Joseph Murphy (priest)

Joseph Murphy (16 August 1968 - ) is the current Head of Protocol at the Holy See's Secretariat of State since his appointment on 22 March 2018. He had previously worked in the Secretariat of State.

Biography

Murphy was born in Donoughmore, Cork, Ireland. He was ordained a priest on 11 July 1993 for the Diocese of Cloyne.[1]

He studied at the Pontifical Irish College and Pontifical French College, and the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, where he earned his doctorate in Sacred Theology.[2]

He began his service in the service of the Holy See's Section for General Affairs on 1 October 1997. In 2002 he was appointed private secretary to Cardinal Angelo Sodano, then Vatican secretary of state.[3]

He was transferred to the Section for Relations with States on 15 September 2006.[4]

On 22 March 2018 he was appointed Head of Protocol at the Secretariat of State replacing José Avelino Bettencourt.

As Head of Protocol Murphy addresses the procedures concerning the granting of the agrément for new Ambassadors, their reception when they arrive in Rome, their first protocol visits to the Substitute for General Affairs for the presentation of copies of their credential letters and to the Secretary for Relations with States, the official communication of the solemn Audience for the presentation of credential letters to the Pope and all the formalities relating to diplomatic personnel accredited to the Holy. It also deals with official requests for audiences with the Holy Father and the sending of temporary Pontifical Missions and envoys.

gollark: Perhaps "serious" computer systems on hardware when they were made never booted that quickly, but special-purpose devices easily take less than 5 seconds for bootup.
gollark: Don't?
gollark: However, UEFI is hilariously slow.
gollark: You can directly boot the kernel as an EFI binary.
gollark: On EFI systems, you do not strictly need GRUB.

References

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
José Avelino Bettencourt
Head of Protocol of Secretariat of State of the Holy See
22 March 2018 – present
Succeeded by
incumbent
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