Armando Xavier Ochoa

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Armando Xavier Ochoa
Bishop of Fresno
Coat of arms of Armando Xavier Ochoa.svg
Church Roman Catholic
See Fresno
In office 2011—
Predecessor John Steinbock
Successor (incumbent)
Orders
Ordination May 23, 1970
Personal details
Born April 3, 1943
Oxnard, California
Previous post Bishop of El Paso, Auxiliary Bishop of Los Angeles/ Bishop of Sitifis (titular)

Armando Xavier Ochoa, D.D. [1] (born April 3, 1943) [2] is the Bishop of Fresno and was formerly the fifth [3][4] Bishop of El Paso. Ochoa is an advocate of diocesan foster care programs and responsible water use.[5]

Early life

Armando Ochoa grew up in Oxnard, California [6] and was educated at institutions such as Ventura College and St. John's Seminary.[7] He was ordained a priest on May 23, 1970. Ochoa served at three parishes in Los Angeles before becoming an administrator of Sacred Heart Parish in Lincoln Heights, CA in 1984.[8]

Episcopal appointments

Ochoa was named titular bishop of Sitifis[9][10] as an auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles by Pope John Paul II during late December 1986.[11] He was consecrated on February 23, 1987 by Cardinal Roger Mahony. While as an auxiliary bishop, Ochoa was the principal co-consecrator of Bishops Joseph Martin Sartoris, Thomas John Curry and Gabino Zavala.

On April 1, 1996, Ochoa was appointed as the bishop of the Diocese of El Paso and installed on June 26 of the same year. During the eleven-year span between 1999 and 2009, there were only two ordinations to the priesthood in the Diocese of El Paso.[citation needed]

On December 1, 2011 the Pope appointed Ochoa as the bishop of the Diocese of Fresno, California, succeeding the late Bishop John Steinbock, who had died of lung cancer in December 2010 (the Fresno Diocese has an area of 91,268; a total population of 2,778,000; a Catholic population of 1,084,000; 166 priests; 46 permanent deacons; and 152 religious).

Positions

Ochoa considers the ordination of woman priests to be a moot point due to papal opposition; he believes that homosexuals should remain celibate in accordance with Church doctrine requiring all unmarried people to remain celibate; he believes that the priest shortage will be solved through faith rather than through allowing a married priesthood; and fears that teaching children about condoms in a school setting would send a "mixed message" regarding pre-marital sex.[12]

References

Sources

Episcopal succession

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of El Paso
1996–2011
Succeeded by
Mark J. Seitz[2]


  1. Diocese of El Paso Dioecesis Elpasensis Retrieved: 2010-03-18.
  2. http://www.elpasodiocese.org/latest-news/565-bishop-mark-j-seitz