‘Christ calls us to be Christ for one another,’ Mobile’s new shepherd tells faithful

MOBILE – Archbishop Emeritus Thomas Rodi (right) hands newly installed Archbishop Mark Rivituso the crozier of Bishop Michael Poitier, first bishop of Mobile, signifying the transfer of the Archdiocese of Mobile to Archbishop Rivituso. (Photo by Mary Dillard, courtesy Archdiocese of Mobile)

Editor’s note: Bishop Joseph Kopacz and Chancellor Mary Woodward were in attendance at the installation of Archbishop Mark S. Rivituso. From the archives will return in our next edition.
By Rob Herbst/The Catholic Week

MOBILE, Ala. (OSV News) – About 45 years later, the trade between the Archdiocese of St. Louis and Archdiocese of Mobile is complete.
Archbishop Mark S. Rivituso, a former auxiliary bishop of St. Louis, was installed as the third archbishop of Mobile Sept. 3 at the Cathedral-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.
Archbishop Rivituso, 63, was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of St. Louis by Archbishop John L. May, who previously served as bishop of Mobile.

While Archbishop Rivituso expressed gratitude for his new assignment on the Gulf Coast, he learned from Archbishop May’s tenure to pray for good weather.
“I don’t know if it’s fact, fiction or embellishment … but it was told to me during (Archbishop May’s) time in Mobile that the area suffered the devastation of a hurricane. Immediately after that, John L. May was appointed to the Archdiocese of St. Louis. The saying goes, ‘One hurricane and you’re gone,” Archbishop Rivituso joked at the closing of Mass.
Archbishop May was appointed as archbishop of St. Louis in January 1980, four months after Hurricane Frederic hit Mobile.
However, weather was no issue on this September sun-soaked day. About 700 people filled the cathedral for Mass, including Cardinal Christophe Pierre, papal nuncio to the United States, along with about 25 visiting bishops and archbishops. Those in attendance included Archbishop Mitchell T. Rozanski of St. Louis, Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond of New Orleans as well as Archbishop W. Shawn McKnight of Kansas City, Kansas, and Archbishop Edward J. Weisenburger of Detroit, who were both installed archbishops earlier this year.
Those unable to sit in the cathedral watched the Mass via livestream at the nearby Saenger Theatre in downtown Mobile.
Archbishop Rivituso succeeds Archbishop Thomas J. Rodi, who served the Archdiocese of Mobile for 17 years. Archbishop Rivituso is the 10th bishop of Mobile and third archbishop of Mobile, dating back to 1829.
While Archbishop Rivituso was installed to lead the Archdiocese of Mobile, he expressed his desire for the faithful to work alongside him in sharing the love of Jesus to all in the southern half of Alabama.
“I am installed as shepherd of the church in the Archdiocese of Mobile, but I acknowledge humbly my need for the faithful to be one with Jesus, be one with me as we show the shepherding love and care of Christ to all in this local church,” Archbishop Rivituso said during his homily.
Cardinal Pierre – a proud Frenchman – opened the Mass and Archbishop Rodi then spoke briefly about the history of Mobile, which was the first permanent French colonial settlement in the U.S.
But before publicly reading the papal bull in which Pope Leo XIV appointed Archbishop Rivituso, Cardinal Pierre deadpanned with a finger wag: “Rivituso … he’s not French.”
However, he added, “Congratulations on the blessing you have received from the Providence of God and by the choice of Pope Leo to become the archbishop of Mobile. May your service to the people here … be a continuing sign of the hope with which God blesses us.”
Upon accepting the apostolic mandate, Archbishop Rivituso presented it to the archdiocese’s college of consultors and walked through the cathedral’s three aisles to show the congregation.
After displaying the papal bull, Cardinal Pierre and Archbishop Rodi escorted Archbishop Rivituso to the cathedra. Archbishop Rodi handed the new archbishop his crosier. Archbishop Rivituso then greeted various archdiocesan dignitaries before the Mass proceeded.

Archbishop Mark S. Rivituso displays the papal bull during his installation Mass at the Cathedral-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Mobile, Ala., Sept. 3, 2025. Archbishop Rivituso was previously an auxiliary bishop in St. Louis. (OSV News photo/Mary Dillard, courtesy Archdiocese of Mobile)

The Gospel reading chosen was Luke 22:24-30 in which Jesus says, “I am among you as the one who serves” and Archbishop Rivituso stressed in his homily the need to serve all.
“We are brothers and sisters and Christ calls us to be Christ for one another,” Archbishop Rivituso said.
“I am excited to be your shepherd,” he said, “working alongside you as we show forth Christ’s shepherding care and love for all – and being especially mindful to reach out with Christ’s shepherding love and care to the poor and the homeless; to reach out with Christ’s shepherding care to our immigrant brothers and sisters in their own fears and anxieties; to be with all those who are imprisoned and on death row and show the comfort of the Lord and show a redemption in the Lord.”
He added, “With the rich history in this archdiocese of civil rights, (I am excited) to build upon the witness of those who advanced civil rights by fostering racial harmony and to be a shepherding, caring church of Jesus. (I look forward to being) present to those who feel forsaken, those who feel forgotten, those who are marginalized, those who are on the peripheries of society.”
Archbishop Rivituso also acknowledged that while many are suffering today, the faithful must remember the words from the Mass’s second reading, 2 Corinthians 4:1-2, 5-7.
“We live in very challenging times. I know many feel disconnected from one another. It is good to hear the word of God through St. Paul today – ‘We are not discouraged.’ We are ministers of hope.”

(Rob Herbst is editor of The Catholic Week, the news outlet of the Archdiocese of Mobile.)