Diocese of Fall River
The Anchor
F riday , August 19, 2011
Diocesan music workshop: Singing the Rite music By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
making all things rite — George Campeau, director of music ministries at Corpus Christi Parish in East Sandwich, leads the way through a section of the musical changes that will take place in the new English translation to the Roman Missal during a music workshop at the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption Parish in Fall River. (Photo by Rebecca Aubut)
FALL RIVER — Opening in prayer and most fittingly with music, the first of three workshops entitled “Singing the Rite Music” designed to help guide music directors through the new changes to the Roman Missal was held at the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption in Fall River. Pope Paul VI promulgated the Roman Missal, the ritual text for the celebration of the Mass, in 1970 as the definitive text of the reformed Liturgy after the Second Vatican Council. That Latin text was translated into various languages for use around the world; the English edition was published in the United States in
1973 with the Holy See issuing an overall revised text in 1975. Pope John Paul II promulgated the third edition of the Roman Missal in 2000, which since then has been getting translated into English and other languages according to more precise translation norms in which the prayers of the Roman rite are expressed in a grammatical structure that closely follows the Latin text. “We are entering into a new chapter,” said Msgr. Stephen J. Avila, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish in Mansfield, during his opening speech for the workshop. “I know how vital music is to the parish community.” Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan, the Turn to page 14
Mass. euthanasia petition submitted to attorney general By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
BOSTON — Once again, euthanasia supporters are attempting to bring physician-assisted death to the Bay State. They hope to have the “Death With Dignity” petition amendment submitted to the attorney general’s office on August 8, and on the 2012 ballot. Opponents of doctors cooperating in the suicide of a patient have readied themselves to fight the measure, which they say endangers the lives of vulnerable people who are ill, disabled or elderly. “Literally, some people will be signing their own death warrants,” Kristian Mineau, president of the Massachusetts Family Institute, said about petition signers. Mineau said such legislation would turn doctors into executioners. “It’s a further erosion of the sanctity of life in our Commonwealth,” he added. “You talk about the slippery slope; this is
going off the cliff — morally.” The Massachusetts petition is currently under review by the attorney general’s office. If the language is approved, its supporters will have 60 days to collect 68,911 signatures — three percent of the number of votes cast in the last gubernatorial election. Then, the measure will be vetted by state lawmakers who can back the proposal, offer alternative legislation or permit the petition to be decided at the ballot box. In the last case, backers would need to collect more than 10,000 additional signatures. The initiative would permit terminally-ill Massachusetts residents — defined as those given six months or less to live — to obtain lethal drugs. Patients would need to be “capable of making medical decisions” in consultation with their doctor. They would be required to submit their request in writing twice — 15 days apart. The requests would need to be signed Turn to page 15
all is great from one to eight — First-grade students, above, and eighth-graders, below, in the Faith Formation program at St. Patrick’s Parish in Wareham eagerly participated in the new summer Religious Education program there.
Wareham parish hopes to revive awareness, appreciation for Catholic faith and doctrines By Dave Jolivet, Editor
WAREHAM — It’s a trend that troubles most parish priests and Religious Education ministers — parents who simply drop their children off at Faith Formation classes and eschew their own Sunday Mass obligation. The problem isn’t new, but it is ever-increasing. At St. Patrick’s Parish in Wareham, pastor Father John M. Sullivan, and director of Faith Formation, Paula Wilk, feel they have come up with a family-oriented
solution to this concern. Beginning this summer, the parish has instituted a “blended” Faith Formation program called “Hearts To Christ,” which incorporates a one-week summer catechetical program for students in grades one through nine, and a bi-monthly meeting involving students and parents from September through May. “After Vatican II, when the Baltimore Catechism was tossed aside, I saw that Catholics were
not learning Catholic doctrine as much any more,” Wilk told The Anchor. “I feel like a whole generation has gone uncatechized.” “The program is an intergenerational one,” Wilk said. “Instead of weekly classes for the students, we condensed the material into a one-week summer session where grades one through nine are taught Catholic doctrine with regards to the Mass, the Sacraments, and Church teachings. Turn to page 16