Two Ohio dioceses are considering a potential merger, according to a joint letter issued Dec. 11 by Bishop Earl K. Fernandes of the Diocese of Columbus, Ohio, and Bishop Paul J. Bradley, apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Steubenville, Ohio, who said they “have begun very preliminary discussions regarding the potential merger of the dioceses.”
The bishops said “the Apostolic Nunciature has asked the dioceses to work together to consider how different dimensions of the dioceses, including the temporal aspects of life, might be affected by sucsdh a proposal.”
The move comes a year after a similar attempt was put on hold by former Steubenville Bishop Jeffrey M. Monforton.
In October 2022, Bishop Monforton — whom Pope Francis appointed auxiliary bishop of Detroit in September — announced a potential merger of the dioceses due to a downturn in demographics and vocations.
The prospect sparked “disappointment and even fear,” Bishop Monforton later admitted in a Nov. 7, 2022, letter to the diocese announcing the merger plans had been temporarily shelved.
Now, “while no decision has been made, due diligence is needed so an educated and responsible decision can be discerned in a timely manner,” wrote Bishop Fernandes and Bishop Bradley.
“Ultimately the decision is up to the Holy Father,” they wrote. “The work has begun, and as the work continues, updates will be provided.”
They asked clergy and laity “to pray that the unified work may be fruitful.”
The Vatican erected the Columbus diocese in 1868. It covers 23 counties in central and south central Ohio. Created in 1944, the Steubenville diocese covers 13 counties in southeastern Ohio. According to 2021 statistics, the Columbus diocese has a Catholic population of nearly 290,000 out of a total population of just over 2.8 million. Statistics on the Steubenville Diocese from 2020, the latest available, show that there are just over 30,000 Catholics out of a total population of about 496,000.
Besides Columbus and Steubenville, Ohio has three other Catholic dioceses, Cleveland, Toledo and Youngstown, and one archdiocese, Cincinnati.