The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Monsignor: St. Patrick’s Day mission is to spread gospel

In Savannah, it’s not just about raucous street celebratio­ns.

- By Amy Paige Condon

Green-clad revelers sipping green suds watched from Lafayette Square as Savannah’s faithful filed into the Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist for the annual St. Patrick’s Day mass —further evidence of the juxtaposit­ion between the solemn Irish underpinni­ngs of the holiday and its transforma­tion in this former debtor’s colony (where Catholics and alcohol both were once illegal) into a raucous celebratio­n.

Beneath the soaring ornate ceiling of the Basilica, hundreds of worshipper­s dipped fingertips into the font of holy water while the Cathedral choir sang Celtic hymns. Many of the city’s prominent Irish families — Sheehans, McCarthys,and Fogartys — shook hands and hugged as members of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee and local dignitarie­s such as Savannah Mayor Van Johnson, State Rep. Edna Jackson, and Chatham County Commission Chair Chester Ellis lined up for the procession­al led by 2023 Grand Marshal George Schwartz and his wife, Patricia Hodges Schwarz.

The Most Reverend Stephen D. Parkes, bishop of Savannah, reminded parishione­rs of Saint Patrick’s disciplesh­ip, a theme further reinforced during the homily delivered by Monsignor James Costigan, pastor of St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church, and a native of Ireland.

Recounting Patrick’s 1432 return to the Emerald Isle, where he had been enslaved during his youth, Costigan spoke of his devotion to the Holy Trinity and evangelism.

“Remember him best in his pilgrimage of faith,” said Costigan. “That faith we celebrate today . ... The mission was to spread the sacred power far and beyond.”

Following the sacrament of communion, the grand marshal led the recessiona­l out of the cathedral for a blessing and the beginning of the 199th anniversar­y of Savannah’s St. Patrick’s Day and parade.

 ?? COURTESY OF WILL PEEBLES ?? St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee Grand Marshal George Schwarz III and his wife, Patricia Hodges Schwarz, enter the Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist for St. Patrick’s Day Mass in Savannah.
COURTESY OF WILL PEEBLES St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee Grand Marshal George Schwarz III and his wife, Patricia Hodges Schwarz, enter the Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist for St. Patrick’s Day Mass in Savannah.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States