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PARISHES WITH PULL.


How great communities attract people

There are certainly many new approaches to spirituality and belief these days, but the parish remains the place most Catholics go to for sustenance Sustenance
Amalthaea

goat who provided milk for baby Zeus. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 41]

ambrosia

food of the gods; bestowed immortal youthfulness. [Gk. Myth.
. In fact, two thirds of all American Catholics are registered parishioners. While a varied lot, to be sure, they all are looking for--albeit in many different ways-a transcendent connection to God and guidance for their life's journey, a place where they will be at once nurtured and prodded. Catholics today seek not just to be on the rolls of an institution to fulfill their religious obligations; they want a spiritual home.

My interest in finding excellent parishes came into being after I returned from a parish in New Jersey where I had given a three-day pre-Lenten mission. Simply put: I loved being there. It was so alive; the parishioners and staff were so friendly and so ready to say "yes." The programs were varied and useful--both old and young were being educated, and people in their 20s were crowding into the Sunday night Sunday Night, later named Michelob Presents Night Music, was an NBC late-night television show which aired for two seasons between 1988 and 1990 as a showcase for jazz and eclectic musical artists.  liturgy. Only when I returned to my home parish and a certain sadness came over me did I realize the dramatic difference between that parish and my own.

There were surely other parishes like that one in New Jersey, I assumed, and over the next year, with the generous support of a grant from the Lilly Endowment Lilly Endowment Inc., headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana is one of the world's largest private philanthropic foundations and is among the ten largest such endowments in the United States.

The endowment was founded in 1937 by J. K. Lilly Sr. and his sons Eli and J. K. Jr.
, two researchers and I set out to find them. What we found is that great parishes not only exist, they abound. I am convinced that their approaches to the various aspects of parish life can succeed elsewhere. Neither these parishes nor their pastors are cut from some magical cloth that inured in·ure also en·ure  
tr.v. in·ured, in·ur·ing, in·ures
To habituate to something undesirable, especially by prolonged subjection; accustom:
 them to the problems facing both the church and people today. In fact, these problems often made these parishes into the great places they have become.

Of the hundreds of great parishes our project has identified, I have profiled eight in my new book, Excellent Catholic Parishes. Here are two of them (see box on page 17 for the other six).

FAITH WITH A LATINO FLAVOR

As the sun slips behind the imposing bank buildings and high-rise hotels that flank Interstate 10, it sets ablaze a bronze statue of Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus.

Jesus Christ

40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11]

See : Ascension


Jesus Christ

kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T.
: the peasant Christ, with a rough-woven serape over his shoulders, a walking stick in one hand, a small bag in the other. As Father Arturo Banuelas stands beneath this at-once unassuming and imposing figure, the soft sounds of tumbling water from a three-tier fountain impart a sure peace to the place. Behind him sits the stately, mission-style stucco stucco (stŭk`ō), in architecture, a term loosely applied to various kinds of plasterwork, both exterior and interior. It now commonly refers to a plaster or cement used for the external coating of buildings, most frequently employed in  church of St. Pius X.

"El Paso El Paso (ĕl pă`sō), city (1990 pop. 515,342), seat of El Paso co., extreme W Tex., on the Rio Grande opposite Juárez, Mex.; inc. 1873.  is a border town," he begins. "Hispanics are on the borders of the Anglo world; to be a Catholic is to stand at the edge of a secular society. Even today, the church is still on the border between old ways and new ways, the traditional church of Sunday devotion versus the church that we carry into the world each day. So, it was appropriate that our `Border Christ' would be the symbol of our church--always on the move, not ever at home, willing to go where he is needed, wearing the simplest of clothes, carrying no more than he needed but, because of his marginalized status, capable of entering all cultures and bridging all people as one."

Banuelas' modest assessment of his parish and its signature statue belies what has happened here. St. Pius X has wedded ancient Hispanic values and faith with a Vatican II Noun 1. Vatican II - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms
Second Vatican Council

Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church
 vision of a modern parish, infusing each with new meaning. St. Pius X--or San Pio X to its largely bilingual congregation--is considered not only one of the most outstanding Hispanic parishes in America, but one of the best, period. With hundreds of members solidly trained as lay leaders, new ministries springing up virtually weekly, and liturgies that appeal to everyone from los jovenes to los majores de edad, this parish indeed serves as a ray of hope for Hispanics and for the church at large.

