Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Behring Point is up and running

In my last post I told you a little bit about our project to restore a building that had been a bakery on the property of St. Mary's in Behring Pt, the southern most part of our island.  Fr. Gabriel Roerig, OSB arrived on Andros in 1894 and spent 56 years serving the people of Andros.  After building the church and rectory he built a small building known as the bakery.  He would bake bread for all the people here with no food.  The running joke here is it was called 'window bread', because he sliced it so thin you could see through it.  What the locals say is, 'nobody sliced bread any thinner than Fr. Gabriel, BUT, everyone got a slice.

Anyway - we noticed the walls were solid, but the windows, doors and roof where rotted away.  Knowing our kids at that end of the island had to kneel on the church floor to use the benches as desks, we decided to restore it.  So here is a pic of the building after the rotted wood and roof were removed




and here is the new building - not too shabby!


We had our first lessons this week and the kids got right to work with Ms Ginni watching over them


One bit of excitement was the snake that lived in the foundation decided to make an appearance, but he soon left and we carried on quite well.


Even having a game of Simon Says between lessons.


While we feel blessed to have this building - we do not have running water here, or electricity.  While Fr. Gabriel lived 56 years here without electricity, in 2013 its a challenge in 90 degree heat.  We were blessed to find a 'storm fan' while in Nassau.  This little battery operated unit has a fan, led lights, and a radio for use during hurricanes.  I bought 2 for about $60 each and leave them plugged in at the church to charge the battery and when we have class we pick them up and run the fans on the battery - it works just fine (haven't told the kids about the built in radio yet).

The lack of running water created a problem because little kids need to use the poddy when CCD lasts all morning like our class does.  Someone suggested a composting toilet and we checked them out.  We found one for $860 that uses no electricity and no running water - a toilet used for RV's or boats or that remote camp in the mountains.  It has two tanks, one for liquid waste, one for solid.  The liquid we bring home and dump in the toilet,  the solid is set up with a paddle and you put in peat moss.  After doing your business your turn the paddle and the solid waste and peat moss mix, naturally creating compost over time.

Next to what had been the bakery is the church and the rear door to the sacristy.  Well the church is really beyond fixing but the sacristy is solid so we locked off the door into the church and used the sacristy door as the door into our new sacristy-rest room.  You can imagine the interest when I had to show our kids this new invention.  All the lessons went well until we said it was time to go - - then everyone had to pee.   Each took their turn and it worked like a champ.

Enough for now - next time we should be opening up the new church in Mastic Point - I'll have lots to tell and hope to have pics to post as well.
Till next time

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Hello Again -
Well another month has passed since my last entry and as summer is winding down the work load is ramping up.  Usually we let the kids start school and give them a month before we add CCD to their work load.  This year, Discovery Day, a national holiday  (US Columbus Day) is on Oct 14 so rather than start CCD and a week into it have two of our three classes cancel due to the holiday, we are starting the following week.  Saturday morning the 19th will be all our Primary School kids for an all-morning session in a building we restored in Behring Point, the southern-most point on our island.  It is also on the property of the very first Catholic Church built on the family islands (family islands = Bahamian islands not Nassau).  Fr. Gabriel Roerig, OSB was the first priest here and he built the church:

with a 2-story rectory:


and a bakery.


The bakery is 9x32 and it is that building we restored. (The church needs a $10,000 roof and the 2nd floor of the rectory has fallen into the 1st floor, but the bakery was a restoration we could afford).
Anyway - I should have pics of the restored bakery next time - AND - children in the midst of CCD within it.

Next, of course is the progress on the new church in North Andros - the Mastic Point chapel dedicated to Our Lady of Hope is coming along - the focus of the work now is on the inside but there have been a few additions on the external work, such as the small porch being added at the entry way.


 Inside, the sheet rock is up and taped and sanded - here one of the workman is beginning to prime the woodwork around the windows


 and here we are with the walls primed and ready for a little color.  Eventually the rear and side walls will be white and the front wall behind the altar will be baby blue (or sky blue, or light blue, or ...)



