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INTRODUCTION
In
August 1969, I packed my meager possessions and with a heartfelt goodbye
left the University of Wisconsin--Madison. My years in graduate school
included many rewarding and memorable experiences at the University Catholic
Center, where I was active in the liturgical reform movement inspired
by the Second Vatican Council.
Like most Catholics, I followed the developments
of Vatican II, 1962-1965, from afar reading reports in newspapers and
magazines. The council, a series of sessions in Rome led first by Pope
John XXIII and then, after his death, by Pope Paul VI, was attended by
bishops from all over the world. Vatican II led to important documents
and a spirit of reform and renewal that swept away much of the religious
culture that I had known all my life. Changes were made in Catholic theology,
philosophy, liturgy, vestments, altars, and music. Most importantly, the
church began to timidly move away from the hierarchical model of governance
in favor of a Vatican II-inspired concept: the People of God.
Journeying to northern Minnesota, I began teaching
at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Imbued with the spirit of Vatican
II, I was naturally drawn to Duluth's charismatic bishop, Paul Francis
Anderson, who strove to implement the ideas and spirit of the council.
My contacts with the bishop were limited--sermons, meetings of a diocesan
history committee and a memorable day of bicycling along the famed North
Shore of Lake Superior. My interest in studying Anderson was later sparked
by the contagious enthusiasm of Monsignor George Schroeder and exposure
to some of the bishop's papers when I was writing an historical piece
on his predecessor, Bishop Francis J. Schenk.
Bishop Anderson and his efforts to renew the church
in Duluth and beyond can best be understood by using a new approach to
the study of the American Catholic experience. David J. O'Brien, Loyola
Professor of Roman Catholic Studies at the College of the Holy Cross,
suggests that the history of the American church be retold as a story
of liberation. "Families once poor and on the margins, exploited
workers in mines and factories, immigrants in squalid tenements, over
three or four generations moved up and moved in." He points out that
"if liberation has to do with overcoming economic insecurity and
dependence, lack of education, cultural marginalization, and political
powerlessness, then this is a liberation story." For O'Brien, "the
question now is: 'liberation for what?' Perhaps it always was."
How does one answer O'Brien's telling question?
Perhaps the best way is to study and reflect on the lives of American
Catholics such as Paul Anderson who have been effective witnesses to Gospel
values. Bishop Anderson offered a strong vision of what can be achieved
by taking seriously the ideas and spirit of Vatican II. He called for
a change of heart and mind leading to renewal based on the council's vision
of the church as the People of God; this included expanded roles for women,
lay ministry, personal and spiritual growth, and a strong commitment to
social justice.
Reading Anderson's papers was indeed a privilege
and I wish to thank Father Patrick J. Moran for all his help as I examined
the rich collection of newspapers, letters, sermons, talks and personal
journals housed in the Archives of the Diocese of Duluth. Father Moran
also shared his own valuable insights into Anderson's character and contributions.
Chancellor Jerome Klein of the Diocese of Sioux Falls facilitated my work
with Sioux Falls collections.
I am grateful to the following who formally or
informally shared their memories of Bishop Anderson; Rev. Mr. H.L. (Chico)
Anderson, Father James Crossman, Donna Effinger, Father John Whitney Evans,
Sister Helen Giesen, O.S.B., Jon Helstrom, Professor Delores Leckey, Bishop
Raymond Lucker, Sister Mary Paul Ludwig, O.S.B., Monsignor Patrick McDowell,
Monsignor John McEneaney, P.A., Sister Mary Charles McGough, O.S.B., Monsignor
Bernard Popesh, Father Richard Rice, S.J., Mrs. Robert J. Rich, Archbishop
John R. Roach, Monsignor Gregory Schaeffer, Father James W. Scheuer, and
Monsignor George Schroeder.
Sisters Giesen and Ludwig also shared their recordings
of Bishop Anderson's talks. In addition to providing invaluable information,
the tapes enabled me to once again listen to the bishop's ideas and stories
in his own voice. Sister Mary Charles has a rich collection of the bishop's
paintings. Through her efforts, his artistic contributions have been preserved.
