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Breakaway St. Louis church to elect new board members
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.- Parishioners at the breakaway parish of St. Stanislaus Kostka in St. Louis will elect six new board members this weekend after a circuit court judge brokered a compromise between the church and the Archdiocese of St. Louis. Under the agreement, the church will cancel a second vote to amend its bylaws while the archdiocese has dropped a court motion to stop the vote, which could have further distanced the church from the archdiocese, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports. On Wednesday Mary Ann Wymore, an attorney for the archdiocese, told St. Louis Circuit Judge Bryan L. Hettenbach that if the bylaw vote were to proceed, the church could “potentially affiliate somewhere else” with a non-Catholic church which would then acquire the parish’s assets. Richard Scherrer, arguing on behalf of the church, claimed an injunction on the vote would violate both the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution’s free exercise clause and the Missouri Constitution. The new bylaws would have made it more difficult to fire the church’s pastor, Father Marek Bozek. The priest had left his previous position without the permission of his bishop to become the church’s pastor in December 2005. Archbishop Raymond Burke declared Father Bozek and the parish board members to be excommunicated and the parish to be schismatic, though some board members have since reconciled with the Catholic Church. Out of compliance with canon law, the church is owned and governed by a secular corporation. The church and the Archdiocese of St. Louis became divided over the archdiocese’s attempts to bring the church into compliance. Last month the archdiocese and former parishioners of St. Stanislaus Kostka, who included half of the church’s board of directors, filed a lawsuit seeking to have the church’s pre-2001 bylaws restored. The church’s board rewrote the bylaws in 2001 and again in 2004, eventually eliminating the archbishop’s authority. In the original bylaws, the lay board controlled the church’s property and assets while the archbishop appointed its board members and its pastor. St. Stanislaus Kostka parishioners had intended to vote on new board members and on new bylaws in the upcoming vote, but under the compromise agreed to on Wednesday only the board member election will take place. According to the St. Louis Post Dispatch, Father Bozek claims most of the twelve parishioners standing for election to the parish board are his supporters. St. Stanislaus Kostka’s attorneys in a statement said the parish hoped “to elect a board to manage our affairs as an independent Polish Roman Catholic parish until an agreement can be reached with the archdiocese.” Subscriber comments:
Published by: Mark F
Falls Church, VA 08/11/2008 01:21 PM EST
That's a very good question. There's something here that's being hidden.
Exactly what do the people there who want in independent parish want to do with their lack of pastoral supervision from the diocese and Church as a whole? Do they want "womenpriests?" Gay "marriage?" Something else? I'm not being rhetorical here. There must be something that they want to have that they cannot have if their parish is structured like all other Catholic parishes. Does anybody know what exactly it is that they're fighting over? It cannot just be that they want lack of supervision for its own sake. That's the method to achieve something else.
Published by: hrh
miami/fl/usa 08/09/2008 08:24 AM EST
It's always all about the money, isn't it?
Published by: Anonymous
USA 08/08/2008 11:26 AM EST
Why did they break away from the Archdiocese of St. Louis?
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