Diocese of Fall River
The Anchor
F riday , March 23, 2012
Mass. Pro-Lifers ready to battle threat of physician-assisted suicide By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
age-old tradition — Priests, seminarians and faithful gathered at Santa Sabina Church in Rome for an Ash Wednesday Mass. Father Riley Williams of the Fall River Diocese is part of a group that organizes a Mass at Station Churches in Rome during Lent. (Photo courtesy of the North American College)
Diocesan priest living and studying ancient Church teachings, traditions By Dave Jolivet, Editor
ROME — For such a young priest, ordained for less than a year, Father Riley Williams has surrounded himself with some very ancient teachings and traditions. He is a priest of the Fall River Diocese currently studying for a license in Sacred Theology with a concentration on moral theology, at the North American College in Rome. In addition to studying a topic as old as Church teaching itself, Father Williams is also big part of a centuries-old tradition of attending Mass at Station Church-
es in Rome every day during Lent. The observance of stational Liturgy dates back to the second and third centuries. “Since the 1970s, a group from the North American College, priests and seminarians, have organized Masses at these churches during Lent,” Father Williams told The Anchor. “From Ash Wednesday through Wednesday of Holy Week, we gather with others from the city at a designated station church for 7 a.m. Mass. For two of my years here, I had a role in orgaTurn to page 15
New parish takes shape in Fall River’s Flint neighborhood
FALL RIVER — In the fall of 2010 a task force composed of parishioners from Notre Dame de Lourdes Parish and Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Parish in Fall River was assembled to work with Father Richard L. Chretien, who serves as pastor of both, to begin the process of forming one new parish. In the ensuing period, this Parish Planning Task Force (PPTF) consulted with parish-
NORWOOD — Determined to battle the latest threat to life in Massachusetts, Pro-Life women gathered to educate themselves about the proposal to legalize physician-assisted suicide. A petition initiative will likely allow voters in the Commonwealth to determine the issue in November. The annual Women Affirming Life (WALI) spring breakfast, held March 10 at the Four Point Sheraton in Norwood, featured speaker M.C. Sullivan — a nurse, bioethicist, attorney and director of Ethics at Covenant Health Systems in Tewksbury. WALI is an outreach of the Archdiocese of Boston’s Pro-Life Office. Sullivan said the answer to doctor-prescribed death is palliative care. Palliative medicine ad-
dresses all aspects of the patient, including their physical, emotional, spiritual and social needs. It requires the cooperation of physicians, pharmacists, nurses, chaplains, social workers, psychologists and other health care professionals. The approach can differ greatly depending on the individual patient. Palliative care differs from hospice care, which focuses strictly on the end of life, in that it can be used for patients with either chronic or terminal illnesses. It is not antithetical to curative care but is usually invoked when curative treatments are no longer working. Because it leans less on technology, palliative care is often cost-saving. More importantly, it tends to improve the patient’s quality of life. Turn to page 13
ioners on possible names for the new parish and on whether its location should be the Notre Dame de Lourdes or Immaculate Conception Church. Based upon these consultations, the PPTF made recommendations to Bishop George W. Coleman. In a letter read this past weekend at Masses at both churches, Bishop Coleman wrote that after prayerful consideration, he was pleased to Turn to page 13
Down to business — It’s a balancing act for Claire McManus, director of the Faith Formation Office in Fall River. Uniting the office ministries when she took the helm in 2006, McManus oversees a staff that focuses its attention to the varying demographics of the diocese but keeps the message of evangelization clear — help youth, young adults and adults form a relationship with Jesus Christ. (Photo by Becky Aubut)
Faith Formation Office: The new evangelization in practice
B y B ecky Aubut A nchor Staff
FALL RIVER — After an extensive study done by consultants determined that there needed to be a leader among the varying ministries of youth and adult formation, a national search led to the installation of Claire McManus as the director of the Faith Formation Office in 2006; a position that she uses to propel her staff to support parish ministries within the Fall River Diocese. “That’s why we exist and
that takes a lot of different forms,” she said of the varying duties of the staff. “We’re trying to build up certain ministries that we feel are ripe for evangelization. We’re always keeping that in mind. Everything takes time. I always ask these questions: What is the purpose of a diocesan office? Do we do direct ministry? Do we do big events? I think it’s all of the above.” Big events like the annual conventions and junior high rallies take a lot of energy,
as evidenced by the morning conference call being held by Crystal Medeiros and Deacon Bruce Bonneau focused on the upcoming New England Adult Faith Formation Symposium to be held in August. “It’s pretty much taking everything we do at a diocesan level for, say a youth convention, and expanding it to a regional level,” said Medeiros, assistant director for Youth and Young Adult Ministry. “That involves a lot of time Turn to page 14