LUNENBURG – St. Boniface Parish’s 75th anniversary Mass Sunday – like the parish, priests and parishioners themselves – drew newer and long-time members.
Seminarians at the Pontifical North American College in Rome typically spend their first summer abroad – studying a language or doing mission work. Here are two reflections from seminarians on their experiences during the summer of 2024. Seminarian summer assignments for summer 2025 were announced.
“We wanted to start our own business group,” he said, “connecting people who are like us who either run our own businesses or have knowledge of what we can do to help the other parishioners within the church and even people who might not go to the church.”
The National Centre for Padre Pio in Barto, Pennsylvania, is displaying relics of St. Padre Pio in an exhibit traveling throughout the nation and one of the stops will be at St. Anne and St. Patrick Parish in the Fiskdale section of Sturbridge.
With his music ministry, Som do Monte (Sound of the Mount), the 38-year-old Father Azevedo gives concerts in Brazil and around the world and has more than nine million followers on Instagram and more than seven million YouTube subscribers, Deacon Longhini said.
Bishop McManus welcomed the 400-500 people attending the ordination in person and the 549 watching all or part of it livestreamed, and thanked them for their support.
As the Diocese of Worcester celebrates 75 years since its establishment in 1950, The Catholic Free Press took a look back at the events, people and places that helped shape the Catholic Church in Worcester County.
Staffing changes are coming this summer for several parishes – due to priests retiring, becoming a senior priest, going to a different parish, taking on specialized ministry, or taking a leave of absence.
Jonathan E. Amidon was working a well-paid job that he enjoyed. He was an echocardiographer for Boston Medical Center. “I had everything that I could have possibly needed,” the 30-year-old Worcester native said. “I had all my debts paid off, I had everything. But I was like, ‘You know, I’m not really happy. There’s something lingering.’”
Sharing and repurposing was celebrated at separate, but related, events May 29. At St. Bernard Elementary School in Fitchburg, Bishop McManus blessed a new altar made by a grandfather, and statues donated by religious sisters. The statues came from a convent sold that day to serve veterans.
“Today … we have professed the truth” that we believe the Church is one, holy, Catholic and apostolic, Bishop McManus said Sunday. No matter what continent we come from, there is only one faith.