As I spend time at St. Pius, talk to parishioners, and witness some of their 39 different ministries, it quickly becomes clear that this parish has thrived for two primary reasons. The first is the positive, willing-to-risk attitude of its pastor. The second is a concerted lay training program based both in periodic parish evangelization e·van·gel·ize  
v. e·van·gel·ized, e·van·gel·iz·ing, e·van·gel·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To preach the gospel to.

2. To convert to Christianity.

v.intr.
To preach the gospel.
 retreats that lead people into small Christian communities and Tepeyac, a lay institute that provides theological underpinnings for ministry.

St. Pius owes much of its success to its laypeople lay·peo·ple or lay people  
pl.n.
Laymen and laywomen.
, who are not considered "volunteers" in the programs they either originate or join; they are "ministers."

As I sit with a group of Jovenes en Cristo members, they tell me how they came into being. They were too old for teenage activities and younger than the 35-plus group. "We had no place to turn for guidance as we face some of the biggest decisions of our lives, decisions that will shape our lives," said Victor Hugo Arquelles, 27. They wanted the church's guidance, and they craved good friends and fellowship.

While Banuelas emphasizes such community building in everything, he draws a line: "Community without service is a self-help group self-help group, nonprofessional organization formed by people with a common problem or situation, for the purpose of pooling resources, gathering information, and offering mutual support, services, or care. ." So Jovenes en Cristo is other-directed--playing bingo with kids with cancer in a hospital or taking 15 at-risk teenagers on a retreat.

Another group at St. Pius, which eventually came to be known as the Living Word Ministry, started with the Passion drama the parish stages each year on Good Friday Good Friday, anniversary of Jesus' death on the cross. According to the Gospels, Jesus was put to death on the Friday before Easter Day. Since the early church Good Friday has been observed by fasting and penance. . "After we all went to Tepeyac for classes," says Tom Chavez, who plays Jesus, "we saw that the Passion drama was just a beginning; we could do so much more to make the gospels, the personalities in the church come alive."

What continually impresses me as I talk with these people across such a wide spectrum of interests and ages is the theological depth and the organic quality of the St. Pius ministries. They have risen up out of the human needs of the parishioners and out of a desire to extend themselves into the world.

For Frank Lopez, the prospects of a lucrative legal practice and a comfortable upper-middle-class life faced off against the gospel values St. Pius X espouses. "And the gospel finally and clearly spoke to me," he says. A graduate of a prestigious law school, Lopez could have joined an upscale law firm. Instead, he took a position with the University of Texas-El Paso to work on the thorny issues of border law, and he has made a personal commitment to St. Pius X's sister parish in Juarez, Mexico, which is a few miles from the church yet is a world removed.

Lopez and I walk the dusty, unpaved streets of the colonia in Juarez, just across the border from El Paso. "Our work here is not about charity. It is a journey together with the people of the colonia," he says. "When they come to El Paso they bring their music and their faith. We need each other; after all, we are one family. My heart was always with the poor, but it was only after I studied the documents of Vatican II at Tepeyac that my intellectual needs were met. I saw the `why' behind the `what' that I wanted to do."

In essence, people like Lopez are, although they might not know it, vowed religious of a new kind of lay order that as yet has no name. In a parish like St. Pius, with excellent religious formation, support, and encouragement, they are able to live out their quite serious religious vocations while remaining in the secular world.

"I am a dinosaur," Banuelas says with a smile. "Laypeople are the future of the church. This is no quick fix. This is a long haul Long distance. Long haul implies traversing a state or a country. Contrast with short haul. . And we need to make changes, especially for Hispanic Catholics. We are losing them to other churches, because in the Catholic Church, instead of honoring and utilizing their rich faith and heritage, we are still trying to assimilate them, make them into eurocentric Catholics. They are not."

