A pastoral plan approved by Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley calls for
the Boston Archdiocese to organize its 288 parishes into approximately
135 groups called "parish collaboratives."
Led by one pastor, a pastoral team -- a group of priests, deacons and
lay ecclesial ministers -- would provide pastoral services to parishes
in the collaborative.
Under the plan, each parish in the collaborative
group will maintain its separate identity and retain control of its own
property and assets.
O'Malley said the new pastoral plan comes in response to current
challenges faced by the Catholic church in Boston, and could change if
those realities improve. He approved the plan Thursday.
"The plan to implement a new model of leadership at the
collaboratives does not mean that we are leaving behind the model of a
priest being assigned as the pastor of one parish," he said. "It is my
fervent hope, encouraged by a significant increase in seminary
enrollment during recent years, that a greater number of ordinations to
the priesthood will allow us to again assign priests as pastors of
individual parishes."
Called "Disciples in Mission," the plan identified parishes' main
challenges: declining Mass attendance, shrinking numbers of priests and
trained laity, and an increasing number of parishes unable to sustain
themselves financially.
Published in September, the plan contains the final recommendations
of the Archdiocesan Pastoral Planning Commission based on research and
information gathered through 40 consultations held from December 2011
through March 2012 throughout the archdiocese with priests, church staff
and volunteers.
"Though the challenge of renewing the church will call for
significant effort and a new way of staffing our parishes, we are
committed to re-engaging the culture, the current generation of
Catholics and providing a strong foundation for those who will follow
us. Our Catholic faith is our most precious gift," the cardinal said.
His prepared remarks were made available to The Pilot, Boston's archdiocesan newspaper, before he announced his acceptance of the plan at a press conference.
"Parishes are the heart of the new evangelization; they must be well
staffed and financially sound so as to be effective in this mission,"
the cardinal said.
The new collaboratives will be made up "usually of two or three
parishes, but sometimes only one, and, in rare occasions four parishes."
Although the composition of teams would be different from
collaborative to collaborative, reflecting the needs of each parish,
team members would follow the pastor in serving all parishes in the
collaborative.
Each collaborative, the plan says, is a means for fostering common
pastoral action and a common vision, not a structure "above" the parish,
or coming between the parish and the diocesan bishop. The
collaboratives will take shape in four phases over the course of five
years.
The archdiocese has not determined all collaborative groupings yet,
according to Fr. Paul Soper, interim director of the Office of Pastoral
Planning.
Soper told The Pilot that parishes would soon receive a
letter letting them know if their collaborative grouping has been
determined. Parishes will be asked to respond to those letters, and
those that want it will have a chance to be in the first phase of
collaboratives.
That first phase will be comprised of about a dozen collaboratives.
Their experiences will be studied to hone the process as the phase-in
continues.
The proposal also calls for parish pastoral and finance councils to
be consolidated to allow each to serve the collaborative as a whole,
with subcommittees capable of acting on behalf of each parish.
The pastoral plan also outlines training objectives to prepare
pastoral teams and archdiocesan staff in theology, practices, management
and leadership skills integral to the Catholic church's efforts for the
new evangelization.
The commission proposed that the Office of the Episcopal Vicar for
the New Evangelization, the Catholic Leadership Institute and the
Pastoral Planning Office form a partnership to promote training
objectives in each collaborative.
Training will take place in six stages geared to each level of
participation in the archdiocese, from Pastoral Center staff to the
pastors and the teams supporting them in the parishes. The Theological
Institute for the New Evangelization will grant certificates to
participants upon completion of training.
Soper said a new website, DisciplesInMission.com, will provide blogs, information and daily updates to keep laity informed on developments as the process continues.
In January 2006, O'Malley established committees to explore faith formation, marriage and pastoral planning.
The 15-member Pastoral Planning Committee -- made up of priests,
religious and lay leaders -- was charged with suggesting ways for the
archdiocese to use its resources to continue Christ's mission.
After 18 meetings over the course of 15 months, the committee in 2007
recommended a commission be formed to develop and implement a specific
pastoral plan for Boston. The archdiocese created the Office of Pastoral
Planning in 2008.
In 2010, the archdiocese began a series of consultations with priests
and laity that identified essential elements of a comprehensive
pastoral plan.
In 2011, the cardinal formed the 18-member Archdiocesan Pastoral
Planning Commission -- made up of priests, deacons, religious sisters
and laypeople from around the archdiocese -- to come up with final
recommendations.