With money being tight we are doing everything on a shoe string.  I found an old discarded processional cross and spent some time sanding and polishing before adding a corpus from another old broken crucifix to get what will be a very nice processional cross.  I was also able to take a small wooded tabernacle from Christ the King in Cargill Creek that had been taken out of service years ago and sanded and stained and restored that.  In our garage were a few old discarded chairs and tables - to say they were in rough shape was an understatement - but with more sandpaper, elbow grease, and an old can of walnut stain the table will now be our credence table and the chairs will be the presider and deacon's chairs.  Now the seats of these chairs were in horrible shape and my lovely seamstress wife took it upon herself to reupholster them.  Here she is in the 90 degree heat "basting" the new fabric onto the seat, prior to our stapling it down securely. (I thought basting is what you did to a turkey but I guess there is a basting stitch that pulls the fabric tight before stapling it down - who knew?  Ginni knew!)


The Archbishop has confirmed he will be with us on Nov 17 to dedicate the new building so it is definitely crunch time!

One of the details of building a new church is furnishing it.  We have restored 8 ten-foot pews, again with sandpaper and a dark walnut stain.  St. Thomas More in Nassau has sent us an altar they have taken out of service that is fabulous.  Holy Family in Nassau has recently expanded into a new church building and has donated us their old Stations of the Cross.  I already mentioned the processional cross and chairs -but- we still need an Ambo(think podium), holy water font, thurible (think incensor), holy water sprinkler, etc.   The details in doing this are amazing.

This leads us onto our next adventure.  One of the AUTEC Catholics tells us his brother lives in the St. Petersburg diocese in FL and he is very well connected and could probably find all these things in church basements over there.  If it was OK, he'd be willing to pay for the shipping of anything he could get donated.   Sounded good to me - so off he goes.  I get the email asking for a list, which I provide, and he goes off on his treasure hunt for us.  The next I hear, an email has been sent to all the parishes in the St. Pete diocese soliciting donations for our mission church.  Now that is quite the deal - but - the next day I get an email from  a Deacon, the Vice-Chancellor of the diocese saying he has researched Our Lady of Hope and there is no such church in the Bahamas - what is going on?  SIGH   So I crank out an email explaining the church doesn't exist yet, who I am, what we're doing, etc. and cross my fingers.  Next day there is a wonderful email thanking us for our service and wishing us much success in furnishing the church - Whew - what a relief.

A few weeks ago as I drove thru the Haitian shanty town to pick up people for church I was directed down new paths my van had never seen (or attempted) before.  When we were back on the main road one of my friends said, "Deac, there are many more that want to come once we have a church - you're going to need a bigger bus!"

Did I tell you about Barry?  Barry has been meeting with us from time to time this summer, considering joining the church.  He is from North Andros and his job -- he drives a bus.  Does this sound like God's plan or what!

Till next time - Peace

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Growing the Church

Well hello again - I can't believe my last post was in July after our trip to the US in June and here it is SEP already.  Well let me tell you what has been going on.  During that trip we were able to do a mission appeal at Immaculate Conception in Weymouth - AND be with all my friends at St. Timothy's in Norwood for the 50th Anniversary - AND see my family once again.  The end result was a very fruitful mission appeal.  Enough to put a roof on our new church in North Andros.


Our Lady of Hope, in Mastic Point is going up as we speak - roof and all.  Since we took this pic last week the windows and doors are in and the siding is going on.  We didn't have enough money to tile the floor so we were going to paint it BUT since I distributed these pics to friends and family a few have asked how they can help and that help may just be enough to put down tile!  Praise God.

The interior has a long way to go.  As you can see here as they begin to frame the sacristy and put in the window for that space.  Suffice it say - coordinating this AND preparing for the upcoming year of CCD is a very full time job.

