Results matching “ceremony” from Save St Mary's Malaga

Today is the blessed Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel. Mass today is at St. Joseph's Church, Hammonton Votive candles and OLMount Carmel inside the churchat 2 and 7pm. The beautiful "emergence ceremony" in which the statues of the saints are brought out from the church, followed by the procession around town, is at 4:00.

Also, don't miss the food, fun, music, rides, and games. I am obviously not a member of St. Joseph's, but my wonderful neighbors are and the feast is a great blessing and a beautiful tradition. As they say in Hammonton, Buona Festa!

Prayer to the Blessed Virgin Mary

O exalted Queen of Heaven,
Supreme Mistress of the Angels,
Who from the beginning has received from God the power and the commission to crush the serpent's head,
We pray thee humbly,
Send down thy Holy Legions,
That they, under thy command and power,
May pursue the spirits of Hell,
Everywhere wage war against them,
Defeat their boldness and thrust them into the abyss of Hell.

:"Oh kind and tender Mother, thou shalt ever remain our love and hope."

Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, pray for us! Protect St. Mary's from the onslaught of the powers of hell. May St. Mary's continue to be a place of healing and hope to all who visit. Amen.

Above: Our Lady of Mt. Carmel and votive candles at St. Mary's Malaga.

Mother's Day

Happy Mother's Day! On this day we are especially reminded of our "true," Heavenly Mother and God's goodness in giving us so great an advocate. Both Fr. Romanowski and Fr. Namiotka reminded us of this in their sermons today.

This weekend (as well as tomorrow morning) Fr. Romanowski said the traditional Latin Mass at Mater Ecclesiae in Berlin and a bunch of us went there for mass and to see him. It was wonderful and as always, Father did an excellent job. We were fortunate to be able to speak with him after mass. He seemed very happy. He is also extremely busy unpacking, particularly the 50 boxes of books. (I'm not joking.) It goes without saying that everyone at St. Mary's wishes Fr. Pasley, rector of Mater Ecclesiae, a good rest and speedy recovery. He is in our prayers.

Meanwhile, back at St. Mary's, Fr. Namiotka presided over a little crowning ceremony in honor of our Blessed Mother today, as is his custom on Mother's Day. I snapped a few pictures but since my three-year-old was very wiggly by this point and of course there was action involved, they turned out a little fuzzy. It was a special blessing to say the Divine Mercy Chaplet, consecration prayer, and St. Michael prayer after 11:30 mass this afternoon. We are united in our desire to implore God's mercy and protection of St. Mary's.

You will also see that there is a white mantle that is currently on the statue of the Blessed Mother inside the church. On it is sewn the names of this year's First Holy Communicants as a special blessing. Truly she looks over our little church!

Blessed Mother of Our Lord Jesus Christ, gentle and mighty Advocate, pray for the protection of St. Mary's!


Created with flickr slideshow.
Contributed by Leah

Today a group of around fifty COP members from various parishes demonstrated against the merger of our parishes at the Commissioning Ceremony of the Core Teams and Priest Conveners at St. Agnes Church in Blackwood.  It was a typical protest, with people standing in small groups, holding signs.  No one was harassing anyone or disturbing anything.  Once the event had started, we gathered for a group photo in front of the statue of Jesus, then the group dispersed.

St. Agnes Rally


One member from our group, a 77-year old parishioner of St. Mary's--we'll call him Steve-- decided to go back into the Commissioning Ceremony to watch (he had already been inside earlier, but didn't stay).  However, when he tried to enter, all of the doors were locked and two ushers who opened one of the doors would not let him in.  After a few minutes, I walked up to see what was going on.  The ushers were saying that we could not go in because we were protesters and were from St. Mary's.  We assured them that we just wanted to observe the ceremony and would not be disruptive.  One of them then accused me of putting something on the Bishop's van, which I hadn't done and I said as much.  We were asking to be let in and they were telling us "No," but the discussion was calm and we were not trying to force our way in.  At any time, they could have simply closed the door and ended the conversation.

But as we were talking to them, a very short priest with white hair and blue eyes circled around behind us and asked what was going on.  I explained again that we just wanted to observe the ceremony, since no one from St. Mary's was present.  He became very critical of St. Mary's and said we were not welcome inside the church and would have to leave.

At that point, I asked the priest who he was and he refused to identify himself.  One of the ushers inside, the same one who earlier accused me of putting something on the Bishop's van, then accused me of disrespecting the mystery priest, which I wasn't doing at all--I just wanted to know who was saying that we weren't welcome there.  Then, the other usher suddenly pushed the door open, yelled "Leave Now," put both his hands on Steve's chest (Steve was not saying or doing anything) and literally threw him backward.  He fell and slid across the cement apron on his back, nearly slamming his head against both the apron and the pillar on the far side of the apron.

