Showing posts with label ignorance of history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ignorance of history. Show all posts

Thursday, May 9, 2024

What is the current state of English Catholic parishes in Montreal? Where have we come from? Where are we going? Where are we now?

Dans ce JOURNAL je partage de temps en temps un aperçu de ma vie de chrétien catholique et de prêtre pour rejoindre d'autres qui désirent contribuer au bien commun et pour faire avancer l'ouverture personnelle à Dieu qui fait vivre toute l'humanité et veille sur nous. G.S.

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In this JOURNAL I will share once in a while a glimpse of my life as a Catholic Christian and priest to connect with other people who desire to contribute to the common good and to enable personal openness to God who gives life to all of humanity and watches over us. G.S.

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Known Facts – Trying to establish a Timeline

From 1817 to the present.... 

Click here for a fuller and more detailed history 


From 1953 to 2024, the following 12 parishes and missions have been suppressed and their registers have been transferred to a neighboring parish church office.

 

St. Agnes – 1904 to 1953                        St. Ann – 1867 to 1982           

Our Lady of Good Counsel (St. Mary's) – 1879 to 1984      

St. Thomas Aquinas – 1908 to 1990

St. Philip Neri Mission – 1965 to 2002            St. Rita – 1952 to 2002 

All Saints Mission – 1963 to 2003

Marie-Reine-de-la-Paix – 1954 to 2009 when it became Jésus Lumière du Monde / Jesus Light of the World

St. David – 1963 to 2010 when it was joined to Jésus Lumière du Monde / Jesus Light of the World

St. Dominic – 1912 to 2012

St. Raphael the Archangel – 1930 to 2019? When it was changed into a Palliative Care project

St. Anthony of Padua – 1884 which will close this June, 2024

        Our Archdiocese expanded as it established dozens of new parishes, on the fringes of center town and in the developing suburbs on the Island of Montreal, the Island of Laval, and the Assomption peninsula. This came to require additional personnel for the diocesan Curia, the operating center of our diocese supporting our Archbishop. The Diocese acquired an office building formerly owned by the Shell company and it came to be known as the “2000”, which is its address on Sherbrooke Street West, opposite the old Grand Seminary.

        In addition, growth in personnel was also caused by all that developed during and after Vatican Council II in Rome from 1962 to 1965. However, as the Curia personnel was expanding, despite the added number of parishes and churches, the actual Sunday practice for worship began to diminish. The shocking experiences of WW II, the ensuing prosperity of the 1950’s, the social upheaval of the 1960’s, the confusion, violence, and questioning of the 1970’s, the disillusionments of the 1980’s, the sexual and authority abuse beginning in the 1990’s and running into the 2000’s, and finally the Covid-19 pandemic… people were taking a step back from their Sunday worship, support, faith practice, and perhaps even from their belief in God.  

        The plummeting Sunday attendance resulted in the inevitable plummeting of donations and receipts for all the parishes, which translated into diminishing receipts for the Diocese; since its primary source of revenue has been the contribution made by the parishes, usually on a monthly basis. This “diocesan tax” originally set at 3% in the early 19th century, was increased to 5% as attendance began to drop and the Diocese’s costs were simultaneously increasing. Since my ordination in 1983, the rate went from 3% to 5%, then to 7%, and finally some 30 years ago, to 9%. Unfortunately, 9% of zero equals zero. The well is all but dry.

        The Diocese has not been able to adapt and downsize fast enough, and has been running deficits for many years. By the grace of God and the generosity of the faithful, bequests let the Diocese balance its deficits by year’s end. At the end of 2023, though, a few dozen workers were let go, and there may have to be more.

        Churches built to set 1,000 barely see a few hundred or less on any given Sunday. Many parishes, especially older ones, have not had the funds to do maintenance, let alone major repairs; with the result that churches and rectories have become unsafe and have been closed by the city. Many parishes cannot even remunerate their priest and are unable to have any staff; they rely on volunteers to keep the office open for service a few hours a week.

        The Diocese no longer has any funds to support bankrupt parishes. “What will be the future of the Catholic Christian faith in our neighbourhood?” Our ancestors rolled up their sleeves and worked together to build our churches and spread the faith. “What are we doing to proclaim the Good News by our lives?” Society is in a housing crisis. Not only itinerants, but even ordinary families are being pushed out of their homes by owners who want to renovate. “How can we work with government to build housing on our unused church properties?”

        The time is now for us to no longer be content to live as a “religious consumer” expecting services from our Church and, instead, heed Jesus’ call to become missionary disciples, to “go out and make disciples.”

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In this JOURNAL I will share once in a while a glimpse of my life as a Catholic Christian and priest to connect with other people who desire to contribute to the common good and to enable personal openness to God who gives life to all of humanity and watches over us. G.S.

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Dans ce JOURNAL je partage de temps en temps un aperçu de ma vie de chrétien catholique et de prêtre pour rejoindre d'autres qui désirent contribuer au bien commun et pour faire avancer l'ouverture personnelle à Dieu qui fait vivre toute l'humanité et veille sur nous. G.S.

