Tag: Democratic Church

Christian Witness, PNCC,

North Java PNCC parish news

From The Daily News: New life for church and for community

NORTH JAVA — Life has begun to establish itself at Holy Family Parish.

It’s the little things in many ways: penance services, anointing of the sick, members staying for coffee after Sunday Mass.

The North Java community had faced a crisis when the former St. Nicholas Church was closed during the Buffalo Diocese’s 2007 restructuring.

But a new group has just celebrated its first anniversary at the location, marking the church’s revival as a center of faith as part of the Polish National Catholic Church.

Sense of loss

The church on Route 98 had long enjoyed its existence as St Nicholas.

Established in 1891, the parish had once included its own convent and church school, although they eventually closed, until even the rectory was closed as parishes consolidated.

“It was December 2007 around Christmas time we were told we were going to be closing — at the end of May or early June,” said Corey Foegen a former parishioner who now serves as Holy Family Parish’s parish committee chair.

St. Nicholas eventually celebrated its last Mass and was shut. Foegen and a few others had faith it would reopen, but didn’t know exactly how.

Some moved on to the newly-consolidated parishes in such communities as Strykersville and Sheldon. Others seemed to lose hope entirely.

“Most people didn’t know where they were going,” Foegen said. “Several of us just kind of wandered and became known as ‘roaming Catholics’ at that point. A bunch of others refused to go to church at all and we didn’t know to what extent.”

But they eventually noticed strands of what would become the church’s revival, although in a slightly different tradition.

Foegen said former St. Nicholas parishioners started receiving letters and noticed pennysaver advertisements in 2010, asking their interest in the property’s future. Several groups including two new churches were proposing to locate on the property.

One request was turned down politely — people believed it simply wouldn’t fit with the community. But a proposal by Bishop Thaddeus Peplowski of the Polish National Catholic Church caught people’s attention.

They agreed to meet and core of residents liked what they heard.

“He had a nice meeting and interest from a lot of people,” Foegen said. “One, it stayed very close to the (Roman) Catholic faith. There are just a few differences, but it was a chance to embrace it.

“One of the biggest things people were interested in was we would purchase the church and property,” he continued. “So we had to become incorporated under the PNCC, and set up our own board, with the priest being president … It caught a lot of people’s interest.”

Path of faith

The Polish National Catholic Church was founded in 1907.

Although Catholic, it’s not part of the Roman Catholic tradition. Some distinctions exist between the two, and it’s more a “sister church”— like the Eastern Orthodox or Coptic churches — as the Rev. Matthew Kawiak describes it.

What the PNCC brings is a something very close to the Roman rites. But it allows married priests and welcomes people from other denominations, among other differences.

It’s also more democratic, with the lion’s share of responsibility handled by the congregation and church board, instead of the priest.

“There is a validity between the Roman, the Eastern and the Polish National churches, which is really misunderstood,” Kawiak said.

Interested community members met after the initial 2010 gathering to gauge the interest in joining the PNCC. Then they worked together, raised money and secured a mortgage to buy the former St. Nicholas from the Buffalo Diocese.

Bishop Peplowski advised the North Java community of what joining the PNCC entailed. And a group moved forward to keep the church going in its new identity.

“You do have political aspects,” Foegen said. “There are going to be some on both sides who said there’s a division. There are going to be others who say, ‘It’s a different flavor, just don’t worry about it.’ And they do embrace.”

Kawiak, of Bethany, started with Holy Family Parish six months ago. He spent 35 years as a Roman Catholic priest, including duties as Strong Memorial Hospital chaplain, before administering rites in the PNCC.

He also maintains his own practice as a certified therapist specializing in crisis situations.

Kawiak said the assignment dovetailed with his specialty. It’s a church undergoing the challenge of starting over, and dealing with the sadness of being “unplugged” from its former identity.

“My goal has been to help them refresh themselves, but I’ll go even further than that,” he said. “They’re friendly … They’re casual and it’s fun.”

The Scriptures are a sacrament in PNCC practice, so Kawiak also brought his love of storytelling into the mix. He’s also taken an innovative approach to worship, helping to guide the parish as it establishes itself.

It took adjustment in some cases, as many members — often longtime Roman Catholics — adapted to the sense of being “unplugged” from their longtime church.

Many former St. Nicholas parishioners chose to stay within the Roman Catholic tradition, attending Mass in the merged parishes.