On the spiritual front - this year we took the summer months to begin a Charismatic Prayer Meeting at Christ the King, the southern-most parish on the island.  There are several Pentecostal churches there and we have begun to notice their influence on some of our members.  While this might deter some Catholic clergy, we have been 'Catholic Pentecostals' via the Charismatic Renewal for a few decades now and that spiritual expression is 'home' for us. "Did you know Deac be speakin' da tongues, mahn?"  We started with six people the first week, then ten, so we'll see what happens -- right now its back to school time so people are coming back from being away all summer, some are off-island doing back to school shopping, its a bit chaotic for the next week or two -- if attendance rises or falls is the Holy Spirit's business so we will wait until October and decide if we want to add this to our ministries once we start teaching CCD.

Our Primary School students will have a new home for their classes this year.  Another abandoned building has been put to work by our renovating what had been a 'bakery' on the grounds of St. Mary's in Behring Point.  Fr. Gabriel, the first priest on the family islands, build a church and a rectory, then this bakery to bake bread for those who had none.  People still tell me that nobody could slice bread thinner than Fr. Gabriel, but everyone got a slice.  This is a pic of Fr. Gabriel with some of the local kids circa 1940

Anyway - the interior dimensions of the building we restored are 9'x32' and for the first time our kids will have tables and chairs.  No more kneeling on the church floor and using the pews as desks.



Maybe next time I will have pics of this new building with tables and chairs.  Our budget for that effort was nil, since we were also building the church in Mastic Point so we have the building, tables and chairs, but no running water or electricity.  I was able to get a 'composting toilet' that you would put on a boat or a camper that does not need water.  It will convert the waste into compost that we can use on the property.  My  mother used to say 'necessity is the mother of invention' and it is certainly true in this case.  We will see how we last without electricity since that means no fans in the midst of the Bahamas heat.  Maybe there is a solar fan in our future if I can find one.

Pray for us, we certainly need it



Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Anniversary Pics (and Urine???)

Well as you can tell by the subject line of this post I have two completely unrelated topics to share with you.  First, in my last post I promised some more pics of the 50th Anniversary at St Timothy's.  Well here you go.  A friend of ours was in the choir and they sat to the right of the altar so he had a bee-line view of the celebrants and got some wonderful pics.  This first one is a purely coincidental pic of Cardinal O'Malley's profile and mine.


Then he was able to back up a bit and capture all three of us on the altar to include our Pastor


Finally, there is the offetory, and the gifts being presented to the Cardinal, which I then took to 'set the table' for the Eucharist.


It truely was a wonderful celebration.

Now on to the second topic that you may find surprising but actually its not uncommon here in the Bahamas.  We have several sick parishioners here that we bring communion to.  On occasion we hear about 'bush medicine', where locals have identified home-brew medication from local plants or traditions that may or may not be effective, but they swear by.  One of our visits really tested Ginni's Visiting Nurse skill set so here goes:

Our parishioner is on his porch, looking quite frail and so we sit and talk a bit before starting the communion service part of our visit.  During that initial conversation he tells us he has had a terrible sore throat and alot of mucus built up in his chest.  So he's be taking some tea to cut through it and it's been working.  His tea is a combination of sour cassaba, tea, and urine.  Now he says this, I get it, and I look to Ginni who hasn't really heard him clearly.  So we talk a bit more and a few minutes later he says it again, sour "cassaba, tea, and urine, yep Faddah, dat really cuts it."  Realizing Ginni still hasn't heard him, and what her reaction would be if she had, I try to avoid falling off my chair and start the communion service, trying not to crack up as we pray.  On the outside I am praying the penitential rite, reading the Gospel, a short reflection, the Lord's Prayer . . .  but on the inside I know that when Ginni finally understands his 'medication' it will be something to behold.  So we finish communion, our friend says, "well thank you Deac", and I reply, "no problem, my friend, glad you are feeling a little better, hope that tea keeps working" and again he says, "yes, that sour cassaba and urine, it be doing the trick", and this time Ginni gets it, she leans forward and says "Excuse me, are you saying 'urine'?" and he replies "Oh yes, Miss Ginni" and putting his hand towards his genitals he says "I takes a little of my urine, and puts it in a cup with the cassaba" Ginni, in one motion, sits ramrod straight in her chair, inhales deeply through her nostrils, and blinks twice. "Oh".  Well I just about lose it.  Her reaction in that instant was absolutely precious.  We had encountered bush doctors who make a variety of teas from crushed leaves of this plant or that plant for everything from curinging headaches to initiating pregnancy but this was the first urine drinking we'd encountered.

