Bayonne Our Lady of the Assumption
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
St. Andrew
St. Henry
St. Joseph (Slovak)
St. Mary Star of the Sea
St. Michael (Lithuanian)
St. Vincent de Paul
Closter - Edgewater
St. Mary, Closter
St. Michael, Cranford
St. Therese of Lisieux, Cresskill
St. Joseph, Demarest
St. Josphy (Korean), Demarest
St. Mary, Dumont
St. Anthony, E. Newark
Holy Name of Jesus, E. Orange
Holy Spirit & Our Help of Christians, E. Orange
St. Joseph, E. Orange
St. Joseph, E. Rutherford
Holy Rosary, Edgewater
Elizabeth
Blessed Sacrament
Immaculate Conception
Immaculate Heart of Mary
Our Lady of Fatima
Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary & St. Michael's
St. Adalbert (Polish)
St. Anthony of Padua
St. Genevieve
St. Hedwig
St. Mary of the Assumption
St. Patrick
SS. Peter & Paul
Elmwood Park - Fairview
St. Leo, Elmwood Park
Assumption, Emerson
St. Cecilia, Englewood
St. Thomas More, Fairfield
St. Anne, Fairlwan
Our Lady of Grace, Fairview
St. John the Baptist, Fairview
Fort Lee
Holy Trinity
Church of the Madonna
Franklin Lakes - Guttenberg
Most Blessed Sacrament, Franklin Lakes
Most Holy Name, Garfield
Our Lady of Mt. Virgin (Italian), Garfield
Our Lady of Sorrows, Garfield
St. Stanislaus Kostka, Garfield
St. Anne, Garwood
St. Catherine, Glen Rock
St. John Nepomucene, Guttenberg
^Newark Archdiocese is diverse and densely populated, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark. Accessed July 24, 2007. " Archbishop John J. Myers is moving from the plains of Illinois to the geographically smallest diocese in the United States; but its 513 square miles (1,330 km2) encompass about 1.3 million Catholics. It is one of the busiest, largest and most diverse dioceses in the nation. The Archdiocese of Newark encompasses the northeastern New Jersey counties of Bergen, Essex, Union, and Hudson and the population totals 2.8 million people."