Settling in

Settling in

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Dear Parishioners: It is a great joy to be here and begin my priestly service as the seventeenth Pastor of Our Lady of Mercy Parish in East Greenwich.  Since 1853 when Bishop Bernard O’Reilly sent Father Patrick J. Lenihan to the mission territory that was then East Greenwich, sixteen priests have had the great privilege to serve this parish.  I offer my thanks to Bishop Thomas J. Tobin for assigning me as your new pastor and I pledge to him and you that I will strive to serve faithfully, lovingly, zealously and enthusiastically during my pastorate.

Like Fr. Lenihan who arrived over a hundred and fifty years ago, I arrive to Our Lady of Mercy as a stranger to you and to the community around us.  Also like the first pastor, I arrive committed to proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ in this parish and throughout the community around us.  My first duty and greatest joy is to announce the Gospel in all its power and with all its demands.

The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation for all who believe, and our common mission as Disciples of Christ is to bring the Gospel to all we meet. Indeed, Christ commands us to preach the Gospel to the ends of the earth, and that is our Great Commission: to be evangelists.  Evangelization is not something undertaken only by priests and religious or only by missionaries in foreign lands. Evangelization is the common mission of the entire Church, and every Christian shares in the duty and privilege of sharing the Gospel with all people.

In order to evangelize in the 21st century we must use not only the time tested means of preaching and teaching but also adapt to the technological advances in our world.  Therefore, we will soon launch our new parish website at www.olmparish.org .  It will contain lots information about the parish, the Catholic Church and what we have to offer our community. I will be posting my weekly column there as well as blogging on a regular basis.  I would like to eventually establish a parish Facebook page and I may even try my hand at Twitter!  This is only the beginning or our mission to spread the Good News of the Gospel throughout East Greenwich, Kent County, Rhode Island and the world!

I am very happy to begin my pastorate at OLM. God is good and I give Him thanks for the many blessings that are Our Lady of Mercy Parish.  See you around the parish and perhaps even around town!  God Bless!  And Go Sox!!

Father Healey

 

A New Pastor for OLM

A New Pastor for OLM

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Dear Parishioners: Bishop Evans asked that I write the column this week as I prepare to move into Our Lady of Mercy.  I am looking forward to beginning my pastorate especially to meeting you in the coming weeks.  Over the last month I have visited the parish several times and met with the staff to learn more about them, the parish and the schedule for the upcoming year. I am looking forward to working with them in serving you and the needs of the parish.  Father Shemek and I are also getting to know one another.  We are both excited to be part of the OLM parish family.  He is still trying to get me to take a ride down Main Street with him on his motorcycle but I told him not until he gets a sidecar!

I am not unfamiliar with OLM as three of my nephews made their First Holy Communions here several years ago and my niece graduated from OLM School in 2006.  I remember the graduation Mass very well because I had to deliver the homily off the cuff as the scheduled homilist got the wrong time and failed to make the Mass on time.  Sister Jeanne also remembers my niece as one of her favorite students!  Over the years I have also presided at weddings and funerals of friends at Our Lady of Mercy and I know many parishioners already but I truly look forward to getting to know many more in the months ahead.  In fact, one of my many cousins is a parishioner of OLM and he tells me he and his family are at Mass every week.  If he’s not, he soon will be!

Of course, I was also a friend of your late Pastor, Monsignor Lolio, and was often a guest at OLM.  As you know, he was a generous host and frequently after some delicious pasta prepared by Monsignor we would play cards with friends Monsignor Albert Kenney and Bishop Matano. I have very fond memories of Monsignor Lolio who I knew to be a gracious host, a good friend, and a fine priest.  He has left an outstanding legacy at Our Lady of Mercy and I pray that I might continue to build upon the strong foundation he left behind.  May his noble soul rest in peace.

Since I am a little familiar with Our Lady of Mercy let me try to acquaint you with a little more about me.  I have been a priest for seventeen years and I truly love being a priest and serving God’s people.  Being a part of the Catholic Church and following Jesus Christ have been a source of great pride and joy throughout my entire life and the priestly work of preaching, teaching, and sanctifying are things that I thoroughly enjoy.

Over the years I was blessed to serve as the Assistant Pastor at St. Mary’s Star of the Sea Parish in Narragansett and St. Augustine Parish in Providence with two great pastors and mentors, Father Donald Bourassa and Monsignor Barry R.L. Connerton.  I loved working in the large school at St. Augustine where I spent seven years. The last nine years I have very happily been serving as the Pastor of St. Ambrose Parish in the village of Albion which is located in Lincoln, Rhode Island.  My first pastorate was a great blessing in my life and I am grateful for it.