So did the mystery priest come to the aid of Steve?  NO.  To the contrary, the mystery priest, who I later identified as Fr. Terry Odien, stepped in front of me and stated that that's what happens when tensions run high.

DSC01756


He glared at me and said, "Now Leave!" in what can only be described as a menacing manner.  No one helped Steve up, asked if he was OK, or apologized. In fact, as Steve picked himself up off the ground, and after telling us to leave, Fr. Odien and the ushers ran inside, locking the doors behind them. By the time the police arrived, the usher who had pushed Steve had left the premises.

Now, Steve is 77-years old and, by the grace of God, was not seriously hurt, but this type of physical aggression was completely unwarranted, inappropriate, and, frankly, criminal.  I can only say that I was stunned that we would be physically assaulted at the door of a Catholic Church with the seeming endorsement of the Priest Personnel Director of the Diocese of Camden. 

And this is not the first time something like this has happened.  A few years ago, someone picketing the Bishop was assaulted by a priest of the Diocese of Camden, in fact a priest with a leadership position in Deanery 12. 

Bishop Galante, you have expressed concern for your own safety at our picketing events, despite the fact that we have never done anything aggressive toward you or anyone else.  Your flock wants to know, are you going to do something about this type of behavior perpetrated by people acting as agents of the Church?

Core Teams

This submitted to savestmarys today by Robert Walsh:

Editor's Note: We understand that some people are on the core teams in order to prevent merger of their parishes. Clearly in this piece the "core team members" referred to are those who are selling out their parish for their own personal gain--presumably the vast majority of the core team members..

Bishop Joseph Galante will conduct a Commissioning Ceremony on Sunday, October 19, 2008 at Saint Agnes Church, 701 Little Gloucester Road, Blackwood, NJ 08012 beginning at 3:00PM. The purpose of the Commissioning Ceremony is to instruct, direct and bless those individuals that have been selected for each Parish that will serve as Core Team Members with the Priest Conveners.  This is the official start of their work which will be undertaken to effect the closures, mergers, and clustering of the previously announced intentions of Bishop Galante.

Let there be no confusion, the Core Team Members and Priest Conveners have been selected to alter your Parish as you currently know and enjoy it.  Their job is to make the Bishop's plans come into reality.  The Core Team Members may be your friends or acquaintances but they have already been evaluated and interviewed to make sure that they can do the Bishop's work without any previous agenda or concerns of your current Parish.  They are designated to play the role of Judas in betraying your Parish and Our Lord Jesus Christ.  The Pin that they each Core Team Member will receive from Bishop Galante is equivalent to "30 pieces of Silver."

Bishop Galante, his advisers, and Core Team Members: We do not endorse your plan to modify our Parishes. The work you are doing is contrary to the desires of the Parishioners throughout the Diocese of Camden.

We ask the intercession of Saint Thomas More, John Fisher, Oliver Plunkett, and Robert Bellarmine as we undertake the task of preserving the presence of Jesus Christ in our Parish Churches throughout the Diocese of Camden.  Our Lady Queen of Peace, pray for us!
We've long known about the lay leadership program that Bishop Galante has been planning for the Diocese of Camden. In this brief article, we read about the signing ceremony with the College of St. Elizabeth. In the past, Galante has cited an alleged priest shortage as a rationale for the need for lay "ministers, but he continues to send priests away for "training," as military chaplains, and has even forced retirements and sent priests he disliked  to treatment centers or to different dioceses. Usually the priests who are sent away are of the most orthodox ones in the Camden Diocese. This hardly seems accidental. Of course Galante also says that church attendance is down, and that we need to consolidate (close) our churches, but with fewer churches, wouldn't it follow that fewer priests would be needed? The real agenda here is instituting a liberal lay leadership program and pushing for married and, probably, for female priests.

We have long known of two lay men who want to be diocesan priests here--both of whom Rome recently rejected, presumably because they are married--who are still taking seminary classes down at Baltimore's "pink palace," St. Mary's. Not only this, but to the best of our knowledge, both are living in housing paid for by the Diocese of Camden, and one is currently employed by the Diocese. The latter individual I spoke with myself a couple months ago, and he informed me that Bishop Galante asked him if he was interested in being a priest within minutes of meeting him, full aware of his age (he appeared to be in his late 50s), evangelical protestant religious background, poor health, and marital status. If Rome has told these men "no," then why are they still training for the priesthood and, last we heard, still living in diocesan housing? Your guess is a good as mine.

