
April 29, 2007
Diocese of
Allegany Vicariate parishes will be realigned
The Diocese
of Buffalo said today that a number of parishes in the Allegany Vicariate will
be restructured as part of the “Journey in Faith and Grace,” a parish-based strategic
planning and spiritual revitalization initiative launched in June 2005 by Bishop
Edward U. Kmiec, bishop of
Announcement
of the mergers and changes were delivered to affected parishioners at weekend
Masses yesterday and today.
“I am
grateful to all the people in
Bishop Kmiec said this effort is about not
only the blending of faith communities, but also a spiritual coming
together. “As parishes merge, people
will bring a wonderful spirit of their faith to new communities. It doesn’t matter where you go to church, what matters is how you go to church,” Bishop Kmiec said.
Sister Regina
Murphy, SSMN, diocesan director of research and planning, said the second round
of changes were approved by the Diocesan Strategic Planning Commission and the
Diocesan Council of Priests prior to being forwarded to Bishop Kmiec for his final approval.
In the
Allegany Vicariate, two parishes will provide sacramental ministry to two
neighboring parishes (all four will continue as independent parishes with two
of them administered by pastoral administrators); two missions will merge into
an existing parish; two parishes will link with two others (with one of the
parish’s two churches becoming an oratory); one parish will become an oratory; two
oratories will close; one parish will merge with the existing site to close;
and one parish will remain independent pending a re-evaluation in three to five
years.
Following is
the complete parish restructuring plan in the Allegany Vicariate:
·
SS.
Brendan & Jude (Alfred-Almond) will link with
Linked parishes are
two parishes, and in rare cases three parishes, which share the same
pastor. The parishes remain separately
incorporated and are separate communities of faith.
·
Immaculate
Conception Parish (Wellsville) will continue as an independent parish but will
provide sacramental ministry to St. Mary Parish (Bolivar) which will have a pastoral administrator. St. Mary will also remain an independent
parish.
A pastoral
administrator is a lay person, a vowed religious or a deacon who will
participate in the pastoral care of a parish entrusted to him or her, and whose
provision of pastoral care is supervised by a priest moderator.
·
Sacred
Heart Mission (Angelica) and St. Joseph Mission (Scio), both of which are the
current missions of St. Mary Parish (Belmont), will no longer have weekend services and their congregations will
merge with St. Mary to form a new parish with a new name: Holy Family of Jesus,
Mary and Joseph.
A merged
parish occurs when two or more parish congregations join together to become
a single parish congregation.
A mission
is a church serving a community of people who are under the care and
administration of a particular parish.
Ordinarily, missions do not have a large enough congregation or
sufficient resources to support full parish life. Missions are often founded in the hope that
they will develop into full parishes, and they are often reevaluated if that
does not happen.
An oratory is a sacred place that exists for the convenience of some
community or group of the faithful. An
oratory does not have regularly scheduled liturgical services, and the
liturgical functions that can be celebrated there are determined by the local
bishop. A neighboring parish is usually
responsible for an oratory.
·
Our
Lady of the Angels (
·
St.
Mark Parish (Rushford), upon the retirement of the pastor, will become an
oratory to serve the summer
communities of Rushford and
·
St.
Patrick Parish (Fillmore) will link
with St. Patrick Parish (
pastor residing in Fillmore. This was the previous situation from
1999-2006.
·
The congregation of Assumption Parish (Portageville) will merge with St.
Mary Parish (Silver Springs), which is
in the Wyoming Vicariate, and the Portageville site will no longer be used.
·
St.
Mary Parish (Canaseraga) will, at least temporarily, be
an independent parish pending a re-evaluation in three to five years. If growth does not occur in the Canaseraga area, or if the diocese cannot afford to send a
priest to such a small parish, the parish could be closed in the future. If that were to happen, the people could be
served in Dansville and Hornell and the closing would not require another
reconfiguration.
·
The
oratories of
(Friendship) will be closed and sold.
All parish
recommendations are carefully evaluated in terms of demographic information,
Catholic population analysis, sacramental and fiscal data, and pastoral planning. In some cases, reconfiguration decisions
include research and planning that predates the Journey.
Affected pastors have been provided
with written implementation guidelines to assist them and their parishioners in
completing the restructuring, including establishing a timeframe and
coordinating other transition-related details.
Additional restructuring
recommendations now being reviewed at the diocesan level will be announced as
soon as they are finalized.
There are currently 266 parishes,
missions and oratories in
The “Journey
in Faith and Grace” is designed to identify the religious, spiritual and
education needs of the Catholic faithful throughout the diocese and determine
how those needs can best be met. It is an effort to create parish communities
that are much more than a place where Sunday liturgy is celebrated. Its goals
are to establish faith communities that provide formation programs for the
sacraments, religious formation for both children and adults, and outreach to
those in need; to provide for greater lay involvement, good pastoral leadership
and financial stability; and to ensure that parishes will have the membership,
leadership, and resources necessary to be vibrant centers of parish life.
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