11.27.09

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Diocese of Fall River

The Anchor

F riday , November 27, 2009

Renovated Taunton church will reopen its doors Sunday

By Dave Jolivet, Editor

TAUNTON — Father John W. Quirk celebrated the very first Mass at St. Joseph’s Church in the Silver City on Christmas Day in 1910. The parish’s second pastor headed the project for the new church building, for which ground was broken in 1909, with then-Fall River Bishop Daniel F. Feehan laying the cornerstone. For nearly 100 years, wear and

tear from daily use and the elements created the need for an extreme make-over for the venerable English Gothic style edifice. That face-lift began very early this past January, and on Sunday, Bishop George W. Coleman will celebrate the church’s reopening with an 11 a.m. Mass, at which he will bless the remodeled house of worship and consecrate a brand new altar.

Much has changed at the church during the 11-month reconstruction, but much had changed just prior to the project. After careful study by diocesan officials and a Founding Parish Task Force, and input from the members of St. Joseph’s and St. Paul’s parishes, the diocese suppressed the two parishes and formed the new St. Andrew the Apostle Parish, Turn to page 14

Diocesan priests’ convocation planned for December 15-17

B y Deacon James N. Dunbar

STARS LIGHT, STARS BRIGHT — The message that Jesus is the light of the world will burn even brightly this Advent and Christmas season as the annual Festival of Lights at La Salette Shrine in Attleboro has added more than 100,000 lights to its already-impressive outdoor display. The shrine’s display is now open nightly from 5 to 9 p.m. through Jan. 3, 2010. (Photo by Fatima Bigda)

Christmas message burns brighter at La Salette’s annual Festival of Lights B y Kenneth J. Souza A nchor Staff

ATTLEBORO — A Christmas tradition in the Fall River Diocese since it first began on Dec. 8, 1953, the annual Festival of Lights display at La Salette Shrine this year promises to “shine brighter than ever” according to shrine director, Father Andre A. “Pat” Patenaude. With more than 400,000 lights illuminating 10 acres of shrine property every night through January 3, the iconic display continues to emphasize the true meaning of the otherwise busy Christmas sea-

son — celebrating the coming of Christ as the “Light of the World.” The theme for this 56th year of the Festival of Lights is “Jesus is God’s YES!” — a phrase inspired by St. Paul’s declaration: “For all the promises of God find their yes in him” (2 Cor 1:19-20). “The theme basically gives us something to preach about for the Advent and Christmas season,” Father Pat told The Anchor. “It’s a theme we’ll be touching upon during the season. We’ve also depicted the word ‘yes’ in many difTurn to page 18

CENTERVILLE — When priests of the Fall River Diocese gather for their three-day convocation next month in Advent, they will reflect on the timely theme of “Pastoral Ministry in a Season of Expectation.” “Our age (season) is characterized by major cultural deficits that make pastoral ministry very difficult: poverty and unemployment, progressive secularism, scandal in the Church, the lack of quiet,” said Dr. John Cavadini, who will be the keynote speaker. “Perhaps ministry in the face of such daunting problems makes it seem futile, and even worse, ministry in such a time makes it harder for the bonds of friendship and mutual support among priests to flourish, even though they are needed more than ever,” said Cavadini, chairman of the Theology

Department at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. “The idea of these days of recollection is to find a paradigm that can turn these cultur-

First Sunday of Advent

al deficits, if not into cultural assets, nevertheless into the locus of blessing, of beatitude,” he added, in an interview with The Anchor. Turn to page 14

November 29

Bishop accepts recommendation to join neighboring parishes as one

ATTLEBORO — In a letter read at all November 21-22 weekend Masses at St. Mary’s Church in Seekonk and St. Stephen’s Church in Attleboro, Bishop George W. Coleman informed parishioners that he has formally accepted the recommendation of their combined parish task force to join the two communities into one new parish. The task force, comprised of a representative group of parishioners from both parishes and their pastors, has been meeting over the past year-and-a-half to

discuss planning for the future of their parishes, located just 1.5 miles apart, particularly with the pending retirement of Father James H. Morse from St. Stephen’s in 2010. Bishop Coleman wrote in his letter that, following the specifics of the recommendation, the new parish will be inaugurated next spring upon Father Morse’s retirement and that it will utilize St. Mary’s Church as its worship site because of its larger size. Father Thomas L. Rita, current pastor of St. Mary’s, will become

its founding pastor. Over the next several months the Parish Founding Task Force will oversee planning for the transition with assistance from diocesan Pastoral Planning staff. All parishioners will be invited to offer input into the selection of a name for the new parish. “I know that this development may not be easy, and that you may experience different emotions,” Bishop Coleman said in his letter. “Changes in our diocese are impelling us to examine how we Turn to page 12


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