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A concelebration of the Eucharist, expressing the joy of one
who dies in the Lord, will be celebrated Monday at 1 p.m. at the
Cathedral of Christ the King in memory of the late Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan.
The funeral rite emphasizes the event of mans salvation
rather than his death. As chairman of the Bishops Committee on the
Liturgy, Archbishop Hallinan dedicated himself to renewing the rites of the
Church so they would express the peace and comfort that Christ spoke of.
Principal concelebrant at the Mass will be Archbishop Luigi
Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States. Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin
will preach the homily and John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia, a seminary
classmate of the archbishop, will give the absolution.
Other concelebrants of the Mass will be Bishop Bernardin, Bishop
Coleman F. Carroll of Miami, Bishop Ernest Unterkoefler of Charleston, Bishop
Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh, Bishop Paul Tanner of St. Augustine, Bishop
Gerard Frey of Savannah, Auxiliary Bishop Charles McLaughlin of Raleigh. Abbots
Augustine Moore of Holy Spirit Monastery, Conyers, and Walter Coggin of Belmont
Abbey and archdiocesan priests will also concelebrate.
Burial will be in the priests plot of Arlington Cemetery,
Atlanta.
Survivors include his brother, Arthur J. Hallinan of Cleveland,
Ohio, six nieces and nephews and a number of cousins.
Archbishop Hallinan, best known in the American church for his
unending work for liturgical reform and his outspoken support of civil rights
causes, died at his residence Wednesday, March 27, at 5 a.m. The cause of death
was complications from hepatitis and liver failure. He had been seriously ill
for several weeks.
The archbishop died two days before completing six years as the
first Archbishop of Atlanta. He was installed on March 29, 1962. He would have
been 57 years old on April 8.
The body of the archbishop will lie in state at the Cathedral
until the service. A concelebrated Mass will be offered Saturday at 10:30 a.m.
in the Cathedral for members of religious orders in the archdiocese. Principal
concelebrant will be Father John McDonough, president of the Senate and vicar
for religious. Priests from religious orders will assist him.
On Friday at 8 p.m., there will be an ecumenical service with
religious leaders from the Atlanta area participating. The office of the dead
will be offered Sunday at 8:30 p.m. by priests and people of the archdiocese at
the Cathedral. A Mass for school children in the archdiocese was said Friday
morning by Father Daniel J. OConnor, secretary for Catholic education,
and priests who teach in archdiocesan schools.
Paul J. Hallinan was born in Painesville, Ohio, April 8, 1911, the
son of Clarence C. and Jane Hallinan. His mother died in 1952 and his father in
1955. His father lived the last three years of his life with Father Hallinan
while he was Newman chaplain at Clevelands Western Reserve University.
The future archbishop entered Cathedral Latin School in Cleveland
in 1924 and served as editor of his high school yearbook. After graduation, he
went to the University of Notre Dame and graduated with a degree in philosophy
in 1932. While at Notre Dame, he edited the yearbook and a humor magazine.
During summer vacation he worked for the Painesville Telegraph.
Always interested in journalism, particularly the Catholic press,
he once wrote: We need lay spokesmen on diocesan papers, but even more we
need Catholics raising their voices, in accents that a secular society can
appreciate, in every worthy channel of communication: learned journals and
popular magazines, books and lectures, classrooms and laboratories, government
and community programs, all the arts and all the sciences. They must speak not
specifically as Catholics but as highly skilled and accessible persons.
He wrote articles, particularly on the liturgy, for many Catholic
publications. He always said he could never remember ever wanting to be
anything but a priest.
The archbishop attended St. Marys Seminary in Cleveland
after conferring with his pastor, Msgr. William J. Gallena of St. Marys
Parish, Painesville, now deceased. He said, Msgr. Gallena has been
everything to me. He heard my first confession, gave me my First Communion and
has been a friend and adviser all my life.
Father Hallinan was ordained Feb. 20, 1937 at St. Johns
Cathedral, Cleveland. His first assignment was at St. Aloysius, Cleveland
(1937-1942). During World War II, he was a chaplain (captain) and served in
Australia, New Guinea and the Philippines with the 542nd Engineer Amphibian
Regiment. In June, 1944, he received the Purple Heart at Biak, New Guinea.