Once she recovered she did a good job of explaining this wasn't something he should continue.  The body was getting rid of things it didn't want in urine and he shouldn't be drining it.  He understood, and when we promised to bring him cough drops to help his throat he said he'd stop drinking urine and we left.

Once in the car I looked at her and just cracked up "Excuse me, are you saying urine?"  It was unique.  Suffice it to say, she was not amused - but I was, what a hoot.

Well, gotta run - till next time

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Vacation?

Hello once again -
Well since my last post the big news is our time back in the US for the last two weeks of June.  The real occasion for our trip was the 50th Anniversary of St. Timothy's in Norwood, MA but we also got to reconnect with old friends and family as well as work on our home in Canton, MA and our cabin in Hillsborough, NH, neither of which we can sell in the current economic climate.  (Wouldn't you love a log cabin on a lake, in ski country?  Let me know if you're interested).
Anyway - it was a very full schedule of meetings and work and celebration so let me get to it.  We arrived on Friday, just before the Saturday evening celebration at St. Timothy's.  We had Saturday day to catch up with people in the parish on the schedule of the event and questions about the liturgy and at the regularly scheduled 4:30 liturgy on Saturday the celebration began - but let me back up.

A room had been set aside for all the visiting clergy to vest in the lower church.  We had visiting priests from all over the Archdiocese who had, at one time served at St. Tim's, Cardinal O'Malley, his Secretary, and me, the only Deacon.  Our Pastoral Associate had posted the order of procession and the stations for communion we were all assigned to.  While we waited for the Cardinal there were stories of past experiences from these priests that were hilarious.  One was of Fr. Rocco who, as Pastor, had had a disagreement with some parishioners who put together a petition and letter of complaint to then Cardinal Mederios.  A few weeks later Fr. Rocco is summoned to the Cardinal's office.  So he goes off to the meeting, fully expecting a confrontation but upon his arrival he is informed he has been elevated to Auxiliary Bishop of Boston (with no mention of the letter).  All the priests got a kick out of that one.

Anyway - time is moving and no Cardinal, so we head out to the front door for the Entrance Procession and our Pastor is waiting patiently on the steps, no Cardinal.  We wait, and literally about 3-4 minutes before the start up pulls the Cardinal's car.  Our Pastor whisks him downstairs, he is vested in moments, his Secretary comes to me and says "Frank, the order of procession you were given is wrong, you're before the priests, not after them"  it was a small nit, but I thought it cool that the Cardinal's Secretary knew my name and just didn't say, "Deacon - - -".  One of my friends sitting in the choir has some great pics.  If and when he sends them along I will post a few for you but here are a few pics of the liturgy - you can see me pretty clearly in this first one showing the Cardinal preaching.




So the Mass and Anniversary celebration went off without a hitch, and afterward there was a huge tent on the lawn and a reception. 


Throughout the night people would come ask me about the ministry, we'd share stories and I'd talk about the need for money for the new church in Mastic Point and a wad of bills would be stuffed in my hand.  Some people had envelopes with a card and a check.  Others would promise to send money.  I was overwhelmed with the interest and generosity.

The next day, Sunday, I preached at the 8AM Mass to help out.  Didn't do a mission appeal (I felt I had hit up the people of St. Tim's on every trip home - they deserved a break).  But at the end of the weekend I had over $1,000 in unsolicited donations!

