral topics
have appeared in the Harvard Theological Review , Theological
Studies , Louvain Studies , The Irish Theological
Quarterly , Chicago Studies , Origins , The
New York Times , America , Commonweal , The
National Catholic Reporter , U.S. Catholic , The Priest
, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch , The Ligourian ,
The Lake Charles American Press and many other journals and
periodicals. He is the author of numerous articles on African-American
Catholics, many of which have been translated and published abroad.
His books The Wisdom Community and The Faith Community:
One, Holy Catholic and Apostolic are widely used in Catholic
colleges and seminaries. His professional associations include the
American Academy of Religion, The Catholic Theological Society of
America, The Canon Law Society of America and the Black Catholic
Clergy Caucus. His profile is included in Who's Who in Black
America and Who's Who in Midwest America . He is able
to converse in French and he has a reading knowledge of Spanish
and Italian.
Pope John Paul II appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of St. Louis on
March 28, 1995 . His Episcopal Ordination was on May 17, 1995 ,
just days after the Silver Jubilee of his Priesthood Ordination
(May 13, 1970) and his parents' 55 th wedding anniversary (May 5,
1940). One week after he became a bishop, May 23, 1995 , his father,
Cullen, died at age 80 in his Oak Park home. Only one and one-half
years later ( January 30, 1997 ) his only brother and his dearest
friend, Cullen L. Braxton Jr., died of cancer. His personal, pastoral,
and theological reflections on these profound losses in his life
were published in a two-part essay, "Grief Observed: A Lenten
Refection" in the March and April 1998 issues of The Priest
. As he begins his episcopal ministry in Belleville , his mother,
Evelyn, now 85 is not able to be present because of her failing
health.
As Auxiliary Bishop of St. Louis , Bishop Braxton served as Vicar
General with pastoral responsibility for four Deaneries embracing
one hundred parishes. Because the Archdiocese was in the midst of
a Strategic Planning Program, the bishop was engaged in the difficult
work of helping small city parishes to determine whether they should
merge with neighboring parishes or close. He was the Archbishop's
representative to Catholic Hospitals and was actively involved in
the discussions concerning the appropriateness of St. Louis (Jesuit)
University selling its hospital to a for profit corporation, Tenet.
He oversaw the ministry of the Permanent Deacons in the diocese.
With over 215 deacons, St. Louis has one of the largest diaconate
communities in the United States . He oversaw the work of restructuring
and strengthening the Deacon Formation program.
He also oversaw the work of the Human Rights Office, which strives
to apply the gospel of Jesus Christ, the teachings of the Vatican
Council, and the Social teachings of the Popes to the specific challenges
of justice and peace which people face every day. He was responsible
for the work of evangelization in the Archdiocese as well. As coordinator
of the work of Catholic Charities, the bishop was responsible for
the largest private social service program in Missouri . He also
had a variety of responsibilities with Priests' Personnel Board,
the Archdiocesan Pastoral Council, The Archdiocesan Curia, The Kenrick-Glennon
Seminary and the Archdiocesan Development Appeal. Every three months
he hosted an informal gathering for all interested priests in the
Archdiocese to discuss any topic in theology they found of interest.
Bishop Braxton was responsible for the erection of Wiktor Szostolo's
well-known sculpture, "The Angel of Harmony" next to the
St. Louis Cathedral on Lindell Blvd. The face of the majestic angel
with wings made of wind chimes is that of the Bishop's brother,
Lawrence. Children of different backgrounds play in harmony at the
feet of the angel. On the base are Dr. Martin Luther King's challenging
words, "Love is the only force powerful enough to turn an enemy
into a friend."
As a member of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, the bishop is a past member the Administrative Board, the
committees on Education, Catechesis, Science and Human Values, the
Permanent Diaconate, Doctrine, Scripture Translation, Implementing
the Mandatum (Ex Corde Ecclisiae), and International Policy (Social
Development and World Peace) which took him to the Sudan. He is
currently a member of the committees on Liturgy, Evangelization,
and the American College Seminary at the University of Louvain (Chairman).
The Bishop
was appointed Second Bishop of Lake Charles December 12, 2000 and
installed February 22, 2001 . He was actively and energetically
involved in every aspect of the diocese. He made the ministry of
bishop a visible reality not only in religious contexts but in educational,
social, cultural and political contexts as well. In the wake of
the terrible events of September 11, 2001 the bishop's homilies,
talks, and articles ("God on Our Side?" "We
All Worship Allah: An Introduction to Islam") had a very
positive impact on the community.
On March 15, 2005 , Bishop Braxton was appointed
Eighth Bishop of Belleville. He was installed in the Cathedral of
Saint Peter on June 22, 2005 . Bishop Braxton's life and ministry
as a bishop is integrated with a wide variety of interests. He is
an avid reader of theology, philosophy, psychology, sociology, literature,
and the arts. (He is especially interested in serious international
films.) He has traveled extensively in Africa , Europe , Asia ,
North and South America . He enjoys a wide variety of music. He
likes the outdoors: sailing, whale watching, hiking, skiing, and
roller blading. He particularly enjoys the adventure of white water
rafting on the Colorado River of the Grand Canyon .
Good spiritual direction is an essential component of his life.
Each year he makes a silent retreat at a Trappist Monastery, usually
Gethsemani in Kentucky or SnowMass in Colorado . Two of the most
important religious experiences in his life have been thirty-day
directed Ignatian Retreats. The writings of St. John of the Cross,
St. Francis DeSales, St. Catherine of Siena, John Henry Newman,
Gerard Manley Hopkins, S.J., Thomas Merton, and Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. have had a significant impact on him. He has explored
centering prayer and Zen relaxation techniques. Close contact with
and genuine communication with his family and those dear bishops,
priests, deacons, religious, and lay people who are in his life
for his life are also important components of his interior world.
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