Parishioners claim statue of Mary fell inexplicably
at church's final Mass
Update
March 10, 2005 - [See here] article titled Parishioners
believe Mary sent a sign.
October 11, 2004
- Reported in Spirit
Daily.com online newspaper. From Boston.com. A
miracle at final Mass -
Parishioners see fallen statue as closure protest. After
99 years of feasts, funerals, weddings, and baptisms, parishioners
who went to the final Mass at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in
East Boston yesterday declared that they had witnessed a miracle.
The church's statue of the Virgin Mary, which stood in front of
the altar, tipped over suddenly and thudded to the floor after Mass,
seemingly unmolested by human hands, parishioners said. Trembling and weeping, they called it a sign from God protesting
the Boston Archdiocese's decision to close their church, part of
the lifeblood of the working-class, Italian-American neighborhood
since 1905.
"This is
a miracle!" Gerri Costa
exclaimed after parishioners righted the 5-foot statue, which was
missing a few pieces from its
back. "Miracles do happen, and this is a miracle. Viva La Madonna!" The
conclusion to the East Boston church's final Mass in Italian boiled
with pain, anger, and hope, a tumult of emotions engulfing
many parishes in the archdiocese as the process of closing 82 parishes
continues. In suburban
and city churches, worshipers are grappling with the import of Archbishop
Sean P. O'Malley's
appointment last week of
eight prominent Catholics to advise on the closing process. Many
are pondering the meaning of O'Malley's latest statement, that he
is reconsidering "a couple" of his decisions to shutter churches.
"There's
a couple of parishes that we're considering because of new information
that has come forward," O'Malley
said in an interview with the Globe Saturday. While he would not
specify
any parishes, he added that he expected to make decisions "very
shortly." At St.
Albert the Great Church in Weymouth, where parishioners have sat
in vigil since Aug. 29 in hope of keeping it open, one of the
vigil spokesmen, Colin Riley, said he was not sure how to react to
O'Malley's statement or the newly appointed committee, which includes
leaders from the worlds of finance, philanthropy, and higher education.
"I don't
know how to read this," Riley said by phone. "The
archbishop's statement included no mention of the committee's purpose,
no scope, no process, no timeline." He added, "Our trust
is at an all-time low." Peter Borre, a parishioner at St. Catherine
of Siena Parish in Charlestown, which is also slated for closure,
said he did not feel any comfort
in O'Malley's statement that he is reconsidering some parish closings.
"The entire reconfiguration process and suppression has been
so flawed that singling out a few with
a vague indication of hope is
something that does not reassure me," Borre said. "What
this archdiocese needs to do is implement a pause in the entire process
of reconfiguration."
In his statement
Saturday, O'Malley said he had no choice but to close Boston-area
parishes, as church leaders have nationwide. "The
pastoral requirements of serving our 2 million Catholics made some
decisions concerning structure
and finances imperative," he
said. "Hence, I undertook the process of reconfiguration." At
Our Lady of Carmel, parishioners in their 70s and 80s wept and embraced
through the final Mass, while workers in the basement set
up a final post-Mass spread of cookies and coffee. Many were furious
over the closing, saying it was the end of a way of life, a link
to past generations, wiped out before its time.
The Rev. Wayne
L. Belschner said the future of the chapel idea will be decided
soon. "Once
we repair the heat, once we repair the roof, and once we repair the
walls and have the place
painted, we will put a committee
together to discuss the future of the chapel," he said. "We
said we would discuss the idea, but for some reason some people took
it one step further and blew it out of proportion." Belschner
is pastor of Sacred Heart, a larger parish nearby that will serve
parishioners from Our Lady
of Mount Carmel. But its distance,
geographically and culturally, made it a bitter consolation for many
yesterday. "Where are all the old people going to go?" asked
Josephine Costa, 87. The Rev. Francis de Sales Paolo, who has been
at Our Lady of Mount Carmel for years, is now headed to a new parish
on Cape Cod. He said
he hoped for healing in the wake of yesterday's closing, but said
he could not ignore the anger and sadness in his church.
"You know it's
sad, of course," he
said. "It's sad because 100 years ago, they were the immigrants
here, they were the artisans
and carpenters and bricklayers and stonecutters, and they built this
church with their hands."And
so my idea is you've got to carry the faith on, because their work
is not in vain," he
said. ''But it's hard to explain that to people who built the building.
But it can't last, like all buildings."
[See
here] story
titled Statue of Our Lady of Grace weeps Medford, Massachusetts
- as church doors close.
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