Our next task was going to work on the cabin in NH.  It's a log home on a lake in ski country but the economy for places like this is still pretty dead.  We had set aside 4 days for NH - two to do non-stop work and two to give ourselves time to relax.  The weather was forcast to be 2 days of rain, then 2 of sun so we saved the sunny days to get the work done and took the rainy days for ourselves.  We drove far up into the mountains to the Eagle Mountain House - a favorite Inn of ours. 

It was great.  What a change from the flat terrain of Andros to be in the mountains again.  We sat on the porch with a cold drink and read novels!  Not something we ever have time to do on Andros, that's for sure.

Then it was off to the cabin to try to spruce it up a bit.  With the help of John and Kay - wonderful friends of ours, and my nephew Troy, we re-stained the deck, did a ton ( no, two-tons) of yard work, and repaired a list of small things that tenants had broken.  Totally exhausted, we headed back to Mass.

The rest of the week we met friends for lunch, for dinner, for drinks - reconnected with so many wonderful old friends of ours.  After the vaca was over we realized we only had time to eat at home once!  The following weekend I preached at all 5 Masses at Immaculate Conception in Weymouth MA to solicit funds for the new church.  They were very generous donating enough, when added to monies from St. Tim's and friends, to ensure we can put a roof onto the building.

Then back to Andros (whew).  When we got back we found that the walls were going up at the new church but there was a hiccup with the contractor's generator breaking down - and rain.  Progress is progress but its slow -- as I write this we are all nervously tracking tropical storm Chantel on its way to the Bahamas.  It is good to see the walls starting to rise - we are hoping for a September occupancy - pray.


As I write this it is Independence Day in the Bahamas.  Our nation is 40 years old today!  Last night was the Ecumenical Prayer Service, and Independence Day celebration.  I was on the stage in my black clerics with about 8 other ministers.  It was a wonderful celebration with song, dancing, preaching, song, preaching, et.al.  The fireworks were super - despite the rain!  Sorry, no pics of this event, but again, many great friends to celebrate this occasion.
Well enough for now - till next time

Monday, June 3, 2013

OLOH CCD Mother's Day & a trip to the West Side

Well hello again
If you follow me on facebook you know we have had a month of rain that should be in the record books.
We have a cystern to hold rain water and at the beginning of May I washed it out to get ready for the rainy season.  It is circular and is four feet wide and four feet deep.  Today, June 3, its FULL!  Hope that gives you some idea of the rain we have had.
The rain does a number on our roads here, pot holes that live up to their name, literally as deep and wide as your biggest pot.  In the rain they fill up when the roads flood and can really destroy your car.  Our 45 minute drive to North Andros is now an hour and 20 minutes.  One of our parishioners who owns a hardware store went North to get some frieght and lost his oil pan and gas tank in one of those holes and had to be towed home.  Lucky for him he was still on a part of the road with cell phone coverage.  There are miles of that road without any way to call for help.
Anyway, let me catch you up on some news - first, the North Andros construction is well under way.  The foundation and septic are in and we are now into phase 2, walls and a roof - well, walls anyway.  We need more fundraising to get a roof.  Anyway - here is a pic of the sign, (notice the currently meeting sign at the bottom - it says, Currently Meeting Mastic Point Primary.  Still meeting in the Primary School and I am so anxious to take that down and have our own church


Here is a pic of the recently poured foundation



It will be finished by the end of the summer we hope.

On another note - CCD is finished for the year PRAISE GOD!  But I thought I would show you a few pics of that.  A few years ago we restored an abandoned church and turned it into a Parish Hall/School .  It has been fantastic.  At the southern end of our island (Behring Point) we are trying to do the same thing.  St. Mary's has been abandoned for years and it is the oldest Catholic Church on the family islands (Bahamian islands other than Nassau).  This property has a church, rectory, and a building called the Bakery where Fr. Gabriel Roerig OSB (the first Catholic priest on a family island), would bake bread for the locals.
"OH Faddah - dat Faddah Gabrel could make bread - nobody could slice bread thinner than Faddah - you could hold it up and see the sun tru it - but we all got a piece"
Anyway - we can't afford to restore the church or rectory but this bakery has promise.  Its taken much longer than we planned but we hope to be able to move in within the next few weeks.  Unfortunately, not in time for this school year - so the kids down south still had lessons in the church.  I use a TV table for a desk and the kids used the pews as desks.  Here are a few pics of that in progress.  First, here I am using my 'white board' to explain something to the kids

and here they are all working away on their papers - the teen you see in this pic is Emily.  She became a Catholic this year and as part of her Social Svc component she helped us with the CCD lessons. 


