Dear Parishioners:
David E. Belanger
April 3, 1962 — January 27, 2026
Last week, Dave Belanger, the Maintenance and Building Director at OLM School, died suddenly and unexpectedly. Dave worked at OLM for over a decade and previously worked with me when I served as Pastor of St. Ambrose Church. His death was a shock to our parish and school staff as well as to our students. His Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated on Thursday. Our faculty, staff, and students continue to grieve his loss, as he was beloved by all of us.
Dave was hard-working and dedicated to serving our community, and was a source of kindness and thoughtfulness as well as great humor and joy. I kindly ask for your continued prayers for his gentle repose and for the consolation of his family and our OLM community. May he rest in peace.
We learned earlier this week, as I write this column, that the release of the RI Attorney General’s report on his six-and-a-half-year review of clergy sexual abuse in Rhode Island dating back to 1950 is expected sometime this week. The report is the result of the diocese’s agreement for a voluntary review entered into in 2019. I have not seen the report and do not know what it contains. However, Bishop Lewandowski has indicated that “it does not contain any new cases of abuse and much of its content has already been widely publicized in the media over the decades.”
The report is certain to be a difficult and painful retelling of historical cases of abuse in our diocese, including the abuse that took place at OLM in the late 1960’s. This is a painful reminder of the abuse that took place in the past and is sure to evoke sadness, sorrow, anger, and misunderstanding. What do we say in the face of such sad and scandalous revelations?
It should first off make us remember anyone who was ever harmed. We should pray earnestly for them and for their families. We must also pray for our own community of OLM, for the victims of abuse that occurred here, and for their families. We should pray for those whose faith has been weakened that they can once again find their way to encounter Christ in His Church.
If our own faith is shaken by these revelations, turn to Christ in prayer and ask for his guidance and understanding. He knows our pain, doubt, and righteous anger. Christ shares in the pain and suffering because of such sin and scandal.
We should pray for those accused as well. For a Christian, the most fundamental response to sin is mercy. Mercy, of course, does not preclude justice. In fact, it demands it. But it means that sin never has the last word. There is a limit to sin, and it is God’s mercy.
Like you, I too am deeply saddened to read of sin and, at times, an inadequate response to it. But I am also heartened to know that it is not the Church today. I am heartened, too, to recall that the promise of Jesus to His Church remains. Sin can never obscure the truth that Christ is risen from the dead.
Lastly, I ask for your prayers for the many good priests who have served with fidelity and dedication. These revelations are deeply painful for priests, as we are embarrassed and ashamed. Pray especially for our young priests like Fr. Brodeur, who wasn’t even born when these acts transpired. And pray, too, for our seminarians that they remain steadfast in their chosen vocation.
It has been a very long and sad week at OLM and now for our entire Diocese. I have experienced such sadness before in my own life. It is the same sadness I experienced over 25 years ago as a young, newly ordained priest when so many of the reports of clerical sex abuse were first revealed. Such pain and sadness never heal completely but instead remind us to strive to be a people of faith, hope, and love.
As we ponder such evil and darkness with sadness and shame, we must strive to see the light of Christ. As the late Venerable Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen once said: "The experience of the dark night of the soul, though painful, serves as a test intended to purify and deepen one’s faith.”
I thank all who helped with the Mass and collation for Dave Belanger this week. It was a fitting tribute for a good man. Be well. Stay safe. Do good. Keep the faith! God Bless! I am away this week on a previously scheduled vacation. Go Pats!!!





