04.12.96

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t eanc 0 VOL. 40, NO. 15

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Friday, April 12,1996

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS Southeastern Massachusetts' Lareest Weeki)'

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Index Church & World 12 Daily Readings 3 Editorial 4 Family Fare 10 Necrology 13 Our Rock & Rc)le .. 15 Steering Points 16 Youth News 14

WASHINGTON (CNS) - More than 200 people were baptized or received into full Communion with the Catholic Church at Easter Vigil services April 6 in parishes throughout the Fall River diocese .. They joined the tens of thousands welcomed as Catholfcs that day nationwide, concluding their Lenten journeys of IJreparation. In the Diocese of Kansas CitySt. Joseph, Mo,:> for example, there. were more than 600. There were about 750 in the neighboring Diocese of Kansas City, Kan. More than 800 ---- the largest number in 10 years - took their final steps to Catholicism in the Baltimore Archdiocese. There were more than 400 next door in the Diocese of Wilmington, Del. In some larger dioceses and archdioceses the numbers went into four digits. The Archdiocese of Newark, N.J., had nearly 1,200. The Chicago Archdiocese had more than 2,300. St. Louis and Brooklyn, N. Y.,each had just over 1,000. Such figures indicated that if a complete count ·from. all 180-plus U.S. dioceses were taken, the numbers would run well into the tens of thousands. In early Christianity it was standard practice to prepare catechumens to enter the church during Lent and to admit them - with the sacraments of baptism, confirmation and first Eucharjst - at Easter. First steps toward the modern revival of the practice took place in the 1950s when Pope Pius XII restored Holy Week to the prominence it had in the early church, reforming Holy Week liturgies and reviving the ancient rites of the Easter Vigil. After the Second Vatican Council mandated comprehensive liturgical reform, the renewal of the sacraments of initiation led to a revival of the ancient catechumenate in the Rite of Chdstian Initiation of Ad ults. Use of the RCIA has grown rapidly in the United States since it was introduced in 1973. Adaptations in the formation of catechumens, who are unbaptized persons preparing to enter the church, have been developed for candidates, who are baptized Christians preparing for full communion or full initiation as Catho-

law, "a very devout Catholic" twisted her arm "just a little" to sign up for the RCIA program at Immaculate Conception. At first she was afraid the program would be "stuffy" and formal, she said, but she was delighted to find that it was interesting and got her personally involved. "I love it. I've really learned a lot," Easter Greeting she said. It was ,the Easter Vigil. A crowded St. Thomas More Entering the church along with Ms. Huang was Gertrude Dorsey, Church jn Somerset was darkened as the moment of 78, a retired certified public aclighting c~lJIdles arrived. At last all were lit. All was quiet countant, who has already attended until a small voice broke the silence as a little girl sereImmaculate Conception with her naded th~ risen Lord with "Happy Birthday to You." husband for 32 years. Raised a Methodist but not baptized, Mrs. Dorsey began to pretion with a Rite of Election (for While the numbers tell part of pare to enter the church after her catechumens) and Call to Continthe story. the more important story husband, Paul, took steps last year uing Conversion (for candidates). is that of each person behind the to regularize their marriage with In some places bishops now hold figures and his or her faith jour- the church. He had been married in 1936 ney, saidSt. Joseph Sister Marilyn four, five or six diocesan services each· year to accommodate the Barnett, associate director of the but his wife left him while he was Chicago archdiocesan liturgy of- away fighting in World War II and growing numbl~rs. they were divorced. fice. Paul and Gertrude Dorsey marTwo of those stories, both from Some other diocesan figures this year, culled from diocesan newsImmaculate Conception Parish in ried 37 years ago. Last year Paul papers, were: the Baltimore suburb of Towson, Dorsey began the process of seekMd., indicate how diverse the ing an annulment of his first mar- In Arlington, Va., 342 candiriage through a church court, and dates and 177 catechumens were journeys can be. One is that 'of 23-year-old Chia- that marriage was declared null welcomed. Hui Huang, a first-year medical this March, less than a month - Raleigh, N.C., had more than student at Johns Hopkins Univer- before Easter. 460 catechumens and candidates. On Palm Sunday, a week before sity medical school, who was born - Savannah, Ga., had 278 in Taiwan and moved to Mary- Gertrude's formal initiation into catechumens and candidates welland with her parents 10 years ago. the Catholic Church at the Easter comed at a cathedral ceremony Ms. Huang told The Catholic Vigil, the couple renewed their and 57 more who participated in Review, Baltimore archdiocesan wedding vows in church and had the election and call rites in their newspaper, that her parents are their marriage validated. own parishes. The journeys of each new CathoBuddhist, but she grew up without - Erie, Pa., had about 100 lic are many and varied. But all a formal religion. catechumens and 230 can·didates. She said as she and her boy- need to be greeted with a hearty The neighboring Greensburg Diofriend began to get serious about welcome and all receive the evercese had about 500. marriage, her future mother-in- lasting gift of Jesus' love. - La Crosse, Wis., had 35 ceses appear yearly several weeks earlier. On or near the first weekend of Lent, catechumens and candidates from all over the diocese gather, with the bishop presiding, to .celebrate their final stages of prepara-

catechumens and more than 150 candidates. - In southern Louisiana, the Houma-Thibodaux Diocese had 25 catechumens and 50 candidates. In the Diocese of Biloxi, Miss., the combined total was 374.

lics. Candidates may have been baptized in a non-Catholic faith community or they may be adults who were baptized as Cath61ics but did not receive catechetical formation or confirmation and first Communion as children. While the actual initiation rites are spread out over some 19,000 U.S. Catholic parishes each Easter, centralized figures for many dio-

THE SEVENTH GRADE class at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford, wrote a contemporary Stations of the Cross, and performed it at the school on Holy Thursday. In this scene, family and friends mourn the death of a young man who hasjust died from complications associated with the AIDS virus. From left, seated are: Christopher Aguiar, Joyce Mariano and Michelle Borges; standing, from left: Miguel Senra and Kristy Alcaidinho. Story and other photos on page 10. (Anchor/ Jolivet photo)


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04.12.96 by The Anchor - Issuu