RJ Walker

About RJ Walker

Who is it?: Miscellaneous Crew, Actor, Camera Department
Birth Day: May 28, 1947
Archdiocese: Dubuque
Diocese: Sioux City
Appointed: November 10, 2005
Installed: January 20, 2006
Predecessor: Daniel DiNardo
Ordination: August 4, 1973
Consecration: January 20, 2006 by Jerome Hanus, Charles J. Chaput, and Thomas Joseph Tobin
Birth name: Ralph Walker Nickless
Denomination: Roman Catholic Church
Parents: R. Walker Nickless (Father) E. Margaret McGovern Nickless (Mother)
Motto: SPEAK THE TRUTH IN LOVE
Reference style: His Excellency The Most Reverend
Spoken style: Your Excellency
Religious style: Bishop

RJ Walker Net Worth

RJ Walker was born on May 28, 1947, is Miscellaneous Crew, Actor, Camera Department. RJ Walker is known for his work on Atlanta (2016), Small Victories (2016) and Baskets (2016).
RJ Walker is a member of Miscellaneous Crew

💰 Net worth: Under Review

Some RJ Walker images

Biography/Timeline

1973

Nickless was born in Denver, Colorado, one of ten children born to R. Walker Nickless, Sr. and E. Margaret (McGovern) Nickless (his mother died in 2006, shortly after his episcopal consecration). He was graduated from Bishop Machebeuf High School in 1965. Nickless was ordained a priest for the Denver Archdiocese on August 4, 1973.

2005

Nickless was appointed the seventh Bishop of Sioux City on November 10, 2005 by Pope Benedict XVI. He was consecrated and installed as bishop on January 20, 2006 in a ceremony at the Church of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ in Sioux City. Archbishop Jerome Hanus of the Archdiocese of Dubuque was the principal consecrator as the Dubuque Archdiocese is the metropolitan see for the state. The co-consecrators were Archbishop Charles Joseph Chaput of Denver and Bishop Thomas Joseph Tobin of Providence, Rhode Island.

2009

In April, 2009, Bishop Nickless publicly proclaimed his opposition to the University of Notre Dame's decision to invite President Barack Obama to be its commencement speaker.

2012

In February, 2012, Bishop Nickless spoke during a webcast sponsored by the conservative group, Family Research Council, where he characterized an Obama Administration initiative to require health insurers to provide birth control coverage as having been sponsored by "the power of evil," and called for "followers of the light" to "stand up and vehemently oppose this."