Church Merger Could Unite a Mission
By Monica Collins/Downtown Journal/Boston-Herald
Monday, March 29, 2004
On a recent weekday morning in Lent, the traditional season of sacrifice in the Catholic Church, 10 people attended Mass at St. Stephen's in Boston's North End. They heard the Rev. Vin Daly read the gospel from St. John and give a sermon about ``light, water and bread,'' the pillars of reconciliation, baptism and communion that still hold up a shaky church.
Even though his audience was tiny, Father Daly spoke with vigor and spirit, as if addressing a multitude. He has obviously grown accustomed to sermonizing to a smattering. There is never a large crowd at St. Stephen's, even on Sundays.
You might look at St. Stephen's from the outside and think the church is prospering. The historic Bulfinch building, located on the Freedom Trail, has been renovated. New gold leaf glints from its domed steeple. The work was done at state expense through a grant from the Massachusetts Preservation Projects Fund. For months, a sign outside the church's front door listed various public officials - including Secretary of State William Galvin, Rep. Sal DiMasi and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino - credited with helping the rehab effort.
Inside the story isn't as pretty. St. Stephen's suffers from poor attendance and, therefore, a lack of funds. If it were part of the Boston Archdiocese, St. Stephen's would be in a precarious position. But because it is considered a missionary church - the headquarters of the St. James Society - St. Stephen's exists apart from the rest.
In early May, when Archbishop Sean O'Malley selects those churches that will shut down in a painful cost-cutting process touching nearly all of Boston's Catholics, St. Stephen's on Hanover Street will be spared.
A few blocks away, on cobbled North Square, another historic downtown church waits anxiously for O'Malley's decision. Sacred Heart, which offers Masses in Italian, has been recommended for closure after the first round of decision-making by area priests and laity. From the Sunday pulpit, the Rev. Vincenzo Rosato recently relayed the unsettling news to his small but loyal congregation.
The fate of Sacred Heart reflects the changing nature of the North End. Italian-Americans no longer dominate the demographics of the neighborhood.
Yet Father Rosato has described his church as a ``National Italian Church,'' with boundaries that extend well beyond the traditional parish borders. As a priest of the Scalabrini order, Rosato is a member of a missionary group founded to serve Italian immigrants in the United States and Canada.
Why should Sacred Heart be considered in a different state of grace than St. Stephen's? Such are the mysteries of the modern church.
No mystery is the real estate value of Sacred Heart. The church, sitting on a quiet square in a gold mine neighborhood, would fetch multimillions in the condo market. As Archbishop O'Malley makes his decisions to close parishes, money will inevitably tip the balance.
Money is seen as one crucial reason why St. Leonard of Port Maurice on Hanover Street - the most well-known church in North End - will survive. The archdiocese already sold off a piece of St. Leonard's. Last year, the parish house went for $6 million to a condo developer who gave back valuable parking spaces as well as dollars toward renovation of the rundown church.
Still, the average Mass attendance at St. Leonard's - as calculated in 2003 from archdiocese statistics - lags slightly behind St. Joseph's in the West End, another church in the downtown cluster that anxiously awaits O'Malley's decision.
The Rev. Gabriel Troy, St. Joseph's pastor, left St. Stephen's and the Society of St. James, to take over the church adjacent to Massachusetts General Hospital and Charles River Park. He describes his parishioners as ``coming and going,'' but estimates his church serves ``440 to 500'' on any given weekend.
The numbers alone do not give Troy a reprieve from worry. ``We all see our little half-acre. I hope this church stays open and I am keeping my fingers crossed, but nothing will be definite until early May,'' he says.
Troy points out the recommendation to close Sacred Heart was a preliminary one, but he says a valid reason for Sacred Heart's survival would be its mission to serve all Italian Catholics. Says Troy: ``Sacred Heart is in the hands of the Scalabrini, a religious order.''
When asked why Sacred Heart is unequal to St. Stephen's, a church also in the hands of a religious order, Father Troy concedes, ``It's very complicated.''
It's quite simple, though, to imagine Sacred Heart merging with St. Stephen's. The two North End mission churches could unite around one mission and spread the gospel of survival.
The motivations for this church merger are strong and clear.
A church merger seems the obvious solution.
But have the right questions been asked?
Read:
Factors Contributing to Success or Failure in Congregational Mergers, Church Mergers, or a Church Merger