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Catholic Parishioners Challenge Church Closing in Court
Posted: Thursday September 09, 2004 11:24 AM EST
![]() Mary Ames and John M. Galvin, attorneys for parishioners at St. Albert’s church in Weymouth, Mass., at table at right, appeal to judge Thomas Connolly as lawyers for the Boston Archdiocese, Wilson Rogers Jr. and Wilson Rogers III, wait their turn to speak in the Suffolk County Courthouse on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2004, in Boston. More than 150 parishioners from St. Albert’s went by busloads to court Wednesday, hoping to convince Connolly to reverse the Boston Archdiocese’s decision to close the parish. (AP Photo/Pool, Matthew J. Lee)
![]() Sheila Pecoraro, center, a parishioner at St. Albert’s church in Weymouth, Mass., behind, holds a placard and waves along with others at fellow parishioners departing the church by bus, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2004. Three bus loads of church goers from St. Albert’s traveled to Boston Wednesday hoping to convince a judge that they, and not the archdiocese, own the church and reverse the Boston Archdiocese’s decision to close the parish. St. Albert’s is one of 82 parishes the archdiocese is closing as part of a massive downsizing brought on by a sharp decline in Mass attendance, a shortage of priests and the high costs of maintaining old church buildings. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Three busloads of parishioners from St. Albert the Great church went to court on Wednesday, to challenge the Catholic Boston Archdiocese’s decision to close the church. The 150 church lovers, many of whom have been holding round-the clock prayer vigils and sit ins since last week to prevent the lock-down of the cathedral, said they would not give in easily. “We’re not going down without a fight,” declared Barbara King, a parishioner who joined the church 2 1/2 years ago. St. Albert’s is among some 80 churches that are being closed by the Boston archdiocese as part of one of the largest massive closure in American Catholic history.
Judge Thomas Connolly, who heard the case, gave no indication of when he would rule on the parishioners’ request for a temporary injunction to prevent the archdiocese from selling the church’s assets.
Source: http://www.christianpost.com/
Reproduced with permission from The Christian Post.
Copyright ©2004 Christianpost.com. All Rights Reserved. |
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