Former San Diego Bishop McElroy facing surgery after cancer diagnosis

An older man, facing to the right, talking. He is Cardinal Robert McElroy.
An older man, facing to the right,  talking. He is Cardinal Robert McElroy.
Cardinal Robert McElroy (File photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego)

Cardinal Robert McElroy is preparing for surgery on Nov. 13 to remove a cancerous growth, but his prognosis is positive.

“I am at peace with this challenge and hope and believe that in God’s grace I will be Archbishop of Washington for many years to come,” the former San Diego Bishop said, according to a Wednesday statement from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, his home since March.

“I ask your prayers and support in these days and plan to resume full duties two weeks after the surgery.”

McElroy first made the announcement to fellow priests on Tuesday during an annual convocation in Washington D.C.

His doctors say his prognosis is good, according to the Archdiocese. He has well-differentiated liposarcoma, a type of soft tissue cancer found in fat cells.

While sarcomas are rare and more often diagnosed in children than adults, liposarcoma is a common form of soft tissue tumors found in older adults, according to the Sarcoma Oncology Center. Most diagnoses are in adults over 40; the cancer is found in the thigh or other extremities.

The fact that McElroy’s liposarcoma is well-differentiated is a positive: It’s non-aggressive, slow growing, painless, non-life threatening and rarely metastasizes to other parts of the body, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

Bishop Michael Pham, who followed McElroy as leader of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, could not be reached for comment.

McElroy served as bishop in San Diego from 2015 until 2025 with a focus on saving the planet from climate change, immigrant rights and not stressing abortion as the pre-eminent matter of the church.

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