Part 1: The Origins of St. Mary's
Part 2: 1922-1939: A Mission Church of Sacred Heart Parish
Part 3: 1939-1961: A Mission Church of St. Rose of Lima Parish
Part 4: Since 1961: An Independent Parish
Epilogue: Pastor's Vision for the Future
Acknowledgments: About this history

In June 1961, the Most Reverend Celestine Damiano, bishop of Camden, formally established St. Mary's as an independent parish and appointed the Reverend Charles Zimmer as its administrator. To accommodate the increasing population in the Malaga area, Father Zimmer added a third Sunday Mass. In addition, he offered Masson weekdays--something that had not been possible during St. Mary's four decades as a mission church.

Building the Rectory

During his first months in Malaga, Father Zimmer used the church sacristy as a temporary home and office. Early in 1962, Bishop Damiano approved the building of a rectory across the street on land acquired four years earlier.

As was the case in 1922 when St. Mary's Church was built, the people of Malaga responded generously to the fund-raising campaign. One hundred and seventy-four individuals gave approximately $20.000. Father Zimmer officiated at the groundbreaking ceremony on March 31, 1962, with Messrs. Joseph Ali (1923-1992) and Charles Colucci, trustees, assisting. The latter volunteered his services as general contractor; the subcontractors were mostly local craftsmen who worked with care and dispatch. Before spring ended, Father Zimmer was able to move into the completed rectory.

Vatican Council II and the 1960s

In the fall of 1962, Pope John XXIII convened the twenty-first ecumentical council of the Catholic Church, generally known as Vatican Council II. Father Zimmer was quick to implement its threefold mandate--renewal, modernization, and ecumenism. He changed the position of the altar so that a priest could say mass facing the congregation. He becam to say Mass in English instead of Latin, he formed one of the first parish councils in the area, and he fostered dialogue with neighboring churches.

By the end of the 1960s, St. Mary's had changed. Part of this change was due to the dictums of Vatican Council II. Another factor was the influx of young, newly married couples, who were attracted to the Malaga area by housing developments within commuting distance of their workplaces. (This influx was akin to that of Malaga's immigrant population a half century earlier.)

The death of many of St. Mary's founders during the 1960s (and 1970s) also augured for chnange. The annual Feast of the Assumption, for example, no longer featured fireworks, a band, and other Old World attractions. Because virtually all the founders were farmers, and because most of their descendants had gone on to other pursuits, the 1960s marked the end of an era during which farming was the dominant occupation of St. Mary's parishioners.

The 1970s and '80s

During the 1970s and for most of the 1980s, Father (later Monsignor) John McCaffrey was pastor. He often said, "My whole interest is in reading and studying the Word of God," and he considered the CCD (Confraternity of Christian Doctrine) program to be vital for the children. Monsignor McCaffrey organized a cadre of volunteers to supllement the teaching by nuns from Villa Rosello (Newfield) at that time.

By the mid-1980s, Mr. Ronald Bonner had been coordinating the CCD program for several years and enrollment had soared to over 100 children, including preschoolers. The preschool instruction motivated numerous parents to send their youngsters to St. Rose of Lima School in Newfield (instead of a public school). At one point, about fifty pupils from Malaga were enrolled at St. Rose's.

Soon after he arrived, Monsignor McCaffrey established a Praesidium of the Legion of Mary to serve the Malaga area. The legion stresses Marian spirituality through attendance at weekly meetings and through a variety of apostolic activities. St. Mary's legionnaires welcomed new families and registered them in the parish.

In addition to helping newcomers with the practical aspects of getting settled in a new community (locating stores, services, medical care, and so forth), members of the legion sounseled them in spiritual matters. During the 1980s, many residents, both old and new, were brought back into the Church as a result of the legion's activities.

During Monsignor McCaffrey's tenure, the diocese's Third Order of Mount Carmel elected to make St. Mary's parish its home. St. Theresa's Rose Garden, which symbolizes her devotion to souls in purgatory, is located on Harding Highway, west of Malaga Lake. A part of the garden, St. Anne's Cenacle, continues to be a site of prayer for Carmelites and others.

Recognizing the importance of music to the beauty of the liturgy, Monsignor McCaffrey encouraged Mrs. Sally Bonner to organize a folk group to provide music that would appeal to St. Mary's youth. Mrs. Bonner's guitar playing and singing, together with that of the younger people under her tutelage, has enhanced Sunday Masses since 1982. (Her long-term dedication is reminiscent of that of an earlier musician, Mrs. Simone Walsh [1899-1985], who served as organist at St. Mary's for twenty-five years.)

