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New shrine for the nation |
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By Maria Wiering
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Tuesday, 16 June 2009 |
As the Year of St. Paul draws to a close on June 29, the Cathedral of St. Paul is announcing its new designation as National Shrine of the Apostle Paul.
The Cathedral is among about 100 U.S. Catholic churches that have been
honored with the designation — and it’s the only one dedicated to St.
Paul the Apostle, said Msgr. Anthony Sherman, executive director of the
U.S. bishops’ Secretariat for Divine Worship. The designation comes
from the Holy See and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops at the request of Archbishop John Nienstedt.
The title ‘shrine’ recognizes the Cathedral’s national importance and
designates it as a pilgrimage destination for groups from across the
United States, said Father Joseph Johnson, the Cathedral’s rector.
Already, visitors from beyond the archdiocese — Catholic and
non-Catholic alike — tour the Cathedral when they visit St. Paul.
Parish groups from around the Midwest have organized pilgrimages to the
building, Father Johnson added.
The shrine designation may result in more pilgrims, he said. Today, the
USCCB wants a national shrine to be a place that can accommodate
national pilgrimages — in this case pilgrimages intended to increase
devotion to the Apostle Paul, Father Johnson said.
Becoming a shrine
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Visit the Cathedral's website HERE.
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It’s significant that this shrine was named in the Year of St. Paul,
Msgr. Sherman said. “This was a church that, even by its design and
architecture, revealed the life of St. Paul and the challenges of his
ministry and his preaching and proclamation,” he said. The Year of St.
Paul began on June 29, 2008.
“We’re hoping that . . . this shrine in particular might be an impetus
for evangelization, that people will get the spirit of St. Paul and
begin to want to try and reach out and proclaim the message of Christ,”
he added.
The USCCB granted the designation on March 25, but it is now just being announced by the archdiocese.
The shrine designation will add another layer to the many roles the
Cathedral already plays in the community, Father Johnson said. It is a
parish serving about 3,000 households; it is the mother church for the
archdiocese; and it is a civic monument because of its impressive
architecture and history.
Because the Cathedral often hosts group pilgrimages, it has already
played a role on the national scene, Father Johnson said. However, the
designation will increase its “national spiritual significance,” he
added.
To be considered for a shrine designation, a parish must complete a
questionnaire and provide extensive information about itself, which is
confirmed through a visit of a bishop on the Committee for Divine
Worship. For the Cathedral, about 16 months passed from the beginning
of the application process until the designation, Father Johnson said.
National shrines are designated in the United States because of a
specific devotion to a saint or the Blessed Virgin Mary, Msgr. Sherman
said. This devotion draws more people to the church, he added.
In the application process, the challenge lies in ascertaining whether
or not a shrine designation might be able to make a unique
contribution on the national level, Msgr. Sherman said.
Increased devotion
The Cathedral began the application process when the Year of St. Paul
was announced, Father Johnson said. He felt the Cathedral had a
particular responsibility to heed the jubilee year’s call to greater
devotion to the Apostle Paul.
He also thinks the national shrine designation honors the vision of the
Cathedral’s founder, Father Lucien Galtier, the first priest to
establish a parish in the area in 1840. Because of his devotion to the
saint, he named the log chapel he built after St. Paul, which led to
the name of the city.
“Father Galtier looked to the person of Paul when he arrived in this
wilderness, and it’s interesting that now the universal church has said
we’re all going to do that,” Father Johnson said.
Because of the shrine designation, the Cathedral will continue some of
the programming it began during the jubilee year, including its First
Saturday series, which featured speakers, prayer and reflection. It
already offers several weekly tours.
The new shrine has also established the Archconfraternity of the Apostle Paul
to help people feel connected to the shrine, Father Johnson said.
Members serve as the spiritual apostolate of the National Shrine of the
Apostle Paul in five particular ways:
- Greater devotion to St. Paul and his intercession.
- Study of and reflection on the Pauline epistles in the New Testament.
- Practice of corporal and spiritual works of mercy.
- Commitment to evangelization, especially in everyday encounters
- Connection with the spiritual life at the National Shrine of the Apostle Paul.
Members are asked to contribute $15 in annual dues.
The designation as a national shrine does not affect its designation as
the Cathedral for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Father
Johnson said, since it hosts the chair, or “cathedra,” of the
archbishop. ‘Cathedral’ and ‘shrine’ are unrelated designations, he
added.
The design for the shrine’s insignia was taken from a carved medallion
in the bronze grails behind the sanctuary which features a sword and a
wreath, both symbols of Paul’s martyrdom.
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