                                   

and another angle - not the most comfy position for CCD, but they never complained, not once


and then there is snack time, usually cookies and lemonade - Deacon has to keep his strength up



The other highlight of the last month or so was Mother's Day. We ordered carnations and Ginni baked, and baked, and baked - 5 cakes, dozens of cookies and cup cakes - dozens.  Here she is at Cargill Creek trying to make sure the mothers get some before the kiddie descend in droves


It really was a great day - wonderful community time for everyone to chat after services were over.  This isn't the best of pics but you get to see what the view is like from the front door of Christ the King.



Here are two Grans - great ladies showing off their carnations


Our Mother's Day up north was a little different.  Having church in a 4th grade classroom didn't cramp our style one bit.  Sorry I didn't get a pic of the teacher's desk converted into an altar but here you can get the idea of our Haitian friends gathering up the sheets we put together that has English on one side and Creole on the other.



Having church at 4:30 on Sunday can be a long day for some of our members up north.


Finally, I have mentioned before that Andros is only populated on the East side of the island -  the rest is swamp.  That means that the West side is still pristine, undeveloped land.  The Bahamas National Trust has been formed to protect the environmental beauty of the Bahamas and last week they offered to take the clergy of Andros to the West Side to show us its beauty and get our support to push added environmental protections.  Well its everything they said.  Going thru this bight to get to the West side we saw a half dozen turtles, herons, and fish in clear blue water.


Well, enough for now - till next time

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Mea Culpa

Hello my friends - and I do apologize for being away from the blog for so long.  There is much to tell to try to catch up on life on Andros so here goes

The last time I wrote we were entering Lent and here we are thru Lent and Easter and coming up on the Ascension.  As I mentioned before, the priest shortage is a major problem here and we had no priest through Lent.  I found it challenging to preach about the need to repent without being able to offer the Sacrament of Reconciliation.  For me, there were two highlights in Lent this year.  The first was Ash Wed.

Prior to Lent beginning we ask everyone to return their palms from last year and we gather them up for a Pallm Burning to create the ashes.  In prior years I would just do this by myself to collect the ashes for our annual ecumenical Ash Wed service with the Anglicans.  This year I did something different.

We are having our Primary School children meet for CCD on a monthly basis this year.  Rather than a weekly one hour class after school in each of the townships, we collect all the kids and have a monthly class that lasts for about 3 hours on a Saturday morning -- basically we do 3 lessons in that one session.

For the class right before Ash Wed we gathered up our palms and brought them to class.  We explained the penitential use of ashes historically, sackcloth and ashes, etc.  Then we took the kids and our basket of palms out into the yard.  I had a broiling pan with a few palms and, once I got that aflame, each child took a handful of palms and dumped them into the fire - it was a rather well organized system of kids going from the fire to the basket and soon the flames were roaring.  Once it all died down we went back inside to let them cool while I did another lesson.  At the end of the session I poured the ashes (still rather warm) into a coffee can and we headed home.  THEY had made ashes for Ash Wed.

