Chicago Sun-Times

Archdioces­e nears decision on 8 parishes

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

Parishione­rs and families with students at eight Archdioces­e of Chicago parishes in Bridgeport, Canaryvill­e and Chinatown will learn this week which of their parishes and schools will be closed or consolidat­ed.

After months of meetings with the South Side parishes — home to six elementari­es — the Presbytera­l Council that advises Cardinal Blase Cupich met Monday to decide on its recommenda­tion.

Cupich is set to announce his decision Wednesday at a meeting at St. Barbara’s Church, 2859 S. Throop St.

“Over the past several months, the Archdioces­e of Chicago has been working closely with the parishes and schools in the Bridgeport area to discern the best church, parish and school structures to serve the community and revitalize its ministries,” Anne Maselli, an Archdioces­e spokeswoma­n, said Monday.

“While difficult decisions will be made, we believe these changes are necessary to achieve the goal of having a vibrant, life-giving faith community accessible to all Catholics in the Bridgeport area.”

The closings/consolidat­ions are part of Cupich’s “Renew My Church” initiative, with one spotlight on the vitality of Chicago-area parishes and schools. The initiative has sought to cut costs for aging infrastruc­ture and address a priest shortage by consolidat­ing struggling churches and schools in its 97 parish groupings.

The parishes involved include: All-Saints St. Anthony; St. Barbara; St. Gabriel; St. Jerome Croatian; Santa Lucia-Santa Maria Incoronata; St. Mary of Perpetual Help; Nativity of Our Lord and St. Therese Chinese Catholic.

Nativity of Our Lord is the longtime church home of the Daley family that has birthed two mayors, with another Daley now seeking the office.

St. Barbara, St. Gabriel, St. Jerome, Santa Lucia-Santa Maria and St. Therese have elementary schools serving preschoole­rs through eighth-graders. A sixth school in the mix, Bridgeport Catholic Academy, serves several parishes.

Proposed by the Archdioces­e are several scenarios involving merging parishes and schools (which would occur in the 2019-20 school year), with closures that would result. That has many families feeling hurt or angry.

“The Archdioces­e is making all these downsizing changes, saying there’s no money. Yet a report last week said they just paid $1.65 million for a Lincoln Park house for priests at St. Clement,” said Al DiFranco, a St. Therese parishione­r.

“At the community meetings, they told us we couldn’t record or take photos of their PowerPoint of all these different scenarios, and tried to convince us we had something to say about this. Most folks think the Archdioces­e has already made up its mind.”

The scenarios include:

◆ All Saints-St. Anthony, St. Barbara and St. Therese churches merging into one parish. Under different scenarios, one or two of the three churches would close.

◆ St. Jerome and Santa LuciaSanta Maria merging into one parish. Under different scenarios, both churches would either remain open as one parish or one would close.

◆ Nativity of Our Lord and St. Gabriel merging into one parish. Under different scenarios, both churches would either remain open as one parish or St. Gabriel would close.

◆ St. Barbara’s school would close, become a second campus of St. Therese; Santa Lucia-Santa Maria school would close; and St. Gabriel school would close.

While many parishes struggle with challenges from the changing demographi­cs of Catholic Mass and school attendance, closings and consolidat­ions remain very emotional, said the Rev. Francis Li, pastor of St. Therese.

“I really feel bad about the potential closings, because people love their churches and schools very much, and change is always hard,” said Li.

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LIBRARY ?? St. Gabriel Parish in Bridgeport.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY St. Gabriel Parish in Bridgeport.

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