Does he think there is a priest shortage This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject.
Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details.
? "Yes and no," Banuelas answers. "Yes, in that people might not be anointed "Anointed" redirects here. For the process of anointing, see Anointing.

Anointed is a Contemporary Christian music duo consisting of siblings Steve and Da'dra Crawford. Their musical style includes elements of R&B, funk, and piano ballads.
 before death by a priest, or a priest might not take the casket to the cemetery, or their classes might not be taught by a priest. But are these the most important things?

"No, there is no priest shortage, because the mission of the church becomes more credible when laypeople are the leaders. Laypeople don't have the restrictions clergy do; they are every place. That is why this is a very creative time in the church and a most exciting time to be a priest--dinosaur that I am--because I am multiplied time and time again out in the world by our parishioners.

"Some other parishes look upon us as radical, liberal, but we are not. We are theologically, liturgically solid, yet we adapt to people's needs. All that has happened here is that people have been given back their church, total possession--and they bring a unique Chicano flavor with it."

When Banuelas arrived, the church building, as the pastor recalls, was "nothing more than a glorified glo·ri·fy  
tr.v. glo·ri·fied, glo·ri·fy·ing, glo·ri·fies
1. To give glory, honor, or high praise to; exalt.

2.
 gym." Today, the original church building serves as exactly that, for the use of the parish and parish school of 550 children, and a new church has been constructed. The architects--in consultation with laypeople and Banuelas--designed three major gathering areas. "So there are three places where people can gather before and after church," he says. "This is so important, that the people of God have a natural place to stop and to talk--about the church, about their lives. Perhaps more gets accomplished in these places than in formal meeting rooms."

Banuelas firmly believes that images also form souls. Sixteen stained-glass windows encircling encircling (en·serˑ·k  the cupola cupola /cu·po·la/ (koo´pah-lah) cupula.

cu·po·la
n.
A cup-shaped or domelike structure.



cupola

cupula.
 of the new church depict a litany of the saints The Litany of the Saints (Latin, Litania Sanctorum) is a sacred prayer of the Roman Catholic Church. It is a prayer of invocation to God, Jesus, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and all the martyrs and saints upon whom Christianity was founded.  of the Americas. As people leave the church, a stunning stained-glass window in the gathering area reminds them that their spiritual work, rather than ending, has just begun.

"I cannot say how important it is for people to have ambiance am·bi·ance also am·bi·ence  
n.
The special atmosphere or mood created by a particular environment: "The noir ambience is dominated by low-key lighting . . .
, to have symbols that speak to their experience," Banuelas says. "We have simple needs, so it is basically a simple church, a space to be used, not only for liturgy, but for community events, to be visited whenever a person stops by. That is why we are open all day. Yes, things get stolen every once in a while, but to restrict people from visiting their home would just not be right."

St. Pius X has brought out the best in people, tapped talents they didn't know existed, and made Catholicism the moving force in their lives. As I sit amidst some of the parishioners in the rectory RECTORY, Eng. law. Corporeal real property, consisting of a church, glebe lands and tithes. 1 Chit. Pr. 163.  one afternoon, one of two hearing-impaired women, who had been included in the discussion through people signing to them, raises her hand. "Once you have a parish like this," she says, "you just won't have it any other way. When Father Arturo leaves, we will miss him badly, but something has begun here that will only get stronger."

COOPERATE AND EVERYONE BENEFITS

For more than 100 years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 farmers of the Upper Midwest The Upper Midwest is a region of the United States with no universally agreed-upon boundary, but it almost always lies within the US Census Bureau's definition of the Midwest and includes the states of Minnesota and Wisconsin, as well as at least the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  have endured the vagaries of weather and market prices, but 20 years ago the hardest of times hit. The increased mechanization mechanization

Use of machines, either wholly or in part, to replace human or animal labour. Unlike automation, which may not depend at all on a human operator, mechanization requires human participation to provide information or instruction.
 of farming, which required less labor and more capital, and the advent of large-scale agribusiness agribusiness

Agriculture operated by business; specifically, that part of a modern national economy devoted to the production, processing, and distribution of food and fibre products and byproducts.
 forced more and more farmers out of business. The population began to shrink. Stores, post offices, and parish schools closed. Consolidated was the word used, but it simply meant the end of treasured parts of a proud and independent rural life.