It occured to me that having to do an Ash Wed service at three parishes we started at 9AM, then 12, then 3PM, followed by the ecumenical service at 7PM at the Anglican church.  Kids who lived south would be in school and not able to attend the 9AM service.  So I called the principal, told him about having made ashes with the kids and would he mind if I stopped at the school around 10:30 to give the kids that helped make the ashes, ashes.  He said no problem, so we had a plan (but his and mine were a bit different)

So we do the 9AM, then head over to Behring Point Primary School for my six kids at that school who had helped make the ashes.  It was then that I learned the Principal had called a special assembly and all 81 kids were expecting to get ashes!  Ginni and I did a quick mental adjustment of what I was going to do and I pulled off a 10 minute spontaneous explanation of why we use ashes like this - used Job sitting in sackcloth and ashes as an example - then we all said the Lord's Prayer and Ginni led them in song as they each processed up to get ashes -- little pre-K kids, wide-eyed and innocent; and the older ones, and even the teachers and the principal!  As we left I shook my head and wondered what the mother of the 7th Day Adventist child was going to say when her child came home with ashes.  I also was a bit overwhelmed with the privelidge I have in being able to minister to these kids like this - it was an awesome experience.

The second highlight of Lent for me was also in CCD.  As a Deacon I cannot hear confession or forgive sin.  Yet without a priest I was struggling with the lack of a penitential service of some kind.  What I came up with is what I call a 'Signing Service'.  After a lesson about the sacrament of reconciliation and our need to forgive each other, and be sorry for our sins I brought out my broiling pan once again, but this time full of sand.  Next to it was a pile of vigil candles and a sheet of paper with the words I AM SORRY down the left column.  As we sang an appropriate song, each child came up, lit a candle and stuck it into the sand, then signed their name next to I AM SORRY.  After all the kids had come up the church was aglow with the candle light and I did a little 'from darkness to light' explanation of being reconciled to God because we are sorry for our sins.  It wasn't confession, but it did the job I think and I was kind of tickled that I pulled off a penitential service like this one.

As Lent came to an end I kept wondering about having a priest for Easter.  We hadn't had one for Christmas and I had an RCIA candidate that expected to recieve the sacraments.  Well I got the phone call, and there was nobody to send - no priest for Easter.  A bit miffed I asked if I could look for a priest and was told to go for it.  After a half dozen emails to Boston contacts one idea of my pastor in Norwood paid off.  He suggested I contact the Director of the Priest Personnel Board.  On occasion a priest may be between assignments, or be home from a St. James Society mission assignment, and I might just luck out.  Well it turns out that the Director himself was able to come.   I was thrilled he could join us and, he did a wonderful job.  He was with us for all of Holy Week, washing feet on Holy Thursday, venerating the cross on Good Friday, the Easter Vigil and Easter Sunday.  All the while he was online with the Cardinal back in Boston working on an upcoming Boston Priest Pilgrimage to the Holy Land.  He was a busy man but it was great to have him with us. 

During his stay we were able to coordinate a conference call with Archbishop Pinder to talk about the feasibility of Boston loaning a priest to Nassau for a few years.  As Director of the Priest Personnel Board, he promised to carry a letter to the Cardinal with Archbishop Pinder's request.  Keep that one in your prayers, we sure could use the help.

The Easter season has been a joy - the 2nd week of Easter is our annual clergy retreat and it was great to spend the week with clergy from all the islands.  Ginni headed home to the US to get in some nursing and earn some much-needed money for us while I was on retreat.  On that point I should share that the VNA that Ginni does her hospice work for has changed their policy on nurses that work the way Ginni does, requiring more frequent work days.  This means that after 25 years, Gin has had to resign.  She will miss the nursing but not the admin part of the job.

On another front - while we minister here, we are also building our new chapel in North Andros.  I have written about this before but we are well on our way.  Thanks to Deacon Paul Rooney at St. Anthony in Cohasset and Deacon Fran Corbett at Immaculate Conception in Weymouth and all my friends at St. Timothy in Norwood, the mission appeals we have done have given us what we need to get this effort off the ground.  Bulldozers have cleared the land and we have just completed laying the foundation.  Phase two will be the construction of the walls and roof and that should start in a few weeks while we await materials.  Then the interior work will begin.  If all goes well we should be done late summer.  But lets not count our chickens just yet -- Murphy's Law is very real when it comes to construction.  Lets just praise God we've completed the foundation!

Much more to share but its time to head out for CCD.  Pray its not quite so long before my next post
Till then - Peace