headline
Full Text:
St Rose Pastor To Be Installed By Bishop At July 31 Mass
(with photo)
BY JAN HOWARD
The newest clergyman in town may still be living out of boxes and his office
in the rectory may not be as organized as he wants it, but he is already
initiating some changes and will be developing, with lay leadership and staff,
a mission statement to address current and long-range parish needs.
The Rev Robert E. Weiss began his duties at St Rose of Lima Church in Newtown
on July 1. He will be officially installed as pastor by the Most Reverend
Edward M. Egan, Bishop of the Diocese of Bridgeport, on Saturday, during the
5:30 pm mass.
Despite his short time here, Father Weiss, 52, already has met with members of
the Parish Council to discuss parish needs.
"We're trying to be more people-focused here and (ask) what their needs are,"
Father Weiss said.
"My priorities will be parish priorities," he said. "My job is to facilitate
and serve this community."
Father Weiss's first priority is to make changes in worship and music.
"We are looking into enhancing liturgies and creating more lay involvement,"
he said. "We are also enhancing the music program to bring more diversity."
Father Weiss said his second priority is to bring the religious education
program into diocesan conformity. "We need to encourage teacher volunteers to
feel more secure in teaching. They need to be involved in formation of the
program," he said.
There are about 1,200 public school students in grades kindergarten through
eighth grade enrolled in the religious education program.
Outreach is his third priority. "There is a big call for people to get
involved in outreach, especially by the youth," he said. Some teenage members
of St Rose participated in a week-long workcamp with youth of other town
churches this summer.
"We need to get out of ourselves and into the greater community," Father Weiss
said.
"We also need to address what's happening in our parish already and work
cooperatively," he said. "There is no center of coordination. I would like the
staff and organizations and committees to work more collaboratively."
Father Weiss said St Rose parish also needs to consider several options for
physical expansion.
New Hall Is Needed
The first option, and the one he feels is most needed, is construction of a
large parish hall that would house a gymnasium, classrooms, and meeting rooms.
"We need to build a parish center for people to gather," he said. The parish
hall would also offer an alternative space to hold additional services, such
as a liturgy for children, he added.
The parish hall would be multi-purpose, he said. "I'm looking for a lot of
flexibility.
"Right now that's the most viable option and the most immediate need," Father
Weiss said. "The current building is not a great gathering spot. I feel the
parish hall will be a quick priority."
However, it cannot be done too quickly, he added. "We have to work with the
people to develop a committee, work with the diocese, and then get an
architect before we proceed."
Father Weiss said he plans to meet with the lay leadership and staff in the
fall to develop a mission statement. "We need to look at our financial
situation," he noted. "This parish has been discussing a parish hall for some
time."
Another option the parish needs to discuss is whether to build a satellite
church. "We would need to get another priest here," he noted.
"I don't want to make the parish divided. The Church Hill Road church would be
the main place of worship," he said.
However, building a satellite church could present a problem. A second
Catholic church has not been built in Newtown, despite the size of St Rose
parish, because of the lack of priests.
"We're ordaining strong groups of young men, but it's still not enough,"
Father Weiss said.
Things will not get better in the future because the parish will continue to
grow, he said, because "this part of Connecticut is booming."
St Rose currently serves between 2,800 and 3,000 families, he said. It has six
masses, four on Sunday and two on Saturday.
"Long range, we'd like to have another parish here, but the Bishop is being
cautious," Father Weiss said.
The third option is to expand the existing church. "That never works that
well," He said. "It makes the church so big that you can't see the people in
the back row."
Development of technology and upgrading of computer programs are top
priorities for St Rose School, he said.
Father Weiss said there are space limitations in the school. "There is a
demand for education. We could build on but that has to be carefully
evaluated."
The school will enroll 252 students in September, he said. Its capacity is
270.
Some other much-needed work is taking place now. Overgrown plantings around
the church are in the process of being removed and replaced with new ones, and
next week the parking lot will be paved. The parking lot has been dug up three
different times because of sewer line installation and drainage.
A Life Of Outreach
Father Weiss said he has been impressed by the Newtown community and the
people he has met during his short residency.
"Newtown is a beautiful community. The people I've encountered are fine
people," he said. "The parish is filled with vibrant people who want
activities. There are lots of volunteers. Whatever I've asked of the people,
they have been willing to help."
Father Weiss has been involved in many community endeavors in his past
assignments. He started a drug rehabilitation program and served on a hospital
board. He is also involved with the state Department of Mental Retardation
(DMR).
"I always worked hard to make people with disabilities welcome," he said. It
was because of this that he feels he was invited by the DMR to serve as a
patient advocate.
He said he hopes to get involved in Newtown and to continue some of his prior
commitments, such as serving on the Diocesan College of Consultors.
Father Weiss was born in Baltimore, Md., in 1946. His parents live in Florida,
and he has three brothers, two in Florida and one in Georgia. His sister is
deceased.
Father Weiss said he did not always want to be a priest. In fact, in his
senior year in high school he had been accepted at a teacher's college.
But his family had always been close to the church, and at the end of his
senior year he felt he had a calling. After talking to a priest at his school,
"off I went to seminary."
After attending St Bernard Seminary in Rochester, N.Y., he was ordained in
1973 in St Christopher parish in North Chili, N.Y.
He obtained his doctor of ministry degree from the Jesuit School of Theology
at Berkeley, Calif. in 1979.
Father Weiss was formerly pastor of St Joseph Parish in Shelton for nine
years. He also served at Corpus Christi Parish in Rochester, N.Y., St Mary Our
Mother Parish in Horseheads, N.Y., and was parochial vicar of St Andrew Parish
in Bridgeport in 1976. While serving as spiritual director at Stamford
Catholic, now Trinity Catholic, High School, he served as a resident priest at
St Leo in Stamford, becoming parochial vicar there in 1981.
Father Weiss was incardinated into the Diocese of Bridgeport in 1982 and
served as parochial vicar of St Jude parish in Monroe from 1985-1990.
"What I find most satisfying as a member of the clergy is that you're a
constant presence and bearer of hope to people, a conduit of God's love. You
can celebrate and suffer with people," he said. "Nobody is invited into
people's lives like members of the clergy."
Father Weiss said he was very happy and settled in St Joseph Parish. However,
the bishop matches a priest's abilities to parish needs, and the bishop
decided to send him to St Rose. "He felt I would be able to do what had to get
done here, to build on what was already here, and meet the needs of the
parish."
Father Weiss talked modestly of the massive letter writing campaign from St
Joseph parishioners asking the bishop to reconsider his appointment to
Newtown.
Approximately 1,500 people wrote to the bishop.
In his nine years at St Joseph, he said he and the parishioners rebuilt the
physical plant and the spirit of the church as well as made it fiscally
solvent. He said the letter-writing campaign "was a tribute to good work and
ministry."
Father Weiss stood for eight and a half hours shaking hands at his going-away
reception.
"It was a very emotional, difficult time," Father Weiss said, adding the
outpouring of letters "made this much more difficult for me.
"Our vocation is that we go where we're asked to serve, where we're needed."
He said Saturday's installation ceremony "will be a joyous celebration."