Vatican City, May 28, 2021 / 06:10 am
Pope Francis on Friday appointed Msgr. Gregory Gordon as an auxiliary bishop of Las Vegas.
Gordon, 60, has served as vicar general, chancellor, and moderator of the curia of the Diocese of Las Vegas since 2020.
He worked at the Apostolic Nunciature to the United States from 2007 to 2014 under the late Archbishop Pietro Sambi and then Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò.
Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the current apostolic nuncio to the U.S., publicized Gordon’s appointment on May 28.
Originally from Philadelphia, Gordon moved with this family to Nevada when he was 11. He returned to Pennsylvania to attend St. Joseph’s University, where he discerned a vocation to the priesthood, partly as a result of John Paul II’s first visit to the United States in 1979.
“I had the opportunity to hear him and visit some of the sites at which he spoke. I think that really helped to cement at least a desire to be open to seminary and the priestly calling,” Gordon told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
He told the newspaper that his discernment to enter seminary was also based on “the parish priests that I had worked with and served with and who I admired.”
Within a year of the papal visit, Gordon enrolled at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia. He was sent to study in Rome at the Pontifical North American College, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in sacred theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University and later a licentiate from the Pontifical Lateran University.
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