Posted on 03/12/2012 2:03:53 PM PDT by NYer
REFLECTIONOver the past two weekends, nearly 1,500 persons who will enter or come into full communion with the Church in parishes of the archdiocese at the Easter Vigil took important steps on their journey. A catechumen and his sponsor, at left, pray during Rite of Election ceremony led by Cardinal Dolan in St. Patricks Cathedral Feb. 26.
The archdiocese rolled out the welcome the past two weekends for 1,470 people who will be fully received into the Catholic Church at the Easter Vigil April 7.
On Feb. 26 the Church welcomed to St. Patricks Cathedral 655 who will be baptized, confirmed and receive first Communion. The catechumens, as they are known, were accompanied by their sponsors and by family members. They came from more than 80 parishes around the archdiocese to publicly declare their commitment to the faith and to sign the Book of the Electa registry of names thats part of the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA).
And this past Sunday, 815 candidates, those who had either already been baptized into the church as infants but did not practice or those baptized into other Christian denominations who are now seeking full communion with the Roman Catholic Church, were welcomed at St. Patricks Cathedral as well as at three other parish churches across the archdiocese.
At St. Patricks, 583 candidates participated in the Rite of Calling to Continuing Conversion while 65 more participated at Transfiguration Church in Tarrytown, 109 at Blessed Kateri Church in LaGrangeville and 58 at Our Lady Star of the Sea Church on Staten Island.
Cardinal Dolan presided at St. Patricks while Auxiliary Bishop Josu Iriondo, vicar for Hispanic Affairs, presided at Transfiguration; Auxiliary Bishop Dominick J. Lagonegro, epispocal vicar of Dutchess, Orange, Sullivan, Ulster and Northern Westchester/Putnam, at Blessed Kateri; and Auxiliary Bishop Gerald T. Walsh, rector of St. Josephs Seminary, Dunwoodie, at Our Lady Star of the Sea. The candidates will receive confirmation and the Eucharist at the Easter Vigil.
This is one of the happiest Sundays of the year, declared Cardinal Dolan during the Rite of Election ceremony Feb. 26, because I get to look out and see people who are eager and happy to become Catholics and enter the Churchand I thank you for the example.
He continued that welcoming theme with the candidates on Sunday, telling them that, like the disciples at Jesus Transfiguration in that days Gospel, they too could expect to be dazzled at Easter by Christs full radiance revealed in Communion.
I am looking out at people who have known Jesus for quite a while, Cardinal Dolan said. Some of you were raised in different Christian denominations, some of you were baptized Catholics ... at least you heard of Jesus. You know him the way Peter, James and John knew him. But now, through the RCIA, through your full communion with the Church at Easter, you will see him glorious and radiant as he is transfigured before you.
The archdiocesan Catechetical Office oversees the RCIA program, which is conducted in parishes for persons wishing to enter the Church.
At the Rite of Election, the strongest showing came from the parishes that serve the lower Manhattan-Chinatown area, with the 263 catechumens from the Basilica of St. Patricks Old Cathedral accounting for more than one-third of the total. Of them, 240 were Chinese-speakers, mainly young immigrants who come from throughout the metropolitan area.
Msgr. Donald Sakano, the pastor, credits the ministry of Father Andrew Thi, a Chinese-born priest whos been a fixture at the parish for 25 years.
Hes a tireless worker for the Lord and the Church, Msgr. Sakano said. People are drawn to him, as children are to a father.
Transfiguration parish, on Mott Street in the heart of Chinatown, also had a large contingent. Chao Chao Lin, a 14-year-old junior high school student who was one of the few English speakers, has been in the United States for just one year.
Hes entering the Church, he said shyly, because I feel that when I do something wrong, God will forgive me and I will feel better.
The group from another lower Manhattan parish, St. Josephs of Greenwich Village, appeared to be made up mainly of young professionals and college students.
Robert De Cosimo, 28, who grew up in a Protestant family in Tennessee and now works for a New York investment bank, said hes entering the Church because hes engaged to a Catholic woman and we wanted to share the same faith, especially with having children in the futurethats important.
Emma Dunlap, 21, a student at the New School, said she grew up in an atheist household upstate but had a series of profound religious experiences in connection with the death of her grandfather. She began attending Mass at St. Josephs, she said, at the recommendation of a parishioner-friend and made the decision to formally enter the Church.
I couldnt be happier, she said.
These faces transcend all barriers and join into one image of community, in anticipation of their entry into the Catholic Church at Easter. May God bless them all!
BTTT!
9 Elect
about two dozen confirmandi
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.