Pope Francis recently accepted the resignation of Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki and named Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Jeffrey Grob to be his successor.
With the Nov. 4 appointment, the 63-year-old Grob will be returning to his birth state of Wisconsin. The prelate was born to dairy farmers in the town of Cross Plains in 1961.
Listecki, who has served as Milwaukee’s archbishop since 2010, submitted his resignation to the pope on his 75th birthday, March 12, as required by canon law.
The Metropolitan Archdiocese of Milwaukee spans 10 counties in southeastern Wisconsin. The territory has a 550,000 Catholics — about 23 percent of the population — and 184 parishes.
After growing up in rural Wisconsin, Grob was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1992. He also served as a judge in the archdiocesan tribunal after receiving a licentiate — and later a doctorate — in canon law.
He also holds a licentiate in sacred theology and a doctorate in philosophy.
Grob served as judicial vicar for the Chicago Archdiocese for two years before he was named its chancellor in 2017.
Pope Francis appointed Grob an auxiliary bishop of Chicago in September 2020, according to a Catholic News Agency report.