Those who chose Holy Family are happy with their direction, Foegen said. And it isn’t an issue for them, with people in both groups deciding to worship where it best suits them.

“I believe we’re in the hands of the Spirit and maybe this is the way the spirit is calling us,” Kawiak said. “But really, if a quarter of (Roman) Catholics are leaving the churches and not going anywhere, you can’t tell me they’re giving up their faith in God. They’re searching for community and I think it’s here in this Polish National Church, because they’re encouraged to practice their gifts and charisms in a democratic way they’re not finding in their former tradition.”

Kawiak prefers to talk about the people who have returned to the church, and what they’re accomplishing.

New community

What’s developed has been a church community re-starting itself from scratch.

Kawiak leads Masses with an emphasis on the positive, as the members start in a new direction. Some are former St. Nicholas parishioners, while others are newcomers seeking a spiritual connection.

“People ask me what it’s like to serve here at Holy Family and I tell them it’s incredible,” he said. “The people here are incredible and I told them last Sunday at church.”

It’s not just about the liturgy, he said. The members are working to restore and revive faith, supporting the church and the community.

It’s a choice some have never considered, and an opportunity to restore buildings, and continue to learn about Jesus, while fulfilling his love for others, Kawiak said. Much of his work has been overcoming people’s fears and any misunderstanding.

“It’s living — not just in the spirit — the faith to me, of any faith tradition,” he said.

“Faith in North Java is when people recognize people who are in need, and the generosity is extraordinary.”

The church now has about 65 total parishioners, with people from as far away as Warsaw, Strykersville and Alexander attending Mass. And it’s making a name for itself in the PNCC’s Buffalo-Pittsburgh Diocese.

“I keep telling people, you want a church in the 21st century?” Kawiak said. “A faith community, Catholic by tradition, that welcomes people of all faiths, with that sense of open doors? North Java is the premiere parish in the country as far as I’m concerned, and in six months.

“And it’s not me,” he continued. “It’s the people’s faith that had to be nourished. What did we do here? We instilled the trust.”

Holy Family is currently developing a mission statement, which stands at the moment as: “To love God as God loves us, with open doors, open minds and open hearts.”

“It’s fantastic,” Foegen said of the church’s renewal. “Think of your own health — the things you’ve done, the foundation you’ve built to take care of yourself, and where it’s going to take you later? It’s no different for the church.”

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Thank God for freedom

Today we celebrate Independence Day. Let us pause to give thanks for the freedoms we have as citizens of the United States and as members of our Church. Let us pray that these freedoms remain and are protected in law, in spirit, and in the life of our Church.

Independence Day is a day that is special to the heart of every Polish National Catholic. Our parents, grandparents, as well as members of our parishes to this day, have come to the United States not just for economic opportunity but also to live within the spirit of freedom.

When our ancestors’ former Church continued to oppress their freedoms, treating them as obedient servants only, with their pastors and bishops as a sort of exclusive royalty, they struck back by organizing a true Church that upholds the Holy Catholic faith and operates as a free society.

In our Church, as in our country, every person has a voice and a vote. In our Church, women have voted and participated in its democratic traditions even before women had a right to vote in our country. In our Church the clergy are not an aloof, royal class, but co-workers with the laity. We are a Church of liberty, freedom, and equality.

Let us give thanks this Independence Day for our free country and our free Church.

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Special Synod of the Polish National Catholic Church

On Friday June 22nd, a Special Synod of the Polish National Catholic Church took place at St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Cathedral and its Youth Center in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The Synod was held to elect two candidates for the office of Bishop within our Holy Church. Four nominees were put before the Church, Rev. Stanley Bilinski, Rev. Raymond Drada, Rev. Bernard Nowicki, and Rev. Jerzy Rafalko. There were 218 delegates from the Church’s five Dioceses as well as guests who witnessed this solemn and special occasion.

Each Nominee for the Office of Bishop spoke, giving his plans for the growth of parishes and expansion of the Polish National Catholic Church (PNCC). The PNCC has parishes throughout the United States, in Canada, as well as in Poland, Norway, Italy, Sweden, and soon in Germany.

The Church sought the intercession and working of the Holy Spirit during Holy Mass before the Special Synod and before the election. Your support and prayer were very important to this process, and to the blessings that were received.

Based on the information presented to the delegates and the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, the Synod body chose Rev. Stanley Bilinski and Rev. Bernard Nowicki as candidates for the office of the Bishop.

