| One
Sunday in July 1961, the newly established parish of The
Most Blessed Sacrament and its first pastor, the
Reverend Francis F. Boland, were preparing for the first
Sunday Masses to be celebrated in the community. Seated
on folding chairs, 455 parishioners attended services in
the cafeteria of the Ramapo Regional High School.
Collection baskets yielded $465.66, slightly more than a
dollar per person.
THE
EARLY ENVIRONMENT
Catholics were divided about where to attend Mass. Some
traveled to Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Oakland,
others to St. Elizabeth's in Wyckoff. There were very
few churches in town then. The minister of the Methodist
Church on Pulis Avenue observed his devout Catholic
neighbors, the Pierce Cleary family, marching each
Sunday in a line along the Susquehanna Railroad tracks
toward St. Elizabeth's. "Like ducks in a row,"
he mused in admiration of another church's flock. By
1960 the Archdiocese of Newark, well aware of the
expanding population in the town, moved to establish the
parish of The Most Blessed Sacrament.
His
Excellency Thomas A. Boland, then Archbishop of Newark,
personally selected the parish name and assigned Father
Boland to organize the parish. In the first week of July
1961, Father Boland transferred from Our Lady of The
Valley Church in Orange.
THE
TANGIBLE CHURCH
The green shingled house at 591 Colonial Road, provided
by Urban Farms, Inc., served as the rectory. Although
Sunday Masses were being said in the Ramapo High School
cafeteria, there was no place for offering daily Mass.
Father Boland had a room in the rectory converted into a
chapel. Some parishioners recall going to confession
behind a makeshift confessional screen in the living
room of the rectory. Enthusiasm among parishioners was
growing rapidly. Bright autumn leaves were beginning to
fall when the rectory was moved from Colonial Road to
the Rizzo farmhouse at 711 Summit Avenue. Combining
imagination and necessity, the storage barn beside the
stone farmhouse would soon be transformed into a small
church. Much of the painting and decorating was done by
volunteers from the Holy Name Society and the newly
formed Rosary Altar Society. Other generous contractors
helped in the church project.
TOP
PRIORITY: A SCHOOL
During the first few months that the parish was in
existence, its school children went to St. Elizabeth's in
Wyckoff. Bus transportation was made available through
the efforts of Clarke Folsom, then secretary of the
Ramapo Regional High School. Children who attended local
public schools were taught catechism by two Sisters from
St. John the Baptist Parish in Hillsdale. The children
were transported by a carpool of parish mothers.
During
the winter of early 1962, Father Boland was directed by
the Archbishop to proceed as rapidly as possible with a
building program to meet the growing needs of the
Catholics in Franklin Lakes. The Archbishop decided that
an elementary parochial school would be the first
priority; then as funds permitted, to be followed by a
convent, church and rectory.
Father
Boland chose the site at the corner of Franklin Lake and
High Mountain Roads for the school and future church. On
the 1875 map of Franklin Township, a single house,
marked "Gormley," is shown on that spot.
By the
end of 1962, parking was a problem at the Summit Avenue
chapel. Some Masses were so crowded that people had to
stand outside the front door or listen through open
windows. Several parishioners remember sheep grazing in
the field next to the chapel and recall hearing them
through open windows during daily Mass.
Building
plans for Most Blessed Sacrament School were being
studied by contractors during the summer of 1963. The
Reverend Gordon Byrne, pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual
Help in Oakland, offered use of three classrooms in his
newly opened parochial school so that some children from
Most Blessed Sacrament could attend school there that
September. By late August, three sisters of St. Joseph
arrived to take up residence in the convent of Our Lady
of Perpetual Help. On September 3, 1963, parishioners
held a reception for the sisters at the Indian Trail
Club. Two days later, Most Blessed Sacrament School
opened, using the available classrooms in Oakland. The
historic double groundbreaking for both the school and
convent was held on Columbus Day, October 12, 1963.
On
September 19, 1964, Most Blessed Sacrament began its
school year with grades one to five still using
classrooms in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish. Sixth
and seventh grades were using temporary space on the
second floor of the Urban Farms Shopping Center over the
barber shop.
Christmas,
1964, was another eventful date for the church. Masses
were offered in the unfinished auditorium of the new
school. The parish had come a long way from its first
Christmas Eve Mass in the old storage barn on Summit
Avenue. A few days after Christmas, the Sisters of St.
Joseph moved from their temporary convent in Oakland to
the new red brick Colonial style convent next to the new
school. It was the final touch to what was an important
and historic year for the parish. The highlight of the
year was the formal dedication of the school and convent
on Memorial Day, Monday, May 31, 1965. Archbishop Boland
and Father Boland officiated at the ceremonies which
nearly 700 parishioners attended.
NEW
PASTOR
In June 1967, the parish welcomed the Reverend Joseph M.
Doyle as its new pastor to succeed Father Boland, who
became pastor of St. Joseph's Parish in Roselle. (He is
now deceased.)
