During his coadjutorship, he lived at Ashline House on the Kilrush Road in Ennis, which had been made available for him by the incumbent, Michael Fogarty, by means of an eviction.[5]
Bishop of Killaloe
Following the death of Fogarty on 25 October 1955, Rodgers succeeded him as Bishop of Killaloe on 29 October.
In May 1956, two members of Jehovah's Witnesses were attacked in Doonass, near Clonlara, County Clare, which led to a district court case in Limerick at which local curate Fr. Patrick Ryan and nine of his parishioners were charged with assaulting the two members and maliciously damaging IR£3 worth of books, Bibles and other literature being distributed by them. All charges made against Ryan and his parishioners were dropped, in part due to an intervention on the part of Rodgers, who was present at the trial.[6][7]
The presiding judge declared that the two Jehovah’s Witnesses had been "guilty of blasphemy", and that they had "come into this village [of Clonlara] and attack and outrage all that these simple Irishmen hold dear. I think the two men were lucky to escape so lightly."[8]
Rodgers was so outraged by the whole affair that he wrote to the then Taoiseach, John A. Costello, expressing his anger that the Attorney General could proceed with the case "against one of [his priests] for upholding and defending the fundamental truths of our treasured Catholic faith", given the "pernicious and blasphemous literature distributed and sold in [his] diocese" by the two members. While Costello was not unmindful of "the just indignation aroused among the clergy and the people by the activities of the Jehovah’s Witnesses", he insisted that the law had to be upheld.[9]
Death and burial
Rodgers took a walk in the garden of his Westbourne residence in Ennis on the evening of 10 July 1966, but suffered a heart attack and was found dead the following morning.[10]