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© 2004-2024 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2024 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Russia - Ukraine war... how ignorant and arrogant of us "westerners" to comment, draw conclusions, or go so far as to judge, without understanding Cossack history going back a millennium. Who are we to judge?

Dans ce JOURNAL je partage de temps en temps un aperçu de ma vie de chrétien catholique et de prêtre pour rejoindre d'autres qui désirent contribuer au bien commun et pour faire avancer l'ouverture personnelle à Dieu qui fait vivre toute l'humanité et veille sur nous. G.S.

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In this JOURNAL I will share once in a while a glimpse of my life as a Catholic Christian and priest to connect with other people who desire to contribute to the common good and to enable personal openness to God who gives life to all of humanity and watches over us. G.S.

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No doubt what is happening in Ukraine with the invasion by the Russian Federation cannot be understood without reference to the enormous and constant pressure from the U.S.A. through NATO pushing right up to the borders of Russia since the dissolution of the U.S.S.R. between 1989 and 1991. I still recall in the years preceding the "end of the Soviet regime" 
the genuine good will of Mikhail Gorbachev, at the time President of the Soviet Union. He boldly and courageously led a "new revolution" by trying to coax his diverse people into openness towards the rest of the world.

In retrospect, clearly we westerners, led by the Americans - who have never suffered from any lack of conviction about what is in their own interests - took advantage of that Russian good will in order to claw their way to the very borders of the former Soviet Union; just in case they ever became aggressive again... so the thinking goes....

From a strictly impartial viewpoint, it could well be said that it was to be expected that the Russians would wake up - sooner or later - to the truth that American-led NATO was taking advantage of their openness and abusing it to expand NATO to their very borders. Russia extended an open hand in openness and friendship to offer a new period in world history of collaboration for the common good and the betterment of humanity. I'm ashamed to have to admit, that in following the leadership of the U.S.A., we have rejected that open hand of friendship, in effect also rejecting this offer of a new period in world history of working together in collaboration for the common good and the betterment of humanity. 

So, with that offer apparently gone, no longer valid, what are we left with? We can only understand that by looking back at the history of the region. Check it out on Wikipedia and you will find a history of the Cossack peoples going back a millennium. The Cossacks, from our point of view, are very difficult to clearly define, or for that matter, to even begin to understand. They have been a collection of peoples with common culture known for their skill with horses and navigation, as well as military might and boldness characterized by fearlessness of personal injury or even death. They were even better organized and better educated than many of their surrounding neighbors. They were highly prized as mercenaries and allies and, understandably, feared as foes or enemies. It is reported that their total population ran over 3 million people, with 3 to 4 hundred capable men capable and ready for military service. Even this was highly developed and organized by age.

The ravages of history - the empires originating in Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Hungary, Turkey, and others used and abused the Cossack peoples, and more dramatically, the Russian Revolution of 1917 pitted them against each other, depending on which side of the dividing lines they fell. World War II did the same thing, as did the aggressive policies of Stalin to relocate entire populations. Whenever Cossack peoples were pitted against each other, they murdered ruthlessly then just as they would previously do when pitted against foreigners or outsiders; it was all the same.

This culture of the Cossack peoples is really quite "foreign" to our western sensibilities and ways of thinking, but there's no avoiding that history if we are to have any hope to begin to understand what is going on in Ukraine and why those actions looks as horrible as they do.

This is a time for us to humbly admit our own failings, which are so many, before we even think of picking up a stone to throw at anyone. We need to trust in those diverse peoples and to let them "work it out". Would we not want others to allow us to do the same? 

Mikhail Gorbachev's open hand may no longer be there, but other Russian hands may very well be open. One thing is certain, and that is that Jesus open mind, open heart, and open hand will ever be extended towards us and all "people of good will" intent on pursuing together the common good and willing to make allowances for each other's failings and human weaknesses. Looking back is useful for understanding from where we come, but is we are to make progress, we need to look ahead, and to do it together.

"Father and Creator of us all, open our spirits once again to your Son Jesus." "Lord Jesus Christ, Saviour of the world, Son of God - and as the man from Nazareth - the One Risen from the dead, have mercy on us, and fill us anew with your Holy Spirit, that by your grace we may become better versions of ourselves and once again open our minds, hearts, souls, and hands to one another." 

"Our Lady of Fatima, Myriam, Mother of the Son of God as the Mother of Jesus, woman of peace, pray for us all your children." 


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In this JOURNAL I will share once in a while a glimpse of my life as a Catholic Christian and priest to connect with other people who desire to contribute to the common good and to enable personal openness to God who gives life to all of humanity and watches over us. G.S.

----------------------------------------------------------------

Dans ce JOURNAL je partage de temps en temps un aperçu de ma vie de chrétien catholique et de prêtre pour rejoindre d'autres qui désirent contribuer au bien commun et pour faire avancer l'ouverture personnelle à Dieu qui fait vivre toute l'humanité et veille sur nous. G.S.

----------------------------------------------------------------

© 2004-2022 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2022 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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What is the current state of English Catholic parishes in Montreal? Where have we come from? Where are we going? Where are we now?

Dans ce JOURNAL je  partage   de temps en temps un aperçu de ma vie de chrétien catholique et de prêtre pour rejoindre d'autres qui dési...