Around the same time, dramatic changes took place in Catholicism, the faith that had sustained so many of these farmers. Priests and nuns left religious life. So when their bishop asked members of these five Minnesota towns to consolidate so they might pool their resources, many saw it as another defeat, another imminent closing.

"Look, when we got word of this, I was ready to fight it to the death," says John Shekleton, the robust 63-year-old owner of the Murdock Cafe. "Nobody was going to take my church away from me, the church founded by the ancestors of the townspeople who come in here every day."

That was 22 years ago. "The way it worked out is simply amazing a·maze  
v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es

v.tr.
1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise.

2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex.

v.intr.
," his wife, Roxanne, adds. "We really got the best of all worlds--we have better programs, because we could do one well rather than five half-baked, and we have five pastors instead of one."

Arriving at the Catholic Area Parishes office in Benson--the only one of the five towns appearing on my map--and being greeted by Sister Clara Stang, a Franciscan, it is obvious that Roxanne didn't exaggerate. The consolidation had succeeded and even provided the model for a new kind of extended Catholic parish.

The staff meeting on Wednesday mornings provides just one example of a rare kind of ecclesial Ec`cle´si`al

a. 1. Ecclesiastical.
 cooperation. Not only does the staff coordinate programs for the 1,000 families scattered across some 400 square miles, they also agree upon a unified message for the coming weekend's liturgy. In addition, they write up three points for the bulletin to encourage reflection on the next week's gospel reading: These points focus the discussion in the 15 to 20 small faith communities that will gather that week, and they will be read at every parish meeting. Homilists at the weekend liturgies will reflect on them as well.

"We are constantly working on unity here," says Father Steven Verheist, pastor of St. Francis in Benson. Verheist, together with Father Ronald Huberty, pastor of Sacred Heart The Sacred Heart is a religious devotion to Jesus' physical heart as the representation of the divine love for humanity

This devotion is predominantly used in the Roman Catholic Church and also used in the Anglican Church.
 in Murdock, and pastoral administrators Sister Clara Stang at the Church of the Visitation VISITATION. The act of examining into the affairs of a corporation.
     2. The power of visitation is applicable only to ecclesiastical and eleemosynary corporations. 1 Bl. Com. 480; 2 Kid on Corp. 174.
 in Danvers, Sister Darlene Gutenkauf at St. Bridget's in DeGraff, and Sister Louise Bauer at St. Malachy's in Clontarf make up the Catholic Area Parishes' leaders.

"While I am the presider at the liturgy, it is the assembly that is important. They are the people of God; from this extended family comes the Spirit. And they need not be territorial; shared resources mean that everyone can benefit. And it has caught on. I've heard it over and over again from our parishioners: `These used to be priests' parishes--now these are people's parishes.' That is a high compliment; that is ownership," Verheist says.

Tim Mattheisen, who operates Do-Mats Supermarket, remarks, "We all knew one another, but that didn't mean we necessarily were praying as a community or really befriending one another. The singing, the liturgy really get me going. Something is happening here, and we all can feel it."

This consortium of parishes--perhaps the first in the country--has carefully used the strengths of each member of the pastoral team and yet allows each parish to maintain its individual identity. Gutenkauf is a talented musician and liturgist lit·ur·gist  
n.
1. One who uses or advocates the use of liturgical forms.

2. A scholar in liturgics.

3. A compiler of a liturgy or liturgies.

Noun 1.
 who also enjoys working with the elderly. Bauer has a girl for teaching children and young people in religious education. Stang is a proficient organizer and a visionary; she works intensely with small faith communities. Huberty is the RCIA RCIA Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults
RCIA Rite of Catholic Initiation for Adults
RCIA Retail Clerks International Association
RCIA Richmond Creative Investors Association
RCIA Request for Clarity, Information & Assistance
 expert and a compassionate listener, an excellent counselor. Verheist is good with youth, liturgy, and administration.

