| By Paula Day
St. Matthew's parish in Fairburn is one of the seven LaSalette parishes in
the archdiocese undergoing an evaluation this summer.
Father James Caffery, MS, is pastor of the South Fulton County parish and
during his two years as pastor the parish has grown from 260 to 345 households.
Recently when he asked parishioners to evaluate their parish, he told them,
"You will honor me most by being truthful." The priest noted that if
a parish is a healthy parish, it is because the parishioners also work to make
it so. "We must be a welcoming, inviting community as individuals,"
he said.
Through its Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) process the parish
received 14 into full communion with the Church this past Easter. Seven are now
participating in the pre-catechumenate and nine have indicated interest in the
sessions to begin in the fall.
"The spirit of this parish community is shown in its
liturgies," Father Caffery explained. "They are uplifting, welcoming,
joyful. The people are extending themselves, not allowing themselves to be
strangers."
St. Matthew's has many young families the priest pointed out. The number of
children in the parish religious education program has increased from 55 to 160
since he became pastor. They are involved in the weekend liturgies, singing
songs, offering prayers of the faithful, at times performing appropriate skits.
Recently a parishioner approached Father Caffery asking to initiate a senior
citizens group. According to Rose Noehl, the group has grown from 12 to 16 to
21. They have attended a local theater production and have plans to go to a
Braves game.
"If you take care of the young and take care of the old,"
Father Caffery said, "then you get those in-between. If you care for those
they love, then they'll be interested in the Church."
Father Caffery points with pride to the parish outreach to the community at
large through its S.M.A.R.T. Team. The St. Matthew's Addiction Referral Team
meets twice a month and offers educational and supportive assistance to those
affected by alcohol and drug abuse in the area.
St. Matthew's parishioners extend their welcoming and joyful spirit to the
sick and shut-in, making regular visits to Christian City. The extensive
complex in South Fulton County includes a convalescent center, retirement home
for the elderly and home for children.
St. Matthew parishioners recently trained to assist with the obtaining of
annulments at a workshop conducted by the archdiocese's Tribunal. Two plan to
attend an August training session for parish AIDS ministry coordinators offered
by the Archdiocesan AIDS Task Force.
"The parish sends people to these (events) so that when hurting people
come to me, I can send them to those who have been trained. The parish helps
finance their involvement. No matter what the future, they'll be of service to
the Church," Father Caffery said.
The "little church that could" is bursting at the seams. A
converted funeral home, the structure houses the priest's living quarters,
offices, meeting rooms, classrooms and a tiny sanctuary, once the funeral home
chapel. To accommodate overflow at weekend Masses, one room is converted into a
closed circuit television room. Another, at a right angle to the sanctuary,
opens directly onto the altar area.
Groundbreaking for a new all-purpose structure with 4,000 square feet of
socializing space is planned for the fall. In addition to this gathering area,
it will be used for the more heavily attended weekend Masses, seating 450. It
will add needed classroom space and the plans allow for the parish's projected
growth. The parish has $100,000 of the needed $300,000 for construction.
The hoped-for completion, "at least by spring," cannot come soon
enough for Father Caffery who is a "man without a room" from eight to
11 on Sundays. Even the rectory living room is expropriated; RCIA sessions are
held there. Because of the concentration of so many on Sunday mornings in such
a small area, the pastor says he "does more work on Sunday and then uses
Monday to figure out what I promised people" the day before.
"We're working in a hurting situation, but there's tremendous
good spirit," the priest says. "We'll look back and say 'those were
the days.'"
The LaSalette priest came from a Cajun parish in Louisiana of 1,500 families
and church that could seat 800-900 people. He finds that the intimacy of St.
Matthew's small sanctuary with "no big pulpit to hide behind" creates
a far less formal atmosphere and in his homilies he shares himself, talking
"as if with family members."
St, Matthew's will have its on-site evaluation in mid-September. Father
Caffery will be the LaSalette member on an evaluation team visiting Good
Shepherd parish in Orlando, FL, in October.
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