MELROSE, MINN.
It was while shoveling the front steps of her beloved Church of St. Mary last week that Micki Lovelace realized just how bitter the town's divisions have become. Here she was, clearing the area of snow for an upcoming prayer vigil, when the priest approached and asked her to leave.
This was trespassing, he said. A police officer was called to reinforce the message. Others with Lovelace complained that they should be allowed to clear the snow, but they eventually walked to their cars and drove off.
Days later, a fence was erected in front of the church, and then chains, yellow police tape and a "no trespassing" sign.
This is the state of St. Mary's Parish two years after an arson fire consumed the 120-year-old church's wooden altar but otherwise left standing its stout brick walls and distinctive twin steeples.
Parishioners like Lovelace, some of whom have started a group called Friends to Restore St. Mary's Church, have fought to keep it even as the St. Cloud Diocese lays plans to replace it with a $12 million building on land nearby.
The divisions have wounded this largely German Catholic community of 3,600 people about 100 miles northwest of the Twin Cities.
The Friends group has filed a lawsuit against the Diocese and Bishop Donald Kettler, hoping that it can forestall demolition. They're using social media and letters to the local paper to rally people to their cause. And on Sunday, the second anniversary of the 2016 fire, they plan to hold a one-hour prayer vigil in front of the church, despite the "no trespassing" sign hung there by church officials.