The churches share liturgical planning, RCIA preparation, and a religious education curriculum. The small Christian communities cross parish lines, but each parish still has its own parish council, finance, and education committees; holds religious education classes in the parish; and controls the funds directly related to that church's upkeep and specific needs.

The parish does not request, it requires a high level of lay participation and leadership. "Everybody has to pitch in; you can't hide in these little towns," Roxanne Shekleton says, laughing.

"Out here we are believers in what my grandfather from Belgium used to say: `The grass is always greener where you water it,'" explains Verheist. "We take what we have and try to make these parishes into the great places that they can

be."

"Sometimes it seems like America has forgotten us," says Nancy O'Leary, the parishes' bookkeeper. "But in certain ways that's exactly what we want. I think we have a sense of community out here that everybody could learn something from."

"People are crying out for meaning in an era of fragmentation," says Verheist, "and rural people are beautiful examples of living a meaningful life. But their way of life is constantly being threatened. These people have tremendous pressures upon them, yet they have so much to teach us."

Stories of conversion, such as Kevin McGeary's, abound. His modest farmhouse overlooks 400 acres of family land he can no longer profitably farm. He had to rent out the land and now drives a grain truck.

"I got into drugs in the service, drank too much when I got back, eventually got divorced, and was generally messing up my life," he begins as we sit at his kitchen table. Stang listens, but says nothing.

"But Sister helped me get an annulment annulment

Legal invalidation of a marriage. It announces the invalidity of a marriage that was void from its inception. It is to be distinguished from dissolution or divorce. To justify annulment, the marriage contract must have a defect (e.g.
, let me see I was not only worthy to receive the Eucharist but that Christ really wanted to feed me. Then she hooked me up with an ATEC ATEC Army Test and Evaluation Command (US Army; formerly OPTEC, Operational Test & Evaluation Command)
ATEC Australian Tourism Export Council
ATEC Advanced Technologies (Hamburg, Germany) 
 (Adults and Teens Encounter Christ) retreat, which was the best weekend of my life; it really turned me around. I saw what my life was about: to spread Jesus' Word and his love. Jesus became my high. Now, Visitation is my family, my gathering place, instead of some bar or liquor store. This is my home."

Stang and I drive back to the Danvers rectory where she lives. Straightforward, not pious, she radiates a deep spirituality and never calls attention to herself. She is a superb pastor, giving quiet testimony to what new and powerful roles religious women play in a changing church.

The five Minnesota parishes, however, hardly make up some perfect Catholic world free of jealousy, hate, and selfishness. When representatives of a Hmong community from the Twin Cities explored the possibility of resettling some of their people in the Benson area to work at a clothing manufacturing firm, negative comments from townspeople caused Hmong leaders to withdraw their interest.

Stang promptly started an antiracism task force and held a three-day seminar to educate and sensitize sen·si·tize
v.
To make hypersensitive or reactive to an antigen, such as pollen, especially by repeated exposure.
 the townspeople.

As I drive out of town and into the open countryside, where family farms have disappeared without a trace, I am reassured to know that the church has not left these brave and good people. They are the unknown and unsung heroes and heroines who feed not only us, but a good portion of the world. While farming is done on a larger and larger scale, they have kept the intimacy of rural life alive. Independent and rugged as farmers have always been, they have proved themselves people who can also do things together. Small things, important things, holy things.

RELATED ARTICLE: POINTS OF EXCELLENCE AT ST. PIUS X

1. TRAINING LAY LEADERS

Father Arturo Banuelas realized that if laypeople were truly to live out Vatican II's mandate to be the "priesthood of believers," they would need training. He began to hold weekend and summer courses in theology and the church's social documents under the umbrella of a newly formed Tepeyac institute. The courses, while rigorous, were specifically geared to laypeople so they could better and more tidily function in their various parish ministries. Since its founding, it has educated some 11,000 people, making it one of the largest diocesan lay institutes in America.

