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THE GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1967 3
Msgr. Frey
Consecration
Set August 8
Msgr. Gerard L. Frey, bish
op-elect oi Savannah, will be
consecrated Tuesday, Aug. 8, at
10:30 a.m. at St. Francis Ca-
brini Church in New Orleans.
Bishop-elect Frey was ser
ving as pastor of St. Francis
de gales parish and as direc
tor of the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine when he was
named bishop of Savannah by
Pope Paul VI on'May 31.
A native of New Orleans, he is
the son of Mrs. Andrew Frey
and the late Mr. Frey. He
studied at St. Joseph and Notre
EOme seminaries and was or
dained April 2, 1938 by the late
Archbishop Joseph F. Rummel.
MEMBERS OF St. Thomas More Parish are collecting S&H Green Stamps to purchase overhead
projectors for use in the St. Thomas More classrooms. A spokesman for the church said 700
stamps are needed. Shown examining a projector are, from left, Julian Rou, Walter N. Ormstron
of the 3m Visual Products, Sister Miriam Raymond, St. Thomas More School and Mrs. Bea Minor.
Bishop Is Asked
To Back Appeals
Board In Ohio
He served as assistant at
Holy Rosary parish, Taft, La.,
and at St. James Major and St.
Leo the Great, both in New
Orleans. In 1946, he became
archdiocesan CCD director.
In June 1952, Msgr. Frey
was named founding pastor of
St. Francis Cabrini parish,
where he was stationed 11
years. Both the church and the
school built during his pastorate
won national awards to the de
signing architects.
He inaugurated an active CCD
program for all age levels in
his parish, and devised t the
Borromeo clubs to help encour
age vocations. He served as a
priest-observer at the third
session of the Second Vatican
Council, one of four from the
United States.
Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan
will preside at the installation
ceremonies Aug. 10 at 4 p.m.
at the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist, Savannah.
JOSYF CARDINAL SLIP-
YI, exiled archbishop of
Lvov in the Ukraine, who
headed signers of a letter
sent. to the world's bishops
in January on destruction of
the Catholic Church in the
Ukraine. (NC Photos)
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (NC)-
The Steubenville diocesan Com
mission on the Pastoral Office
of Bishops has asked Bishop
John K. Mussio to lend his
support to the establishment of
an appeals board for clerical
grievances, now under study by
the U. S. Bishops’ Conference.
It also asked the bishop to
make every attempt to contact
priests who have defected from
the diocese and who might pro
fit by being returned either to
the active priesthood or to the
lay state.
The commission recom
mended that Bishop Mussio use
every means at his disposal-
including psychiatrists, physi
cians and spiritual advisers—
to help priests with personal
problems, "either forestalling
impending danger or rehabili
tating those who have fallen.”
The commission on the Pas
toral Office of Bishops is one
of a number of commissions es
tablished by Bishop Mussio to
suggest ideas on ways to im
plement the documents of Vati
can Council II. The bishop is
not bound to accept its sugges
tions.
The commission’s report, as
drawn up in final form by the
coordinating committee, also
included the following recom
mendations:
change in assignment, the bi
shop should discuss the matter
with him personally, if possible.
A priest should always be pre
sented with an opportunity to
approach the bishop regarding
such matters.
—The bishop should investi
gate all accusations made
against priests, and hear all
sides of a story before render
ing judgment.
—Priests should be allowed
to make their own decisions
on the use of alcoholic bever
ages on any given occasion,
* ‘always mindful of the need for
giying good example.”
—A simplified annual finan
cial report of the diocese should
be sent to all clergy, with the
understanding that a detailed
report is available at the chan
cery.
—All diocesan committees
or boards should either fulfill
their functions or be discon
tinued.
—Adequate provision should
be made for the care and sup
port of clergy too old or sick
for active work, and a com
prehensive insurance plan in
cluding health, accident, and re
tirement benefits should be stu
died.
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—Improved communications
should be sought between the bi
shop and priests of the diocese.
The bishop should also estab
lish a better liaison with the
motherhouses of Sisters who
serve in the diocese.
—When a priest is given a
t Holy Cross
Brothers
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—The bishop should take
counsel with priests and laity
before establishing new parish
es and missions. He should also
consider realignment of pre
sent diocesan boundaries.
—The bishop should promote
foreign mission work through a
continuing program that would
arouse the interest of the cler
gy, Religious and laity of the
diocese. He should also en
courage diocesan priests to join
such organizations as the Mis
sionary Society of St. James the
Apostle, and local parishes
should be urged to adopt mis
sionary parishes and give them
spiritual and financial assis
tance.
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| Pope Paul And Patriarch Join
Voices Praying In 2 Cathedrals
ISTANBUL (RNS)—Pope Paul
VI and Ecumenical Patriarch
Athenagoras joined their voices
in prayer for Christian unity
In two cathedrals here.
The prayers for unity, of
fered in the Roman Catholic
Cathedral of the Holy Spirit
and in the Greek Orthodox Ca
thedral of St. George, climax
ed a two-day papal visit that
included conferences with many
political and religious leaders,
a boat ride on the Bosporus,
a trip to the Topkapi museum
and a - brief, silent prayer in
the museum of Hagia Sophia,
which was formerly a mosque
and, before that, • one of the
greatest churches of the an
cient Christian world.
On the second day of his
trip, the Pope presided at a
Mass for a largely Italian con
gregation in the small Church
of St. Anthony in Istanbul, be
fore flying to Ephesus where he
visited an ancient shrine to
the Virgin Mary, venerated by
both Christians and Moslems.
