Fathers Murphy (left) and Devlin discuss possible ideas for a chapel at their storefront outreach, once it's renovated, after it officially opens June 15. (Sarah Webb)

Fathers Murphy (left) and Devlin discuss possible ideas for a chapel at their storefront outreach, once it’s renovated, after it officially opens June 15. (Sarah Webb)

It was a small item tucked in the middle of the list of new assignments for priests released by the Philadelphia Archdiocese on May 16. Under Special Ministry, Father Joseph P. Devlin, pastor of St. Bridget Parish in Philadelphia and Father William S. Murphy, pastor of Assumption B.V.M. Parish in West Grove, were reassigned as co-coordinators of Mother of Mercy House in the Kensington section of Philadelphia.

A quick check of the Catholic Directory of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia shows no such place as Mother of Mercy House and for good reason. It will not come into being until June 15, when Fathers Devlin and Murphy take up their new ministry.

You could call it a store-front church, but that is not exactly correct.

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In the first place it is not a parish; that area is part of sprawling Holy Innocents Parish. And truth to tell, its 801-03 East Allegheny Avenue address was not a store. In more prosperous times it was McGee’s, a thriving neighborhood bar; it was also a word play on the location at the intersection of G Street and Allegheny Avenue.

The opening paragraphs of Mother of Mercy’s mission statement tells the story:

“The mission of Mother of Mercy  House, a mission of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, is to enhance the presence of the Church through a new outreach to the Kensington and Allegheny (K & A) neighborhood by establishing small ecclesial communities (block churches) formed by Word and Sacrament, forming lay leaders and by serving the neighborhood through the corporal works of mercy.

The two archdiocesan priests stand at the corner of G Street and Allegheny Avenue across from Mother of Mercy House in the Kensington neighborhood they will serve. Sarah Webb)

The two archdiocesan priests stand at the corner of G Street and Allegheny Avenue across from Mother of Mercy House in the Kensington neighborhood they will serve. (Sarah Webb)

“This new mission is enflamed by Pope Francis’ theology which reminds us that our ‘loving God, poor among the poor, reserved for them a privileged place in Christ’s life and ministry.’”

As a bit of background, Kensington, which traces back to the early 19th century, was historically a working class neighborhood primarily in the textile industries. The earliest workers were English but over time Irish Catholics became the dominant ethnic group, which of course brought churches, among them the huge Ascension Church at Westmoreland and F Streets.

By mid-20th century the neighborhood began to change as the mills, which were its life blood, gradually closed or relocated to such places as the southern states and eventually China in search of cheap labor.

Most of the workers also moved away, and with rampant unemployment as often happens in such neighborhoods, today’s Kensington while more ethnically diverse has become became a center for poverty. With poverty comes the despair that leads to crime, substance abuse and other social Ills.

In 2012 Ascension Parish, whose dwindling congregation worshiped in a huge church in need of daunting repairs, closed.

At the May convocation of priests held that year in Hershey, Pa., Archbishop Charles Chaput brought up the problem of serving the remaining Catholics in parishes like Ascension where much of the energy was being spent on keeping up buildings that were no longer needed. He challenged his priests to come up with solutions.

Independent of each other, both Father Devlin and Father Murphy immediately volunteered to minister in the area. Now three years later, their request has been granted and temporarily until Mother of Mercy House is ready for occupancy, they will be living in the convent of the former St. Joan of Arc Parish.

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As Father Murphy explained in the parish bulletin at his present parish: “The archbishop stated that the priests and the people of God need to discover new ways of being church, a church less tethered to huge buildings or institutions. He suggested the possibility of storefront churches, that is, being present in neighborhoods as church in a simpler but more profound way.”

At St. Bridget, Father Devlin wrote when he told the flock he is leaving: “I truly believe this is one of the places Jesus would be. K & A is poor, densely populated and needy. The archdiocese through its ministry of priests should be more visibly present in such a neighborhood. If you have been reading anything from Pope Francis over these past two years, you will know what I mean. The Holy Father is constantly challenging the church to go to the margins of society, to greater service of those who are poor and often forgotten by society. K & A is that kind of neighborhood.”

Actually there is already a continued presence of the church in a more modest way. At Holy Innocents Parish, which has had to absorb Ascension as well as neighboring Mater Dolorosa, St. Joachim and St. Joan of Arc parishes through mergers, Father Thomas Higgins sends a bus every Sunday into Kensington to pick up parishioners who might not have other means to reach his church.

“Father Murphy and Father Devlin will have their hands full,” Father Higgins said. “We will do what we can to help them.”

Also there is a Catholic presence in the neighborhoods through such programs as the Franciscan-run St. Francis Inn on Kensington Avenue and the Welcome Center, run by the Sisters of St. Joseph, on Allegheny Avenue, among others.

They present the Gospel of Jesus Christ with Christian compassion primarily through social outreach and are conducted by religious congregations independent of the archdiocese.

Mother of Mercy House will be unique in that it will be led by diocesan priests, and while not a parish, pastoral care will be equally emphasized with programs that meet material needs.

As the mission statement explains, “Those who are materially, spiritually and humanly poor are not the focus of special attention because they are an economic, social or pastoral problem, but because the loving God, poor among the poor, reserved for them a privileged place in Christ’s life and ministry.”

Father Devlin and Father Murphy point to the words of Pope Francis for their inspiration:

“Let us go forth … to offer everyone the life of Jesus Christ. I prefer a Church which is bruised, hurting and dirty because it has been out on the streets, rather than a Church which is unhealthy from being confined and from clinging to its own security. If something should rightly disturb us and trouble our consciences, it is the fact that so many of our brothers and sisters are living without the strength, light and consolation born of a friendship with Jesus Christ, without a community of faith to support them, without meaning and a goal in life.” (“Evangelii Gaudium,” “The Joy of the Gospel,” no. 49)

It might not look like much now, but Father Joseph Devlin (left) and Father William Murphy are proud of starting Mother of Mercy House to serve the poor in their Kensington neighborhood. (Sarah Webb)

It might not look like much now, but Father Joseph Devlin (left) and Father William Murphy are proud of starting Mother of Mercy House to serve the poor in their Kensington neighborhood. (Sarah Webb)