Ordination of Bishop Paul Etienne
		  Update from Cheyenne #3
		  By Sean Gallagher
		  The trip to Cheyenne  for the ordination of Bishop Paul Etienne was quite a whirlwind.  We arrived about three hours before the  liturgy began.  And between getting out  of the airport, getting our rooms arranged at the hotel at which we were  staying and changing clothes for the Mass, there was little time left for  relaxation before the ordination.
          It took place in the Cheyenne Civic   Center, an auditorium  that seats about 1,600 people.  I  understand that this location was chosen for the ordination because the  diocese’s cathedral does not seat that many and, in any case, is currently  undergoing restoration work.
          The liturgy was a joyful event.  Catholics from across Wyoming  and Indiana  were there to participate in it.  They  were joined by Cardinal Roger Mahoney of Los    Angeles and many other bishops.  Included among them were Archbishop Charles  J. Chaput of Denver,  the principal consecrator of Bishop Etienne and Archbishop Daniel M. Buechlein  and Bishop David Ricken, his co-consecrators.   Bishop Ricken, who now leads the Diocese of Green Bay, Wisc., is Bishop  Etienne’s immediate predecessor in Cheyenne.
          Also present was Archbishop Pietro Sambi, the apostolic  nuncio to the United States.  He was there as the formal representative of  Pope Benedict XVI.
          At the start of the liturgy, Archbishop Chaput interestingly  compared the theology of what it means to be a good bishop to the theology of  marriage.  Archbishop Sambi then spoke  and referred to a homily that Pope Benedict recently gave at an episcopal  ordination in which he exhorted the new bishops to be bearers of Christ’s  healing.  He also read the apostolic  letter that formally appointed then-Father Etienne as the next bishop of Cheyenne.
          Bishop Robert Lynch of St.    Petersburg, Fla. gave  the homily at the ordination.  He and  Bishop Etienne worked together at the bishops’ conference more than 20 years  ago when Bishop Etienne was still a layman.   It was a heartfelt and humorous homily. 
          The elaborate rituals involved in the ordination were  beautiful.  Many of them are also seen in  the more frequently celebrated ordination to the priesthood: the ordinand  laying prostrate during the praying of the litany of the saints, the laying on  of hands, the anointing with chrism, the handing on of the symbols of the  office and the sign of peace.
          However, there are certain aspects of the ordination to the  episcopate that is unique to it alone.   Only bishops lay hands on the man to be ordained a bishop.  His head is anointed with oil, not his hands.  And instead of a chalice and paten that are ritually given to the new priest, a  book of the Gospels, a ring, a miter and a crosier are given to the new  bishop.  Then he takes his seat in the  bishop’s seat, the cathedra, for the first time.
          Representatives of the diocese’s presbyterate, diaconal  community, seminarians and religious communities all greeted the new bishop  during the liturgy.  They were followed  by representatives of other faith communities and civic leaders.
          The liturgy of the eucharist proceeded forward as usual with  Bishop Etienne serving as the primary celebrant.  After communion, Bishop Etienne walked up and  down the aisles of the auditorium to give his blessing to all those present  while they applauded him and he smiled from ear to ear.  It seemed like a “victory lap” at the end of  a race.
          Bishop Etienne then addressed those present.  He thanked his family and, filled with  emotion, expressed his love for his parents.   Bishop Etienne then spoke to the faithful in the Church in Wyoming, expressing his  hope to join them on a journey in the months and years to come to know better  Jesus better.
          A reception at another hotel in Cheyenne then followed.  When Bishop Etienne arrived, it seemed that  he couldn’t make it past the foyer into the reception hall because one person  or group of people after another came up to him to chat with him and have their  picture taken with him.
          The reception went well into the evening.  Bishop Etienne then had a dinner with priests  and other guests.  Several from the group  who came on the archdiocese’s chartered flight returned to our hotel where we  had a dinner that did not conclude until after 9 p.m., thus ending a very long but joy-filled and  faith-filled day.
          Look for extensive coverage of the episcopal ordination of  Bishop Paul Etienne in the Dec. 18 issue of The  Criterion.  A photo gallery from the  ordination can be viewed here.