Filipino priest named as vicar general of California diocese
A Filipino priest from Laoag City, Ilocos Norte has been appointed as vicar general and chancellor of the Diocese of San Jose in California.
Fr. Andres Ligot (Photo from CBCP)
The Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) on Thursday, July 20, said that Fr. Andres Ligot was chosen as vicar general and chancellor, making him the right-hand man of Bishop Oscar Cantu of the Diocese of San Jose, California. CBCP said every diocese throughout the Catholic Churches must have at least one vicar general, and it is the "highest-ranking official in the diocesan governance after the bishop."
Fr. Andres Ligot (Photo from CBCP)
The Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) on Thursday, July 20, said that Fr. Andres Ligot was chosen as vicar general and chancellor, making him the right-hand man of Bishop Oscar Cantu of the Diocese of San Jose, California. CBCP said every diocese throughout the Catholic Churches must have at least one vicar general, and it is the "highest-ranking official in the diocesan governance after the bishop."
Ligot's life
According to CBCP, Fr. Ligot was born and raised in the City of Laoag, Ilocos Norte. The Filipino priest is also the nephew of the late Bishop Victorino Ligot of San Fernando de La Unión. He was named pastor of Saint Lawrence the Martyr Parish in Santa Clara, a city near San Jose, in 2005, was appointed Judicial Vicar in 2008, and worked full-time at the tribunal. Ligot went to the Diocese of San Jose in 1999 after finishing his Doctorate in Canon Law (JCD) and received his Bachelor of Sacred Theology (STB) at the University of Navarre in Pamplona, Spain. Prior to this, he was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Laoag in 1992 at Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican by St. Pope John Paul II. In San Jose, he started his ministry at the diocese's tribunal, first as the "defender of the bond" and later as a judge. Moreover, Fr. Ligot attended the Jesuit-run San Jose Seminary at Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU) in Quezon City for his first two years of theology education.*(Rhowen Del Rosario)
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