For the last twelve years I have also served as the chief lobbyist for the Diocese of Providence at the R.I. Statehouse and I serve as the Director of the R.I. Catholic Conference which advocates and educates on public policy issues for the Church. I also write the editorials for the weekly diocesan newspaper, the Rhode Island Catholic, so make sure you have a subscription (www.thericatholic.com)!  And I serve as the Chaplain to the men and women of the R.I. Capitol Police Department.  I will continue these other part-time assignments while serving as Pastor of Our Lady of Mercy.

Now that’s what the official resume says but let me share with you some more personal information about myself.  I grew up in the Edgewood section of Cranston and I am the youngest of nine children, the uncle of thirteen nieces and nephews and the grand-uncle of two great nieces.  I was educated in the Cranston Public Schools.  Both my parents are now deceased as my Mother died when I was a senior in college and my Father passed away in May 2011 at the age of 88.  They instilled in me a love of the Catholic Faith that continues to grow stronger. They always practiced their Catholic faith and had a deep respect for marital love and family life that has been the foundation of my life as their son and as a son of the Church.

All of my brothers and sisters live in Rhode Island except for my sister and brother-in-law and their three daughters who reside in Saratoga, New York.  Unfortunately my brother-in-law and his three daughters (my nieces!) in New York are fans of the evil empire known as the New York Yankees and New York Giants (please pray for my sister who remains true to her Rhodey roots!).  I am a diehard Red Sox fan so it continues to be a long summer!  However, I am looking forward to the return of the NFL Football Season and the New England Patriots who I also passionately follow.  My family is a very important part of my life and you may see some of them around the parish from time to time.  Some of my nephews have informed me that they are excited about the playground and basketball courts at OLM!  We are a close family and I am blessed to have most of them nearby in Warwick, Jamestown, and West Greenwich. Although Saratoga is not a bad spot during the Horse Racing Season!

Without a doubt you are to learn more about me in the months ahead just as I hope to learn more about you and your families and this wonderful parish of Our Lady of Mercy.  Once again let me tell you how very pleased I am to have the great privilege to serve you as the Seventeenth Pastor of Our Lady of Mercy Parish.  Indeed I am very excited to begin my priestly ministry here with and for you and I look forward to the chance to meet you in person at Masses next weekend. Until then please know of my prayers for you as I humbly ask for your prayers for me.  God Bless.

Celebrate religious freedom

Dear Parishioners:On the Fourth of July we conclude our national Fortnight of Prayer for Religious Freedom. This special time of prayer, education and action began with a beautiful Mass at our Cathedral on June 20th with Bishop Tobin, twenty priests and over 500 Catholics praying together for religious liberty. The Mass was followed by a Prayer Breakfast with a keynote address by Law Professor Dwight Duncan who suggested:

“It’s a bit of a Paul Revere moment. Only this time it’s not the British that are coming. It’s Big Brother. Or, if you prefer, think of Rosa Parks. We can go along and sit quietly in the back of the bus, or we can stand up for human dignity and the rights of conscience. When it comes to our precious heritage of religious freedom, we must either use it or lose it. “

In his homily at the Mass, Bishop Tobin told those gathered to defend religious freedom – “a right that belongs to every human being” and “a right bestowed on us by almighty God.” He called on the faithful to lead the defense of religious liberty guided by and inspired by the church’s pastors. He told the large crowd that “this is your work, your mission.” Bishop Tobin is right that this defense of religious liberty is for all of us to engage in not only bishops and priests. However, the effectiveness of defending our religious liberty ultimately depends on the vitality of our own Catholic faith – in other words, how deeply we believe it, and how honestly we live it.

The defense of religious liberty is not new at all, our first bishop in the United States, Archbishop John Carroll — whose cousin, Charles, signed the Declaration of Independence — constantly urged the tiny Catholic flock of his time to pray in thanksgiving for the freedom promised us to exercise our faith without harassment from anybody, government included, and to pray for its protection. Nor is it uniquely American, for that matter. What people of every faith have always longed for — the liberty to worship God and live out their religious convictions without oppression — finally came to be fulfilled in the country whose 236th birthday we will observe this July 4th.

Happy Independence Day! Enjoy the holiday on Wednesday, enjoy the picnics and the fireworks but please pray and proudly defend your religious liberty too! God Bless. God Bless America!