07.03.09

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Diocese of Fall River

The Anchor

F riday , July 3, 2009

Catholic Charities Appeal raised near-record $4.28M

MASS MEDIA — The website Masstimes.org provides Catholic travelers with a list of Mass times at parishes across the country. Phone access to Mass Times also keeps Mass-goers informed.

Masstimes.org website steers vacationers in right direction By Dave Jolivet, Editor

FALL RIVER — You’re on the road and you know it’s Mass time. But what times are the Masses, and where? Catholics on the road needn’t worry thanks to the website Masstimes.org, and its associated phone number, 410-676-6000. Mass times and locations are but a few mouse clicks or phone buttons away.

According to the website, “Mass Times was developed in 1994, to help traveling Catholics in the USA find a nearby church with a schedule of religious services. The information was made available by telephone at first, and then via the Internet in 1998.” Since its inception Mass Times has expanded with an international database that now includes 201 countries/territories with more Turn to page 15

Proposed ‘Bathroom Bill’ is dangerous proposition

By Gail Besse Anchor Correspondent

BOSTON — A public hearing on a dangerous bill that would allow men to enter women’s bathrooms and locker rooms will be held July 14 at the Massachusetts State House.

The “Bathroom Bill” hearing begins at 1 p.m. in the Gardner Auditorium. The 15-page-long bill being pushed by the homosexual lobby would have drastic effects on privacy, housing, employment, school Turn to page 18

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — For more than 100 years, Catholic social teaching has tried to help people face the world’s social, political and economic challenges

with the power of the Gospel. Pope Benedict XVI announced June 29 that he had signed his first formal contribution to the list of Turn to page 12

Pope Benedict’s ‘social encyclical’ is pending

FALL RIVER — The Fall River Diocese’s 2009 Catholic Charities Appeal raised a total of $4,280,141,52, the third highest total in the history of the Appeal and only $26,000 — or six tenths of one percent — below the alltime high recorded in 2007. “The fact that we were only $16,000 below last year’s total of $4,296,300.63, is simply remarkable,” exclaimed Mike Donly of the Appeal Office when asked his initial reaction. “I am not surprised at the generosity of our parishioners across the diocese, but it certainly takes on added significance when you consider the state of the economy, and the dire forecast the experts are giving us,” he added. “I don’t think anyone would have been surprised if we had predicted a 10 or 15 percent decrease was expected when the Appeal began given the current eco-

nomic indicators, but that type of mentality is dangerous as it can become a ‘self-fulfilling prophecy’; you expect less so you are satisfied with less,” he said. “That just can’t be when you’re talking about meeting the needs of thousands of people who are much worse off than you are. As Bishop George W. Coleman said, ‘The people of the Diocese of Fall River have once again demonstrated a spirit of sacrifice and a true desire to share with their neighbors and to help change their lives for the better,’” said Donly. Tired but enthusiastic would be an apt description of the staff of the Catholic Charities Appeal office as the final day of the Appeal drew to a close on June 23. They were concluding the 2009 Appeal which had begun on May 1, and had Turn to page 18

Non-English Masses keeping heritages, spirituality vibrant

By Deacon James N. Dunbar

NEW BEDFORD — When Franciscan Father Roman Chwaliszewski spots a greater number of English-speaking parishioners at the 9 o’clock Mass in Polish on Sunday mornings in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, he’ll give the homily in English. “Lately it’s been more half in Polish and half in English,” said Father Chwaliszewski, OFM Cap., “because candidly, fewer people are coming to Sunday Mass,” the pastor told The Anchor last week. Asked if having a Mass in Polish poses a problem to parish life, Father Chwaliszewski said “Not at all. It is all part of our parish … has been so for many years … and we find that many

who usually attend Mass in English frequently come to this Mass to fit their schedule on any particular Sunday.” The Franciscan is among dozens of pastors in the Fall River Diocese who meld non-English Masses into the mix of parish liturgies in order to minister to various ethnic communities comprised of new and older immigrants eager to practice their Catholic faith in their own culture circles. For some pastors it means finding priests to celebrate Mass in Brazilian-Portuguese or in Spanish as those belonging to those ethnic cultures become more prominent and look to their existing local parishes to serve them. Currently 15 parishes offer

Masses in Portuguese, and seven have Masses in Spanish. Four churches have Masses in Latin, one has a Mass in Creole, and one offers Mass in French. For those like Father Chwaliszewski, the roadmap has not changed. “This parish since its founding in 1905 has had Masses in Polish to accommodate those of Polish heritage in this area, and many of that ethnic background still come to us from afar and so we intend to keep this Sunday Mass in that language,” he added. “The readings at that Mass as well as the Gospel are in Polish, but the eucharistic prayer is in English,” he noted. “As far as I know there are no Turn to page 15


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