Bishop elect, Stanley Bilinski
Bishop elect, Bernard Nowicki

There are two dioceses, Buffalo-Pittsburgh and the Western Diocese, in need of Bishops. The date of the the Bishop elects’ Consecration and their assignment will be announced by the Prime Bishop’s Office.

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Prayer for the Holy Synod

And they put forward two, Joseph called Barsab’bas, who was surnamed Justus, and Matthi’as.
And they prayed and said, “Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men, show which one of these two thou hast chosen.
And they cast lots for them, and the lot fell on Matthi’as; and he was enrolled with the eleven apostles. (Acts 1:23-24,26)

Come Holy Spirit, enkindle the hearts of Thy faithful with the fire of Thy love!

Come, Father almighty! Open our minds to see your way, believe in your word, and know you.
Come, Lord Jesus Savior! Open our lips to speak your truth, proclaim the word, and praise you.
Come, O Holy Spirit! Open our hearts to feel your life, to act on the word, and love you.

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, prepare us for your blessing; guide our Synod, and bless Your Holy Polish National Catholic Church that we may do your will, for you are one God living and true, now and forever. Amen.

Our Father…
Hail Mary…
Glory be…

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Prayer for Thursday before the Holy Synod

All these with one accord devoted themselves to prayer, together with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers. (Acts 1:14)

Come Holy Spirit, enkindle the hearts of Thy faithful with the fire of Thy love!

Come, Father almighty! Open our minds to see your way, believe in your word, and know you.
Come, Lord Jesus Savior! Open our lips to speak your truth, proclaim the word, and praise you.
Come, O Holy Spirit! Open our hearts to feel your life, to act on the word, and love you.

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, prepare us for your blessing; guide our Synod, and bless Your Holy Polish National Catholic Church that we may do your will, for you are one God living and true, now and forever. Amen.

Our Father…
Hail Mary…
Glory be…

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Prayer for Wednesday before the Holy Synod

Hear my prayer, O God;
give ear to the words of my mouth. (Psalm 54:2)

Come Holy Spirit, enkindle the hearts of Thy faithful with the fire of Thy love!

Come, Father almighty! Open our minds to see your way, believe in your word, and know you.
Come, Lord Jesus Savior! Open our lips to speak your truth, proclaim the word, and praise you.
Come, O Holy Spirit! Open our hearts to feel your life, to act on the word, and love you.

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, prepare us for your blessing; guide our Synod, and bless Your Holy Polish National Catholic Church that we may do your will, for you are one God living and true, now and forever. Amen.

Our Father…
Hail Mary…
Glory be…

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Prayer for Tuesday before the Holy Synod

Again I say to you, if two of you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my Father in heaven. (Matthew 18:19)

Come Holy Spirit, enkindle the hearts of Thy faithful with the fire of Thy love!

Come, Father almighty! Open our minds to see your way, believe in your word, and know you.
Come, Lord Jesus Savior! Open our lips to speak your truth, proclaim the word, and praise you.
Come, O Holy Spirit! Open our hearts to feel your life, to act on the word, and love you.

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, prepare us for your blessing; guide our Synod, and bless Your Holy Polish National Catholic Church that we may do your will, for you are one God living and true, now and forever. Amen.

Our Father…
Hail Mary…
Glory be…

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Prayer for Monday before the Holy Synod

Come Holy Spirit, enkindle the hearts of Thy faithful with the fire of Thy love!

Come, Father almighty! Open our minds to see your way, believe in your word, and know you.
Come, Lord Jesus Savior! Open our lips to speak your truth, proclaim the word, and praise you.
Come, O Holy Spirit! Open our hearts to feel your life, to act on the word, and love you.

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, prepare us for your blessing; guide our Synod, and bless Your Holy Polish National Catholic Church that we may do your will, for you are one God living and true, now and forever. Amen.

Our Father…
Hail Mary…
Glory be…

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Pray to the Holy Spirit – Special Synod of the PNCC

Our Holy Church, in its democratic tradition, and honoring the practices of the Church as they existed from the time of the apostles, has called a special synod to elect two new candidates for the office of Bishop.

Our Church has two unfilled offices, the Bishop of the Buffalo-Pittsburgh Diocese and the Bishop of the Western Diocese.

