14 | Summer 2022
FA M I LY FA I T H
This is the fourth article in a series featuring different faith communities in Cache Valley. The role of faith in the early settler’s day-to-day life was central. For many who call Cache Valley home today, faith continues to play a pivotal role in Valley communities and individual lives.
St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church TARA BONE
contributing writer
Since the Catholic church’s first mass in Cache Valley 104 years ago, the church has grown along with the Valley, steadily outgrowing buildings and overcoming challenges to become a thriving faith community with members throughout the region, but centered at the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church in Hyde Park. Father Joseph Minuth, parish administrator, says this year has been a rebuilding year while the church experiences new growth. He and church members are putting an emphasis on reintroducing traditions that have been lost with creation of a group called “Luke Two Forty”. The group’s goal is to teach youth underlying gospel truths and bring back “things that make life rich.” “The hope is that by bringing back these feasts and festivals, they will remind youth that they are descendants of many people who fought for them to have their faith,” Father Joseph said. “It just didn’t happen. We had to work at it.” Father Joseph says over time, honored traditional celebrations fell away. Many of
these celebrations have ancient origins and some include All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day in November, Our Lady of Guadalupe in December, St. Joseph’s Table in March, The Crowning of Mary on Mother’s Day, and Mardi Gras, which is 47 days before Easter. Often these celebrations bridge cultures — both anciently and modernly, as is the case with the Our Lady of Guadalupe (OLOG) Mass and celebration. Father Joseph says St. Thomas has an active and vibrant Hispanic population that looks forward to this celebration. Held every December at the church, it reminds all Catholics of reconciliation among different groups. According to writer and church member, Christina Ledesma, during the celebration Danza Azteca Queutzalcoatl, a performing group from Idaho with 20 to 25 dancers in brightly colored and feathered costumes, honors OLOG through reverent dance and rhythmic music. Rogelio Luna, a Danza Azteca Queutzalcoatl member explains, “The dance is Aztec and represents the bridge between two cultures
that existed when Mexico was conquered by the Spaniards. The dance helped unify the Aztec … to embrace the Catholic faith.” Bringing people together of all cultures and ages has been part of St. Thomas from the beginning. Their first church, dedicated in 1942, housed parishioners at 45 East 500 North in