2. EVANGELIZING: STEPS TO GREAT LAY INVOLVEMENT

In the weeks before one of the St. Pius X evangelization retreats, parishioners literally go door-to-door, fanning out into the neighborhood, inviting stranger and parishioner alike to come. It is also advertised in the bulletin and discussed from the pulpit. The weekend retreat combines parishioners' stories of their own spiritual journeys with liturgies, short talks, and time for group discussion and fellowship. Afterward, every participant is contacted once a week for the next three weeks. Small Christian communities are formed. Active participation in parish ministries--or the beginning of a new ministry--naturally follows.

3. CHOIR AS COMMUNITY

"This is not only about rehearsals," says choir director Lisa Vasquez, who was not even a churchgoing church·go·er  
n.
One who attends church.



churchgoing adj.
 Catholic herself when a call intended for her father reached her. The pastor of St. Pius X wanted someone to start a choir. "I liked music, so I said, Why not?" she says. After some 175 people showed up for auditions, a choir was quickly underway, but Vasquez had something more in mind, quickly picking up on the parish community spirit. "We cry together, pray together, go on special retreats together, celebrate birthdays, mourn mourn  
v. mourned, mourn·ing, mourns

v.intr.
1. To feel or express grief or sorrow. See Synonyms at grieve.

2.
 deaths. There is something undefinable that comes out of a group that has shared so much together. Something else is at work."

RELATED ARTICLE: OTHER EXCELLENT PARISHES

Our Lady Help of Christians in Newton, Massachusetts The City of Newton in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, is an important residential suburb of Boston, which abuts it on the east. According to the 2000 census, the population of the Newton was 83,829, making it the tenth largest city in the state. , once shabby and ill-attended, is now the vital center for activities for everyone from kids to Generation X to seniors. The staff has a common vision, yet is feisty enough to dissent

The Catholic variation on the megachurch meg·a·church  
n.
A large, independent, usually nondenominational worship group, especially one formed as an offshoot of a Protestant church. Also called seeker church.
, Holy Family in Inverness, Illinois Inverness is a village in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The population was 6,749 at the 2000 census. Geography
Inverness is located at  (42.113275, -88.098433)GR1.
 has 10,000 parishioners, one priest, but incredible lay participation. A big church is broken down into "communities" of ministries: everything from first-rate counseling to discovering needs people don't even realize they have.

St. Peter Claver This article is about the Jesuit Saint. For the Filipino municipality, see Claver, Surigao del Norte.
Saint Peter Claver (in Spanish: Pedro Claver
 in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded  changed the city's worst neighborhood into one of the safest. It is church-based community organizing The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 at its best. Liturgy is deeply Catholic and deeply African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. . An excellent school serves children of poverty; the parish sees its work as the total transformation of people and their community.

St. Francis of Assisi in Portland, Oregon is a look into the future of the Catholic parish--headed by the divorced mother of six children. This is social justice, up close, with a soup kitchen and multiple services for the poor. There is strong emphasis (a la Saint Francis Saint Francis, city, United States
Saint Francis, city (1990 pop. 9,245), Milwaukee co., SE Wis., a residential suburb of Milwaukee on Lake Michigan; inc. 1951. There is meat processing and the manufacture of plastic and metal products.
) on the environment, namely a park for the homeless. Lay-driven, innovative liturgies draw people from miles around.

At St. Francis of Assisi in Wichita, Kansas
For other uses, see Wichita (disambiguation).


Wichita, also known as the Air Capital of the World, is the largest city in the U.S. state of Kansas, as well as a major aircraft manufacturing hub and cultural center.
 every child is assured a free Catholic education, for tithing In Western ecclesiastical law, the act of paying a percentage of one's income to further religious purposes. One of the political subdivisions of England that was composed of ten families who held freehold estates.  is at the heart of this church. But time and talent are rendered first, before treasure is asked for. Thirteen years of round-the-clock eucharistic adoration Eucharistic adoration is a practice in the Roman Catholic and in Anglican Churches, in which the Blessed Sacrament is exposed to and adored by the faithful. When this exposure and adoration is constant (that is, twenty-four hours a day), it is called perpetual adoration.  have created a deep, reflective spirituality.

