UPDATE — As announced at parish Masses on Jan. 5-6, six West Philadelphia parishes located mostly in Parish Planning Area 600 will merge as three parishes. The closures are the latest result of the ongoing strategic planning process in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
St. Callistus, at 6700 Lansdowne Ave., will merge with Our Lady of Lourdes at its location at 63rd St. and Lancaster Ave.
Our Mother of Sorrows, at 48th St. and Lancaster Ave., will merge with St. Ignatius of Loyola at its location at 636 N. 43rd St.
Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament, 345 N. 63rd St., will merge with St. Cyprian Parish, Cobbs Creek Parkway, at St. Cyprian.
The three remaining parishes will be considered new parishes although they will retain the name of the receiving parishes – Our Lady of Lourdes, St. Ignatius and St. Cyprian.
The former St. Callistus, Our Mother of Sorrows and Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament will remain as worship sites for the time being.
According to 2011 statistics compiled by the archdiocesan Office for Parish Service and Support, St. Callistus, founded in 1921, had 181 worshipers at weekend Masses; Our Lady of Lourdes, founded in 1894, had 819 worshipers.
“I was through this before in Buffalo where I had to close three parishes,” said Our Lady of Lourdes pastor Mercerdarian Father Michael R. Rock.
So far the transition seems to be smooth, he thinks.
“It is really like a marriage; both churches bring their best attributes together. We will have to be welcoming and sensitive. It is not easy, it is very emotional and we will have to work on it.”
On the surface, the two parishes would appear different. While St. Callistus, a largely African-American parish has been losing members, Our Lady of Lourdes, which also has some African-American members, has been growing, largely because Latin and other traditional liturgies bring people from all over. Nevertheless, the English language liturgies are also well attended. “We will make the people as comfortable as possible,” Father Rock said.
Our Mother of Sorrows, founded in 1852, had 99 weekend worshipers; St. Ignatius, founded in 1893, had 140 worshipers. Our Mother of Sorrows and St. Ignatius were already twinned parishes, sharing a single pastor.
“It will be a change for those at Our Mother of Sorrows,” said Father Jeffrey M. Stecz, the pastor of the parishes. “We have been dialoging together on this over the last year or so and we will try to come together and build anew together with the rich traditions of both parishes.”
Bernadine Hawes, a 20-year member of St. Ignatius and a member of the parish finance council, said of Our Mother of Sorrows, “it’s stunning, the physical size of it.”
However, the smaller St. Ignatius is probably more suitable for the numbers in the parish today, she thinks.
With that said, “I’m more saddened that Our Mother of Sorrows is closing than I am glad St. Ignatius is not. In a parish you begin to develop a sense of spiritual community and it is difficult when it closes.”
Although the Archdiocese has directed the receiving parish’s name be kept, Hawes said, “We are going to petition to have this changed. We think it is inappropriate for us to keep our name when Our Mother of Sorrows doesn’t. Our school is called Our Mother of Sorrows/St. Ignatius.”
As it is the two parishes have been meeting to make a smooth transition, she said. “This is not a death but a new life going forward.”
Patricia Brown, a member of Our Mother of Sorrows’ pastoral council, is third generation in the parish. “My mother went to school here and I went to school here,” she said. “It broke my heart when I heard the news. I cried. We have so many memories.”
But because the two parishes held joint committee meetings and shared a choir, the combination should be a bit easier, thinks Brown, who is secretary in the school.
“We will work together, but I love my parish,” she said.
Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament, established in 2005 from the former Our Lady of the Rosary (founded in 1886) and Our Lady of Victory (1899) parishes, had 296 weekend worshipers; St. Cyprian, which is located in PPA 610, had 441 worshipers.
The archdiocesan strategic planning process began in the fall of 2010. A pastoral letter issued by then-Archbishop of Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali announced the start of an in-depth examination of all parishes.
Merger recommendations are based on a combination of factors including demographic shifts in Catholic population, concentrated density of parishes in a limited geographic area, history of declining Mass attendance and sacramental activity, increased economic challenges that threaten sustainability, a decrease in the availability of clergy, and the condition of the facilities.
In the affected PPAs pastors and usually parish representatives meet with their dean, a priest with responsibility for a region of parishes in the Archdiocese, and a facilitator to formulate suggested plans, set goals and identify criteria. Recommendations are brought before the Council of Priests and the College of Consulters by the Archdiocesan Strategic Planning Committee for their observations and approval, with a final recommendation given to the Archbishop.
“There has been extensive study and detailed study before these suggestions were presented to the Archbishop for his approval,” said Msgr. Arthur E. Rodgers, Coordinator for Archdiocesan Planning Initiatives.
In addition to the mergers announced this week, Archbishop Chaput has directed that the merger plan for St. Barbara, St. Donato and St. Rose of Lima, also in PPA 600, receive broader input and consultation. Decisions for those parishes are expected in the spring.
Meanwhile in PPA 560, which covers parishes in Lower Northeast Philadelphia, some decisions are expected in coming weeks and others in the spring. In another PPA, 500, which is also in Northeast Philadelphia, studies are nearing completion with decisions expect in the spring.
Other PPAs under study during the remainder of 2013 include PPAs 320 and 370 in Delaware County; PPA 540 in Northwest Philadelphia, and PPA 650 in Central Philadelphia.
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Lou Baldwin is a freelance writer and a member of St. Leo Parish.
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PLEASE KEEP THE OUR MOTHER OF SORROWS SCHOOL, NAME AND THE CHURCH IN TACT. MY MOTHER WENT TO SCHOOL THERE AND MY PARENTS WERE MARRIED THERE. ITS A BEAUTIFUL OLD HISTORIC CHURCH AND SCHOOL AND THEY NEED TO STOP DESTROYING OUR HISTORY. ARE THEY STILL HAVING THE “BUY A BRICK: SAVE THE BELLTOWERS” FUNDRAISER?
THANK YOU,
JMP
I have relatives buried in the Old Cathedral Cemetery. Will the cemetery be taken care of? I don’t want a parking lot built over my ancestors and I don’t want them moved. What will happen to it?
the closing of so many beautiful churches is very sad it does reflect on the philly which has gone the way of many american cities the onyly major employer is the iniversity of pennsylvania, but the mormons are building a massive temple close by the cathedral it will cost a lot of money. i live in virginia, which basically relies ob the military and civil service jobs to keep going. what happens when the government cuts back is a big question. my parish here in fredericksburg has 10,00 members with a school with teaching sisters. the catholic us bishops should stop sending tons of money to the vatican the us and germany pay all the bills
I am disturbed by this West Philly church merger process. It is sad that the urban-most West Philly churches are losing parishioners, and will have to merge. Pretty much, looking at this process, the churches that will merge with others will lose their name and identity. The timeline is too quick.
We have to face reality; the “Gateway Parish” will be the sole survivor.
It is really something I never wanted to see happen. Our Mother of Sorrows mean alot to alot of people. We have try so hard to keep the doors open. What is going on in this world closing Churches isn’t a good sign of the mortal values we have been taught. Philadelphia should closes places like bars not churches. I can’t even type its breaks my heart.
The West Philadelphia area has been hit so hard it has lost its Catholic roots forever there will be 5 catholic churches left and on the south side you have to travel 20 blocks to find a catholic church then there is only 1 school from upper darby to 47th who the hell did this planing