Two of the 18 Catholic parishes appealing their mergers with other parishes were granted some changes, Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis officials announced Friday. The other 16 mergers will proceed as planned.
The announcement paves the way for the largest reorganization in the archdiocese's nearly 160-year history, barring any successful appeals to the Vatican.
The two parishes that appealed successfully will still merge, but in a more palatable way.
St. Thomas Church in the south metro community of St. Thomas was initially set to merge with St. Wenceslaus in New Prague as part of the reorganization plan. The archdiocese granted its request to merge with St. Anne of Le Sueur instead.
At Holy Cross in northeast Minneapolis, Archbishop John Nienstedt confirmed the initial decision, with significant differences. Holy Cross will merge with St. Anthony of Padua, St. Clement and St. Hedwig. But the name of the combined parish community will be Holy Cross, and the merger will take place after the retirement of the Rev. Earl Simonson as pastor of St. Clement, which will happen by July 1, 2013.
Considering another appeal
Nienstedt's decision to affirm the 16 other mergers was greeted with dismay.
"We're disappointed," said Gene Mach, a church trustee with St. Canice in Kilkenny, which is set to merge with Most Holy Redeemer in Montgomery. Mach said St. Canice preferred to remain in a "cluster" with Most Holy Redeemer, which means the two parishes share a priest.