The church’s sacred mission, faithful to the mandate of Jesus, to teach, serve, and sanctify, requires such ongoing, purposeful, professional planning.
This archdiocese has done so, in a very concerted way, for at least the last 15 years.
...many of the recommendations for our parishes and schools have already been implemented or are in process. Other recommendations await implementation.
Today I want to talk to you about a heightened, more energetic effort to re-commit ourselves to the process of pastoral planning.
What is this all about, anyway?
Well, for one, it’s about fidelity to the church’s primary duty of evangelization. Popes Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI all remind us that evangelization in the third millennium calls for new, creative ways to respond to pastoral urgencies that engage us today.
People are looking to the church to be a light to the world, to be proactive,
not passive, in dealing with contemporary challenges, and to meet the spiritual needs of her people today as she has in the past.
Are we evangelizing and living our faith? Are we meeting the spiritual needs of our people? How effectively do we live Jesus’ mission in today’s world? Are we good stewards? These are the questions that pastoral planning confronts.
Simply put, we have too many parishes, priests, and buildings in areas of southeastern Wisconsin where our Catholic population has shrunk, and not enough where big numbers of Catholics now live.
Simply maintaining the buildings we have, with no energy or resources left for the mission of Christ and his church, is no way to run a railroad!
Does this pastoral planning mean some parishes and schools might merge, move or be served by creative new styles of leadership? Yes.
Does this mean that some new parishes, or re-configurations of current ones, might appear?
Does this mean that new ministries, new models of schools, catechetical programs, and fresh outreach in evangelization and charity might arise? Yes.
Can we continue the mushrooming of central office services that began 15 years ago after the archdiocesan synod?
Have we kept pace with changes in our parishes and reflected those changes in our central structure designed to support those very same parishes? Have we focused on what’s most important, most helpful, most needed?
Or, have we continued to try and be all things to all people, as our world and our culture changed around us?
All of this work is especially important as we move toward a capital campaign.
Well, have I made my point? All this planning is crucial! So crucial that it also needs to be full-time.
Thus, I have appointed a much respected pastor, Fr. James Connell, as archdiocesan vicar for planning. ... We know from experience the aggressive planning I have described will take more than one year, but I believe Fr. Connell’s full-time attention, along with the consultation and support of our priest council and pastoral council, will allow us to make great progress and set the course for future implementation.
Fr. Connell was also just elected chair of our archdiocesan priest council on a “single-issue” emphasis – you guessed it: pastoral planning!
With their election of Fr. Connell, our priest council sent a clear, resounding message – we must boldly renew our commitment to pastoral planning, to new models of administration and to new approaches to serving the people of God in southeastern Wisconsin.
We need to dream of what could be and “cast out to the deep,” ...
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