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Bishop
Paul M Boyle, C.P.
1926 - 2008
Paul
M. Boyle was born in Detroit, Michigan, on May 28, 1926. In 1946 he
made his vows as a Passionist of the Western Province of the United
States. Ordained a Passionist priest in Louisville, Kentucky, on May
30, 1953 and sent to Rome for graduate studies in canon law, he received
a licentiate in Sacred Theology from St. Thomas University in 1955 and
a licentiate in Canon Law from the Pontifical Lateran University in
1957. He also attended Northwestern University in Evansville, Illinois,
St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, St. Regis College
in Toronto, and St. Paul College in Detroit.
In 1964-1965
Boyle served as the president of the Canon Law Society of America and
from 1965 to 1968 as its executive coordinator. He taught canon law and
homiletics at Sacred Heart Seminary in Louisville and canon law at St.
Meinrad Theological Seminary from 1965 to 1968. In 1969 Boyle became president
of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men, a position he held until
1974. From 1974 to 1976 he served as president of Stewardship Services
Inc., an organization established by the CMSM to give financial assistance
to religious communities. During these years he began working on another
project to help religious communities with financial management. In 1976
he founded and became the president of Religious Communities Trust (RCT)
set up to instruct religious organizations on short term investments.
In May of
1968, Boyle was elected Provincial of the Holy Cross Province of the Passionists
(Chicago); from 1976 until 1988 he served as Superior General of the Congregation.
In 1991 Pope John Paul II made him the first bishop of the newly formed
Apostolic Vicariate of Mandeville, Jamaica, West Indies.
As a member
of the Antilles Episcopal Conference, Bishop Boyle participated in Synods
of Bishops representing the Region. He brought to the Conference his expertise
in Canon Law and encouraged the formation of the Canon Law Society of
the Antilles. His accomplishments were many in the newly formed Diocese
of Mandeville: he founded parishes, built clinics, began a Catholic College,
established a diaconate program and constituted a diocesan clergy. He
brought into the newly formed Diocese religious of many institutes and
finally founded the Mission Society of Mandeville, a Public Clerical Association
of Christ's Faithful imbued with Passionist spirituality.
Bishop Boyle
retired in 2004 to the Passionist Community in Louisville, Kentucky. Since
his retirement, he was active with preaching appeals for Food for the
Poor, sacramental ministry, and other preaching engagements for the Diocese
of Mandeville and its institutions.
Bishop Paul
Boyle died from complications following surgery in Louisville, Kentucky,
on January 10, 2008.
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