The Life Teen Life Teen is a Catholic youth ministry organization and movement originating in the United States. It was established in 1985 at St. Timothy's Parish in Mesa, Arizona. Pastor Fr.  Mass at St. Mark's St. Mark's could refer to:
  • St. Mark's Basilica – Venice, Italy
  • St. Mark's Campanile – Venice, Italy
  • St. Mark's Square – Venice, Italy
  • St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan
  • St.
 in Boise, Idaho “Boise” redirects here. For other uses, see Boise (disambiguation).

Boise is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Idaho. It is the county seat of Ada County and the principal city of the Boise metropolitan area.
 transforms teenagers' lives. Twice-yearly retreats and then incorporation into small faith communities means no one gets lost at this vibrant parish. What is most heartening heart·en  
tr.v. heart·ened, heart·en·ing, heart·ens
To give strength, courage, or hope to; encourage. See Synonyms at encourage.

Adj. 1.
 is that laypeople have actually formed their priests.

Visit www.pastoralsummit.org for more about these parishes.

RELATED ARTICLE: CATHOLIC AREA PARISHES' POINTS OF EXCELLENCE

1. PREPARED TO PARTICIPATE AT WEEKLY LITURGY

Weekly scripture readings are woven into the fabric of both parish and everyday life at the Catholic Area Parishes. During the preceding week the readings have been an integral part of every meeting and gathering in each of the five parishes. Whether the story of the loaves and fishes loaves and fishes

Jesus multiplies fare for his following. [N.T.: Matthew 14:15–21; John 6:5–14]

See : Miracle
 or the Transfiguration Transfiguration, in the New Testament, manifestation wherein Jesus appeared "shining" before Peter, James, and John. The traditional explanation is that in it Jesus' divine glory shone in his earthly body. Mt. , the theme is on parishioners' minds throughout the week. The fertile seed of the Word of God has an opportunity to sprout and be fruitful before people file into the pews.

2. CLUSTER MINISTRIES

"Our churches were just too small, and everyone was stretched trying to do too many jobs--and quite frankly, everyone having `their' parish wasn't working; we weren't offering the best to our people," says Sister Clara Stang. When five Minnesota rural parishes banded together more than 20 years ago, it was considered revolutionary not only for clergy to cooperate, but for individual parishes to be served by someone other than "their" priest. "We always stress that each parish still does have a pastor--or, in the case of women religious like myself, a pastoral administrator--but that each parish gets the best-qualified person in the various areas of church life. Farmers know about specialization; there are very few farms that have a few chickens, a few hogs, and a cow. Specialization works; there are advantages to having a class of 15 kids versus five classes of three kids apiece."

3. MINISTRY OF PRESENCE

Rarely do either of the priests of the Minnesota cluster wear his Roman collar Noun 1. Roman collar - a stiff white collar with no opening in the front; a distinctive symbol of the clergy
clerical collar, dog collar

collar, neckband - a band that fits around the neck and is usually folded over
 in public. The three sisters wear a small cross and pretty much anything they choose. "Look everyone in this town knows I'm a Catholic priest," says Father Steven Verheist. "But somehow when I'm in a shirt collar just like the rest of the folks here, it may not break down barriers, but it sure doesn't put any up." They visit farms and have lunch in the restaurants. "Some of the best things happen when you're standing in the kitchen with a woman making supper or out in the barn with her husband as he's fixing a tractor," says Sister Darlene Gutenkauf. "We want to prove we are not some sort of rare breed, and the best way is to do that the way the Lord did it, just by being with the people in the everyday experiences of their lives."

PAUL WILKES is the author of numerous books on religious belief and practice, including Beyond the Walls (Doubleday, 1999) and The Good Enough Catholic (Ballantine, 1996). This article is excerpted with permission from Excellent Catholic Parishes: The Guide to Best Places and Practices (Paulist Press, 2001). Wilkes is also project director of the Pastoral Summit, to be held in New Orleans on May 30-June 1, 2001, which will bring together Catholic and Protestant pastors and lay leaders from across the U.S. For more information on the summit, call 910-962-7225 or visit www.pastoralsummit.org.
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Author:WILKES, PAUL
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2001
Words:4259
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