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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Church
marks centennial in 'wild' On June 19, 1903,
Pope Leo the XIII issued a papal decree that continues to affect life in
Oregon east of the Cascades.
Prior to that time, there
was only one Catholic diocese covering all of Oregon. Pope Leo's decree
recognized the need for change, and the Diocese of Baker was born.
The name came from Baker City,
which was the principal Eastern Oregon population center of that era.
In 1903, Sisters was a tiny
rural community at the confluence of Cascade Mountain trails, and Bend
was merely that -- a bend along the Deschutes River.
One hundred years later, the
Diocese of Baker now makes its home in the growing city of Bend, and the
Catholics of Eastern Oregon are celebrating the centennial of Pope Leo's
declaration.
Peggy Buselli, of St. Edward's
Catholic Church in Sisters, is one of the committee heads and organizers
of the diocesan celebration.
"We're having six regional
events to spread the celebration out," she said.
Buselli explained that the
first of the regional celebrations will take place next week, on Sunday,
February 23, at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds in Redmond.
All the parishes and missions
from the Central Oregon area will gather to celebrate the confirmation
of more than 230 new church members.
Similar centennial celebrations
will take place in Ontario on March 2, Baker City on April 6, Hermiston
on May 18, The Dalles on June 8 and Klamath Falls on June 15.
The centennial observance
will culminate in a diocese-wide celebration at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds
on October 10. More than 30 bishops from around the country are expected
to attend the final celebration.
Pope Leo's creation of a diocese
in Eastern Oregon was one of his last official acts, since he died a month
later.
Prior to his death however,
he managed a few more appointments, one of which was that of Charles J.
O'Reilly as the first Bishop of the Diocese of Baker.
O'Reilly was elevated to the
bishopric from his position as a parish priest in Portland.
According to early accounts,
one of his peers is reputed to have said that the new bishop was "to be
more pitied than applauded."
The reason, according to the
Catholic Sentinel of Portland, the oldest Catholic newspaper on the West
Coast (1870), was that the new diocese "was born in an effort to bring
the Gospel to a large, wild and remote region."
Indeed, when the newly ordained
bishop arrived in his equally new diocese, he had just 13 priests to minister
to a far-flung "see" of 66,800 square miles.
A century later, Bishop O'Reilly's
successor is Robert Vasa, the fifth Bishop of Baker.
Vasa set the tone for the
Diocesan Centennial.
"The diocese and parishes
we see today are built on the deep and abiding Faith, Hope and Charity
of those who struggled and built during the first hundred years of our
history," said Vasa, whose allusion to the 19th Century names for the
Three Sisters was probably not an accident.
Vasa noted the church's present
day challenge "to build a genuine City of God in the midst of an increasingly
secularized society.
"Here we resolve to build
on the legacy of the past," Vasa said, "but to create also a new legacy
for the new century of believers."
For further information on
any of the centennial events, contact Father Jim Logan or Peggy Buselli
at the Diocesan Office in Bend at 388-4004. |
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