According to tradition, Ephe
sus was the place where Mary,
perhaps in the company of Mary
Magdalene and St. John the
Evangelist, spent her last
years on earth. In pre-Chris
tian times, the city was the site
of a shrine of the pagan virgin
goddess Artemis (the Romans’
Diana) which was renowned
throughout the ancient world.
(The New Testament refers
repeatedly to visits to Ephesus
by St. Paul, including a dra
matic passage in the 19thchap
ter of Acts which describes a
riot incited against Paul be
cause he opposed the worship
of Diana).
The Pope returned to Castel
Gandolfo by car directly from
the Fiumicino Airport in Rome
where the Pan American jet
which brought him from Tur
key landed at about 9:25 p.m.
Thursday,,
After being welcomed back by
Italian and Church dignitaries,
the Pope was driven to his
Summer home in the Alban Hills
where he will remain until Sep
tember.
Speaking from a balcony,
Pope Paul confessed, "We are
tired but we are very happy
from the journey we have
made."
Besides joining the Pope
twice in prayers for unity and
presenting him to the Orthodox
congregation as "the first in
honor among us," Patriarch
Athenagoras visited the airport
twice, to welcome Pope Paul
on his arrival and to bid him
farewell.
On each occasion, the two re
ligious leaders repeatedly ex
changed the traditional kiss of
peace amid the enthusiastic
Priest Guilty
In Obstruction
Of Policeman
MILWAUKEE (RNS)—Father
j ames E.' Groppie, a Roman
Catholic priest and civil rights
leader here, was found guilty
of obstructing a police officer
by a 12-man jury which in
cluded three Negroes.
The priest was found innocent
of a second charge that he had
resfsted arrest.
The jury deliberated six
hours before reaching a ver
dict. Sentencing was deferred
at the request of Father Grop-
pi’s attorney. Maximum penalty
for obstructing a police officer
is a year in jail and a $500 fine.
In early May, Father Groppi,
was arrested during a melee in
which three policemen were in
jured. He was released on
$1,000 bond, pending trial on
charges of resisting arrest and
obstructing police.
According to a police report
then, the distrubance began
when two boys were stopped by
police because one of them was
drunk and carrying a knife.
A crowd gathered and police
claimed that Father Groppi
shouted, "Start the riot. Start
the riot.” The priest denied the
charges.
cheers of the crowds around
them.
At the ecumenical prayer
service in the Greek Orthodox
Cathedral of St. George, the
Pope sat to the right of the
Patriarch, a position which is
normally never occupied during
religious ceremonies. He was
further honored by the inser
tion of a reference to him in the.
litany recited at this ceremony.
His participation in the rite
was believed to be the first
time a reigning pontiff has
prayed in an Orthodox Church.
In the small Catholic cathe
dral, the Pope and the Patriarch
recited prayers with ecumeni
cal overtones, using the Latin
and Greek languages alternate
ly.
Among the other religious
leaders with whom Pope Paul
conferred during his visit to
Istanbul were the city's Ar
menian Patriarch, the Grand
Mufti and the Chief Rabbi.
During his flight from Is
tanbul to Smyrna, from which
he proceeded to Ephesus, the
Pope flew over several cities
severely damaged by the re
cent earthquake in Turkey.
Light damage was also notice
able in some of the buildings
in Istanbul.
Addressing the Orthodox con
gregation in the Cathedral of
St. George, Pope Paul said that
"in the light of our love of
Christ and of our fraternal
Charity, we discover once again
the deep identity of our faith."
"The points on which we still
differ must not prevent our see
ing this profound unity,” he
said. "At the same time, it
makes us more deeply sorrow
ful for the present impossibil
ity of seeing this unity expres
sed in concelebration and it
urges us to do everything pos
sible to hasten the coming of
the day of the Lord," 1
He cited "the duty of the
heads of the Churches and their
hierarchies to start out on the
road that leads to full com
munion."
In reply, Patriarch Athena
goras said, "it is our duty to
work that the Churches may
become one."
Religious leaders of many
faiths were at the Catholic Ca
thedral of the Holy Spiritwhere
Pope Paul and Patriarch Ath
enagoras joined for their se
cond ecumenical prayer ser
vice. • At this service, Pope
Paul said that separated Chris
tians must "work fraternally to
find together adapted and pro
gressive forms in order to de
velop and transform into a
a reality in the lives of our
Churches the communion which
exists.”
He also called for programs
of dialogue and of education for
the clergy and people to prepare
them for religious unity.
Christians, he said, must
"get to know each other and
respect each other in the right
ful diversity of the liturgical,
spiritual, disciplinary and theo
logical traditions."
"To re-establish and main
tain communion and unity,” he
said, "one must be careful not
to impose anything that may not
be necessary.”
Peace, as well as Christian
unity, was a theme of the Pope’s
visit. In an address to mem
bers of the diplomatic corps in
Istanbul, he said that "if peace
has political, economic and mil
itary aspects, it has first of all
a spiritual one. The, Church
struggles to spread everywhere
the spirit of mutual love, of
goodwill, of collaboration for
peace.”
At Ephesus, he visited a
shrine^ honored at the House of
the Virgin which is annually
the scene of large pilgrimages
by both Christians and Moslems
on August 15, the Feast of the
Assumption. The city is also
famous for an ecumenical coun
cil, held in 431 A. D., which pro
claimed that Mary was the mo
ther of the Second Person of
the Blessed Trinity made man.
From Ephesus, the Pope sent
telegrams to Orthodox patri
archs in many Eastern cities,
including Alexandria, Antioch
and Athens, and to the two chief
patriarchs of the Armenian
Apostolic Church, Catholics
Khoren of Cilicia and Catho-
licos Vazken of Etchmiadzin,
as well as to several Catholic
prelates of the Eastern Rites.
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