In the
winter of 1968, just after the Christmas holidays,
Father Doyle, in keeping with the spirit of Vatican II,
appointed the first Parish Council. It replaced the Lay
Finance Committee as a means of sharing the responsibility
between the pastor and the laity.
On June
30, 1977, Father Carl Hinrichsen became pastor of Most
Blessed Sacrament after completing six months as
associate pastor. An alumnus of Princeton University, he
was ordained in 1955 and served as associate pastor at
St. Leo's in Irvington before undertaking graduate
studies in church history at Catholic University in
Washington, D.C. From 1961 until 1972, Father Carl taught
at the Darlington Seminary and assisted on weekends at
St. Catharine's in Glen Rock. He longed to return to
full-time parish work and was assigned as an associate
at Mount Carmel in Ridgewood for awhile.
In
March of 1979, the Parish Council announced it would
appoint a Feasibility Study Committee to begin a study
of the parish's future size, needs and ability to pay
for the cost of the construction of a church. By the end
of that summer, progress was made with other projects as
well. On October 21, 1979, Father Carl received word
that Archbishop Gerety had granted permission for MBS to
proceed with the development phase of a church.
Meanwhile, efforts got underway to establish a Building
Fund Campaign to seek pledges of at least $700,000
before attempting to proceed with a church that would
probably cost about a million dollars. An indication of
the strong desire for a church is the fact that about
$1,400,000 was raised, covering the building cost which
came to about the same amount. On Easter Sunday it was
announced at all Masses that the Building Fund Campaign
had reached its million-dollar goal.
In June 1980, groundbreaking for the new church took
place. By midsummer all the brick work was completed on
the new church. The off-white botticino marble altar,
pulpit and baptismal font arrived from Italy.
Installation of the pipe organ soon followed.
THE
BEAUTY OF THE BELLS
One of the most impressive additions to the new church
was the bell tower built to hold three large cast bronze
bells. They were purchased in the summer of 1980 when
the church of St. Alphonsus on West Broadway in lower
New York City was about to be demolished because it was
found to be structurally unsound. The bells were cast in
1875 at the foundry of Meneeley and Kimberly in Troy,
N.Y. and weighed 550 pounds, 800 pounds and 1,000
pounds.
LONG
AWAITED DAY OF DEDICATION
The sky was gray and there was a chilling wind from the
northwest just before noon on November 21, 1981 when the
first of nearly 700 people began to arrive for the noon
dedication of the new church. At exactly 12 o'clock the
big bronze bells pealed the entrance of Archbishop
Gerety, who was met at the church door by Parish Council
President David Canavan. The Archbishop was handed
several symbolic gifts, among which were the results of
the feasibility study, construction plans, a scale model
of the church, and the traditional key to the church.
Archbishop Gerety then presented the key to Father Carl
as pastor. The actual dedication ceremony involved the
anointing of the altar and the walls of the church, the
incensing of the entire interior, and the lighting of
the church. The two-hour ceremony included participation
by the two former pastors, Father Boland and Father
Doyle, as well as Father Granstrand and Father
Serratelli, and more than two dozen other priests. Other
church officials taking part in ceremonies were
Archbishop Oscar Lipscomb of Mobile, Alabama, and Bishop
Robert Garner, the Vicar of Bergen County.
On
Tuesday, June 23, 1983, Father Carl began his homily at
daily Mass in the church chapel by announcing that the
day before he received a telephone call from Bishop
Garner informing him that, at the request of Archbishop
Gerety, Pope John Paul II had named him a
"Monsignor." In June of 1994, Msgr. Carl
retired as pastor. Msgr. Owen Hendry who served many
years in the Air Force Chaplaincy assumed the duties of
pastor. During his tenure, a parish census was
undertaken, two "cottages" were added to the
school facilities and a business manager was hired.
Msgr. Hendry was succeeded by Father Joseph P. O'Brien,
O.Carm. who sensitively cared for the parish until
Archbishop Theodore McCarrick appointed Monsignor
Thomas J. McDade, Ed.D, up until then, the Secretary
for Education for the U.S. Catholic Conference of
Bishops in Washington, D.C. as pastor, effective May 17,
1999. In addition to Msgr. McDade, Father Peter
Palmisano served as parochial vicar.
In June
of 2004 Most Reverend John W. Flesey, who served as rector and spiritual director of
Immaculate Conception Seminary became the next pastor of
Most Blessed Sacrament Church. In
addition to Bishop Flesey, Father Michael Donovan was
appointed Parochial Vicar at MBS. In June 2007, Father
Renato Bautista joined the Parish staff as the second
Parochial Vicar. In the summer of 2009, Father Michael
Donovan was appointed the President of DePaul High
School and remains in residence at MBS as a weekend
assistant. Today,
Most Blessed Sacrament (MBS) is a vibrant parish of over
1,670 families with a wonderful future as it enters the
third millennium.
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