St. Mary's in the 1990s

The Reverend Abbott Hope was pastor of St. Mary's from 1989 until his retirement last February (1997). During his first years in Malaga, Father Hope was assisted by the Reverend Mr. Philip Harris, deacon.

In August 1992, the parish celebrated the seventieth anniversary of the building of St. Mary's Church. The celebrant of the High Mass was the Most Reverend James McHugh, bishop of Camden. Monsignor Patrick Madden, Monsignor Edward O'Connor, and Father Hope were concelebrants.

Father Hope continued to strengthen the spiritual programs at St. Mary's. he focused on making the parish ever more youth-oriented by providing religious instruction for children who attended public schools. (Rising tuition costs at local Catholic schools had caused a shift back to public schools.) He helped start a youth group, which now has 23 members. The group carries out service projects and sponsors recreational activities for its members. Currently, Messrs. Andrew Nuar and John Dalesandro, Jr., represent their peers at parish council meetings.

Father Hope worked closely with his parishioners in operating St. Mary's programs, which are now staffed by the following people:

                                                        Lead Person
Building/grounds.............................................Mr. Charles Chamberlin
Carmelites.....................................................Ms. Mary Whittam
CCD..............................................................Mr. Ronald Bonner
Diamond Jubilee.............................................Miss Theresa DiMatteo
Feast............................................................Mrs. Louiuse Mancus
Fellowship Sunday.........................................Miss Carmella Castelli
First Friday Adoration.....................................Dr. Aime Nuar
Legion of Mary...............................................Ms. Cynthia Herzler
Liturgy...........................................................Mrs. Sally Bonner
Music............................................................Mrs. Sally Bonner
Parish Council...............................................Mrs. Louise Mancus
Youth Group..................................................Mrs. Cindy Merckx
                                                                    (Adult Coordinator)

During his final months as pastor, Father Hope oversaw the purchase of the property next to the rectory (the former Hopkins residence) with funds bequeathed by Mrs. Evelyn Tonelli of Dutch Mill Road, who died in 1994.

Early this year (1997), the Reverend Jerome Romanowski became St. Mary's twelfth pastor. The traditional Catholic community into which he was welcomed comprises nearly 400 registered parishioners--about four times as many as when St. Mary's Church was dedicated seventy-five years ago. Even more significant than this growth is the community's transformation from a group of foreign-born farmers to a population of American-born technicians, tradespeople, large-scale farmers, and professionals.

Over two hundred years ago, the Founding Fathers declared our national motto to be "E Pluribus Unum" (one for many). They envisioned a nation to which many peole could come, transcend differences, and unite.

Today, a small, southern New Jersey Catholic community continues to help fulfill that dream under the leadership of an energetic, forward-looking pastor.


Part 1: The Origins of St. Mary's
Part 2: 1922-1939: A Mission Church of Sacred Heart Parish
Part 3: 1939-1961: A Mission Church of St. Rose of Lima Parish
Part 4: Since 1961: An Independent Parish
Epilogue: Pastor's Vision for the Future
Acknowledgments: About this history

Support the Campaign!

Why Save St. Mary's?

What's true for OL Queen of Peace, Pitman & Assumption, Wildwood Crest is also true for St. Mary's Malaga:

"The people in Pitman bought that ground and built that church and it belongs to them. You can't just take it away."

-Anthony Mecca, Queen of Peace Parish, Pitman (also on the slate for closure), May 8, 2008

"This is God's house. Let us live here with God as we've done all these years."

-Fred Spiewak, Assumption Parish, Wildwood Crest, June 11, 2008

Frequently Asked Questions

Full list of Frequently Asked Questions about the Church Closings

Recent Entries

How Big is "Big Enough?"
We have had lots of reasons, all of which we have previously debunked, (including the priest shortage lie,*) thrown at…
St. Mary's Continues to Resist Merger!
Make no mistake about it. St. Mary's parishioners continue to resist the merger and subsequent closure of their church. Why?…
Wildwood Catholic HS to Stay Open
Wildwood Catholic HS will remain open thanks to the efforts of those who worked to save it. The diocesan spin…

Email Signup

Sign up for daily email updates about the campaign.

Enter your email address:

Facebook

Twitter: Savestmarys

Confidential Tip Line

We would like to announce our totally confidential tip line, for anyone with information pertaining to St. Mary's or their own parish, dealings with the diocese, etc. Remember, you need not give your name, or you may if you choose to. Contact us by email: info@savestmarys.net or phone: 856-692-0222 (ask for Leah).