Diocese of Fall River
The Anchor
F riday , January 13, 2012
National Vocations Awareness Week 2012
Vocations website gets extreme makeover By Dave Jolivet, Editor
A screen shot of the new diocesan Vocations Office website at www.fallrivervocations.org
FALL RIVER — For today’s teen-agers and adolescents, quiet time is a phrase they simply might not understand. Their lives are a jumble of school work, school activities, iPods, smart phones, video games and maybe a good night’s sleep. If God were tugging at their heartstrings, asking them to be still and listen, the request could easily be lost in a sea of electronics and activities. There may be a shortage of priests, but that doesn’t mean God has stopped calling. With that in mind, the Vocations Office of the Fall River Diocese recently gave Father Jay Mello, newly-appointed assistant vocation director, the task of refreshing and updating its website. Rather than shrug off the electronic age, the office has embraced it as an opportunity to reach young men on their home court. As a recruiter, Father Mello said his job isn’t “to be like a military recruiter just getting as many men to sign up as possible.” His ministry is to help young men feel the tug from God and discern if it’s a per-
sonal call from Christ to serve Him and the Church as a priest. “One of the first and most important things was for me to update the diocesan website,” he told The Anchor. “Technology is constantly being upgraded and more and more of our young people are relying upon different modes of cyber communication than any other means of getting information or communicating.” “The old website’s state of disrepair necessitated a complete overhaul,” said Father Karl C. Bissinger, director of the diocesan Vocations Office. “Today’s young men and women apparently will not take an organization seriously unless it maintains a professional and appealing website.” With the help of a website-savvy friend, Father Mello developed a site that provides young men who are open to a priestly vocation with information about the priesthood and discernment, as well as providing parents with similar information relating to the special ministry and the responsibilities they Turn to page 15
UMass Dartmouth chaplain brings energy, zeal to campus By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
NORTH DARTMOUTH — When Father David Frederici took over as chaplain of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth this
student mentor — UMass Dartmouth chaplain, Father David C. Frederici.
past August, he was ready not only to nurture a student-based Catholic group on campus but to thread the Catholic connection to area parishes and additional schools teaching under the UMass Dartmouth banner. In order to do so, he first needed to confront common misunderstandings of the Catholic faith. “The thought is, to be part of an institutional religion, you have to be condemning,” said Father Frederici. “They have friends or family members who they feel they will have to judge and condemn. So the sound bite has won over what we are about.” He needed to reframe it for then. “This is a faith about the experience; it’s about God’s love for us, and when you put it that Turn to page five
West Harwich school to close in June — Page five
MASS COMMUNICATION — Father Karl C. Bissinger celebrates a Liturgy that was taped recently for Sunday morning’s broadcast on WLNE Channel 6. The weekly diocesan televised Mass is the longest-running program on Channel 6 and will celebrate its 50th anniversary next year. (Photo by Kenneth J. Souza)
Production changes, improvements enhance weekly diocesan TV Mass By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
NORTH DARTMOUTH — While it’s common to celebrate multiple Masses at most parishes on any given weekend, it’s not often that a site hosts no fewer than four Masses within roughly a four-hour time span on a Saturday morning. But that’s what happened inside the chapel at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth last week as the diocesan television aposto-
late gathered with the production team from the Fairhaven-based Clicknet.tv to videotape four Mass celebrations for airing later this month on WLNE Channel 6. And while the weekly TV Mass on Sunday mornings is nothing new for the Fall River Diocese, recent technological advances and changes at WLNE have precipitated how the 30-minute Mass is now produced. Turn to page 19