Vermont Catholic Bishop Christopher Coyne as pictured on the homepage of his website, bishopcoyne.org.
Vermont Catholic Bishop Christopher Coyne as pictured on the homepage of his website, bishopcoyne.org.

[V]ermont Roman Catholic Bishop Christopher Coyne will serve as Pope Francisโ€™ U.S. media aide when the pontiff meets this week with national and world leaders in Washington, New York and Philadelphia.

โ€œIโ€™m more or less a background person,โ€ Coyne said in an interview before the trip, โ€œtrying to get others out in front of the camera and into print and radio media.โ€

Then CNN asked if heโ€™d appear live Wednesday morning when President Barack Obama welcomes the pope to the White House.

โ€œI had planned to just go and be in the background, but it doesnโ€™t look like thatโ€™s going to happen,โ€ Coyne told followers of his vimeo.com video series. โ€œWho knows? They may find another โ€˜bishop starโ€™ to do this instead of me. Thatโ€™s fine, I donโ€™t need to be on camera โ€” even though some of you wonโ€™t believe that.โ€

The โ€œsome of youโ€ Coyne is referring to are members of the stateโ€™s largest religious denomination who know the bishop for his social media presence, which includes more than 10,000 followers on Facebook, Twitter (@bishopcoyne) and his own website, bishopcoyne.org.

Upon his installation as head of Vermontโ€™s 118,000 Catholics in January, the Boston native, whose resume includes stints as a dishwasher, sporting goods salesman, lifeguard, musician and bartender, was described in diocesan publicity as โ€œthe Catholic Churchโ€™s first blogging priestโ€ and โ€œan internationally cited leader in the Faithโ€™s โ€˜digital revolution.โ€™โ€

Pope Francis. Courtesy photo
Pope Francis. Courtesy photo

Coyne gained his experience in the worst of circumstances, having served as the Archdiocese of Bostonโ€™s communications secretary and spokesman shortly after the start of its priest sexual abuse scandal in 2002.

โ€œCoyneโ€™s has been a more forthcoming and compassionate voice,โ€ the Boston Globe โ€” which won a Pulitzer Prize for uncovering the scandal โ€” wrote at the time he replaced a less-transparent lay official, โ€œand, perhaps because he is a priest, his words seem to many to carry greater weight.โ€

Coyne, who went on to several other assignments, is now the incoming communications chairman for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Heโ€™s first scheduled to see the pope Wednesday when, after offering television commentary at a White House ceremony at 9:15 a.m., heโ€™ll join his fellow U.S. bishops at a prayer service at St. Matthewโ€™s Cathedral, the mother church for the Archdiocese of Washington.

โ€œI may get a chance to shake the Holy Fatherโ€™s hand and perhaps receive a blessing from him, but thatโ€™s not something that Iโ€™m shooting for,โ€ Coyne said in a recent WAMC public radio interview. โ€œMy job, hopefully, is to clarify and lead others to report the churchโ€™s message honestly and clearly. Oftentimes the pope is viewed in political terms, but the reality is heโ€™s not a politician, heโ€™s the leader of a church.โ€

Coyne will join the pontiff Thursday at a joint meeting of Congress โ€” a first for a pope โ€” and then travel to New York on Friday for a United Nations General Assembly session and to Philadelphia this weekend for a Catholic World Meeting of Families.

โ€œThis is the first pope to address both Congress and the United Nations,โ€ the bishop says. โ€œItโ€™s truly a historic moment.โ€

Coyne issued that last statement as part of an announcement of a new USA Catholic Church mobile app that will offer live video coverage of the visit.

โ€œWe understand many people are looking for more ways to connect with the church and incorporate Catholic living into their busy lives,โ€ Coyne went on to say. โ€œThis is the most comprehensive virtual connection to the Catholic faith available.โ€

But as the schedules note, anything could change at any time. Coyne, for example, woke Sunday at 5:30 a.m. for a Skype appearance an hour later on CNN.

โ€œPut on hold,โ€ he soon posted on Facebook and Twitter. โ€œFinally told I could go on at 7:40 a.m. Not interested.โ€

Seems the bishop had a higher calling.

โ€œThings to do,โ€ he wrote, โ€œlike celebrate Mass.โ€

Kevin Oโ€™Connor, a former staffer of the Rutland Herald and Barre-Montpelier Times Argus, is a Brattleboro-based writer. Email: kevinoconnorvt@gmail.com

VTDigger's southern Vermont and features reporter.

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