Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , October 2, 2015
Area pilgrims share in papal history
By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff beckyaubut@anchornews.org
PHILADELPHIA — The group from the Fall River Diocese making the trip alongside this Anchor reporter may have been small in number, but they were large in Spirit as the 14 pilgrims made their way to Philadelphia to the participate in the World Meeting of Families and to see Pope Francis. Sister Marianna Sylvester, R.S.M., a member of Our Lady of Assumption Parish in New Bedford, said that making the decision to attend the World Meeting of Families didn’t require much thought; she wanted to be part of history, she said. “I knew he was coming to the United States and I felt it was a moment of Catholic history,” said Sister Sylvester. “I decided that I wanted to be visible, not an invisible, member of the Catholic Church. Some people say living life to the fullest is at least showing up and being there. “Pope Francis knows how to focus in on the critical concerns for humanity. I’m a Sister of Mercy and for the last 15 years our chapter developed a framework for our work, and it all has to do with human dignity, and the vision is local and global. When I listen to him, I get very excited because it’s not a hidden message. He’s taken the theology of social justice and made it personal and global at the same time.” For Odete and Joe Depina, members of Espirito Santo Parish in Fall River, seeing Pope Francis would be an opportunity to add to their growing list of trips that have included seeing past popes: “I wanted to see Pope Francis,” said Odete. “I have seen John Paul, Pope Benedict, and I wanted to see the Holy Father. I was very happy to see him, and be able to be with everybody. I was very surprised to see so many young people, and at the same time very happy, because it’s the future, the Church of tomorrow.” Turn to page 12
Sister Marianna Sylvester, R.S.M., member of Our Lady of Assumption Parish in New Bedford, and Eleanor Fischer, member of St. Joan of Arc Parish in Orleans, have some fun while waiting for the papal Mass to start and posed for a ‘picture’ with Pope Francis as he made his way down Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia. (Photo by Becky Aubut)
The canonization of St. Junipero Serra in historical perspective
By Dwight G. Duncan Anchor Columnist dduncan@umassd.edu
A group of parishioners gathered last Sunday at St. Pius X Parish in South Yarmouth for an afternoon of “Patriots and the Pope.” They watched the 1 p.m. Patriots game followed by Pope Francis’ 4 p.m. Mass at the conclusion of the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia. Here are some attendees during halftime.
Retired diocesan priests captivated by Pope Francis’ U.S. visit
By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff kensouza@anchornews.org
FALL RIVER — On any given weekday morning, it’s a sure bet that you’ll find at least a few residents of the Cardinal Medeiros Home for
Retired Priests gathered in the facility’s spacious community room after breakfast, enjoying coffee, some light conversation, and the fellowship of their brother priests. But with the wall-to-wall media Turn to page 18
that no one could be venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church without the approval of the pope, papal canonization has WASHINGTON, been a prerequisite to D.C. — When Pope the public recognition of Francis formally declared someone’s holiness. UsuJunipero Serra to be a ally, canonizations occur saint on September 23 in Rome, for obvious reaat Washington, D.C.’s sons. And, indeed, all the basilica, the National previous canonizations Shrine of the Immacuof Americans have taken late Conception, the first place in Rome, starting pope to be called Francis with St. Isaac Jogues and chalked up at least three his companions in 1930, other significant firsts for and most recently in the Catholic Church in 2012, SS. Kateri Tekakthe United States: It was witha , a native American the first time a saint was from what became New canonized in this country, York, and Marianne the first time a HispanicCope, a nun who worked American was canonized selflessly in Molokai for the United States, ministering to lepers for and the first time Pope Pope Francis pauses in front of decades after St. Damien Francis ever celebrated the sculpture of St. Junipero Ser- died. ra in Statuary Hall at the U.S. CapMass here. Vatican II stressed Ever since Pope Alex- itol in Washington. (CNS photo/ that everyone is called to ander III in 1170 decreed Michael Reynolds, pool) Turn to page 14