After army service, Father Hallinan returned to Cleveland and
served from 1945-47 at the cathedral. In 1947, he was named diocesan director
of the Newman Clubs and worked in the apostolate until 1958. He served as
national chaplain of the Newman Federation from 1952-57. He was named a
monsignor during this time.
On Sept. 9, 1958, he was appointed bishop of Charleston, S.C., and
was consecrated in Cleveland on Oct. 28, 1958, by then apostolic delegate to
the United States, Archbishop Ameleto Cicognani. He was installed Nov. 25,
1958.
Msgr. Hallinan learned of his appointment as bishop while
preparing a lecture for one of the religion courses he taught at Newman Hall in
Cleveland. He was appointed by Pope Pius XII.
In 1961, while still bishop of Charleston, he issued a pastoral
letter on racial justice. The letter dealt with the admission policy of
parochial schools. It said that Catholic pupils, regardless of color, would be
admitted to Catholic schools as soon as it could be done with safety, but not
later than when public schools were opened to all pupils. A year later Bishop
Hallinan issued a pastoral on Christian Unity which said in part, Never
has this longing for Christian unity been more evident...We are growing more
conscious that the Holy Spirit of God, brooding over our distressed world and
our divided Christendom, is stirring now the souls of men in many places,
providing the light and strength without which reunion remains an empty
dream.
When the Diocese of Atlanta was elevated to the status of an
archdiocese on Feb. 21, 1962, Bishop Hallinan was named its first archbishop,
and bishop of the Province of Atlanta which includes five dioceses.
He was installed on March 29, 1962 by then apostolic delegate,
Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, at the Cathedral of Christ the King, Atlanta.
One of his first acts was to integrate the Catholic schools and
hospitals within the archdiocese.
During his term as archbishop, several churches including Holy
Cross, Holy Spirit, St. Thomas the Apostle, Smyrna, and missions at Cleveland,
GA and Clarkesville, GA were opened. The new John Lancaster Spalding Catholic
Center at the University of Georgia was finished and the old St. Josephs
Boys Home at Washington, GA was transferred to Atlanta to new quarters and
became the Village of St. Joseph for boys and girls. He also established The
Georgia Bulletin, the weekly archdiocesan newspaper.
Archbishop Hallinan was also one of four Atlanta civic leaders who
sponsored a banquet honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., after he received the
Nobel Peace Prize. He said Dr. King was a pioneer in a new dynamic of
peace, expressed in the formula, I will walk in liberty, O Lord, because
I seek thy precepts.
But it was his work for the vernacular liturgy that brought
Archbishop Hallinan the most praise and criticism.
In 1962, the archbishop was named to the Commission on the Sacred
Liturgy by Pope John XXIII and worked untiringly for the Mass to be said in
English or the native tongue of all countries.
In one of his last talks on the liturgy, the archbishop said,
Through the Sacred Constitution on the Liturgy, we are now emerging from
a period of fixity and rigidity which was unnatural in the Churchs
life. In the talk, he again called for experimentation.
On the archbishops return from the second session of the
Second Vatican Council he became ill in December 1963, with hepatitis and was
hospitalized for almost seven months. He never fully regained his health.
However, he continued to serve on the postconciliar Commission on
the Sacred Liturgy, as chairman of the U.S. Bishops Committee on the
Liturgy, and on the International Committee for an English Liturgy.
In July, 1964, he wrote a pamphlet, How to Understand
Changes in the Liturgy, and about 50,000 copies were distributed across
the United States and abroad.
His column, Archbishops Notebook, was widely
quoted in the Catholic press especially when he discussed the liturgy. But the
archbishop also spoke on many other issues, the war in Vietnam, on the need for
open housing in America, on aiding the poor and the Negro, against capital
punishment and abortion. He was also known for his support of increasing the
role of the laity in the Church and called what it is thought to be the first
Lay Congress in the archdiocese. He once said, This is the day of the
laity. They work for the sanctification of the world from within, as a
leaven.
The archbishop received honorary degrees from Notre Dame, Holy
Cross, Western Reserve University where he received a Ph.D. in history.
Duquesne University and Belmont College, N.C. He also was awarded the Father
Edward Sorin Award by Notre Dame. |