Delegates from across the Church will gather in Scranton, Pennsylvania on Friday, June 22nd, to elect two priests as candidates. Our former pastor, Fr. Stanley Bilinski as well as Fr. Raymond Drada, and Fr. Jerzy Rafalko have been nominated as candidates and were accepted by the review commission.

Please, please, pray during the month and the days leading up to the Special Synod, that the gifts of the Holy Spirit be poured out generously on our Holy Church.

Come, O Holy Ghost, the Lord and Life-giver; take up Your dwelling within my soul, and make of it Your sacred temple. Make me live by grace as an adopted child of God. Pervade all the energies of my soul, and create in me a fountain of living water springing up into life everlasting.

Especially allow our Special Holy Synod to gather and deliberate all the while having wonder in Your Presence. Allow them to depend on Your interaction in the election of candidates to the Office of Bishop in Your Church.

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PNCC Student Brings History Alive

From the Wilkes-Barre Dallas Post: Bringing History Alive

Thirteen projects earned a first, second or third place award, which is a record number for Lake-Lehman. Twenty-two students from the district will move on to the state competition, to be held May 4 and 5 at Cumberland Valley High School in Mechanicsburg.
One student from Dallas High School, Peter Shaver, won first place for his individual research paper and will be attending the state competition.

First place, Individual Performance: Courtney McMonagle (Grade 10), for her project entitled “The Polish National Catholic Church: Their Reaction, Revolution, and Reformation.

One Norman Rockwell painting had enough influence to shape a History Day project for four Lake-Lehman students.

“The Problem We All Live With,” by Norman Rockwell, depicts 6-year-old Ruby Bridges, the first black student to attend an all-white elementary school in New Orleans in 1960, as she walks to school. Surrounding little Ruby are four U.S. Marshalls, whose heads were left out of the painting.

The students displayed the project, called “Building Bridges: Empowering Racial Harmony,” at the regional History Day competition at the Penn State Wilkes-Barre campus in Lehman Township on March 24.

“We just loved it,” said 15-year-old Emma Evans, of Lehman Township. “It was very inspiring.”

Evans and fellow 15-year-olds Mandy Scavone, Julia Pilch and Emily Crawford designed an exhibit to tell viewers – and judges – more about Ruby Bridges’ plight during the Civil Rights Movement.

“She was really brave,” Pilch, of Shavertown, said of the painting’s subject. “She was only six. When people told her to go away, she prayed instead of getting angry.”

The theme of this year’s History Day contest is “Revolution, React, Reform in History,” and the girls from Lake-Lehman thought Bridges’ story was nothing short of revolutionary.

The rules of History Day allow students to choose from a few different mediums to display their topic. Some choose exhibits, others pick performance, some can build websites, while others create documentaries to get their points across.

Several of the 55 Lake-Lehman students who participated in the contest chose documentary, while 16 participating Dallas students chose several different mediums to present their historical findings.

The Back Mountain area students were part of the competition that included 213 students from 17 school districts located in Northeastern Pennsylvania.

Seventeen-year-old Jeremy Peters and 16-year-old Mike Podskoch, both of Dallas, stood nervously outside a technology classroom where other students were showing their documentaries on Saturday.

They made a documentary called, “The New Deal: A Revolution in Government,” which featured 1930s photographs of men holding signs to find work, people lined up outside various buildings and other Depression-era images, with narration from both students.

“I’ve always had a fascination with 1930s and 1940s history,” said Peters. “The New Deal can’t be applied; you have to show it. We thought the photographs and music would invoke emotion.”

Despite having a background in the subject, Peters was not prepared for the competition and judging process.

“I’ve been to History Day before but did not compete,” he said. “It’s interesting. I’m a little bit nervous. I didn’t expect this many judges – maybe three or four, not, like, 12.”

Back in the exhibit part of the competition, veteran History Day competitor Peter Kuritz, 16, of Shavertown kept his partner, 14-year-old James Rinehart of Dallas, from getting nervous.

The pair designed an exhibit about Otto von Bismarck, first chancellor of the German Empire.

“He talked more about diplomacy than war,” Kuritz, who has participated in History Day three times, said of his project’s subject.. “I thought it was interesting how he unified Germany to become a central power, a strong power.”

Rinehart was most interested in the creation of Germany.

“Germany wasn’t just one country,” he said.

“But one man unified the whole country,” added Kuritz.

Congratulations to Courtney and all the students who designed project.