Bishop Anderson believed to the very core of his
being that the church was the People of God. He strove with all his energy
to foster a change of heart and mind leading to a renewed church, a powerful
witness to the risen Lord. It is my hope that this reflection on his life
and ministry will contribute to keeping alive his message of love and
hope.
I
MAKING OF A BISHOP
"Biographies
are but the clothes and buttons of the man--the biography of the man himself
cannot be written." Mark Twain's astute comment is especially applicable
to Paul Francis Anderson, the fifth bishop of Duluth. It is not enough
to study the climatic highlights of his career. To really know the man
and appreciate his impact on people and their lives, one must see him
in the small moments of his life relating to people. This can not be done.
Still, if Anderson's legacy and contributions are to be preserved, if
we are to document the history of the post-Vatican II era, then it is
necessary to study the man and his career.
To understand Anderson's life and career, we must
journey back to his Massachusetts boyhood and his early years as an assistant
pastor and hospital chaplain. Paul Francis Anderson was born in West Roxbury,
a division of the City of Boston, on April 20, 1917. He was the second
son of Mary Elizabeth and Philip Anderson both children of Irish immigrants.
Never prosperous, the family was at times in dire
straits. Paul's father lost his job in the famous 1919 Boston police strike,
crushed by Governor Calvin Coolidge the future President. Showing his
faith in God, Philip Anderson dropped his last dime in the collection
plate at mass. Sixty years later, reflecting on those trying days, Bishop
Anderson remembered that his father literally did not have a dime to his
name, but the family survived thanks to friends and the grace of God.
The stock market crash in 1929 and the Great Depression
which followed was an especially difficult time for the Andersons, since
Philip, like so many fathers, was out of work. The family, which at times
lacked ample food, scraped by with everyone doing odd jobs. Finally, Phillip
found steady work as a motorman on the Boston Elevated Railway. The future
bishop never forgot his boyhood experience with poverty and it left him
with a profound sense of compassion and an abiding concern for the poor
and disadvantaged.
Despite hardships, Paul's boyhood years were happy
and he shared precious memories with friends for the rest of his life.
He fondly recalled making toys from odds and ends found at home or in
the city dump--bows, arrows, slingshots, swords, shields, kites, model
boats, planes, and other things that filled his heart with delight. Sports
equipment included skis made from barrel staves and footballs made from
stocking caps filled with rags.
Memories of his parents filled his heart and animated
his life as he recalled his tall, busy mother with her smiling face, and
his father who taught him to take advantage of every day urging him to
try things: "You can do it!" From his family he learned two
cardinal virtues: hard work and generosity. For Paul Anderson, family
was central. His life-long effort to form Christian communities wherever
he went stemmed in part from boyhood memories of his family.
Paul cared about people. Working for a number
of grocery stores--pushing a cart and helping customers in the store--he
got to know most of the people in his neighborhood. This personable young
man was offered a managers position as soon as he finished school, but
another calling was beginning to stir, a vocation that would combine his
strong interest in people with his growing religious faith.
Raised in an old fashion Irish Catholic family
by devout parents, Paul experienced the first stirrings of a call to the
priesthood in the 1930s. Vivid images of services at St. John's in Winthrop
remained all his life: candles glowing on the altar, Marian hymns and
prayers, homilies, the smell of incense, Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament,
and weekly novenas to Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal. Taking an active
part in those services as an altar boy made a lasting impression. Another
precious memory from altar boy days was of a very special Christmas when
a man celebrated his first Christmas as a priest. Anderson never forgot
that Christmas and the priest became a model that helped lead him to the
priesthood.
After graduating from Winthrop High School in
1935, Anderson attended Boston College, a Jesuit institution in Chestnut
Hill. Then, despite doubts and fears, he decided to follow his dream of
becoming a priest; he transferred to the seminary of the Archdiocese of
Boston, St. John's in Brighton. With this important, life-changing decision
made, he planned to catch a streetcar and tell his grandmother the good
news. His mother urged him to refuse the money that his grandmother was
sure to offer. She reminded her son that his grandmother was poor and
took in laundry and scrubbed floors just to make ends meet. He set out
determined to heed his mother's advice and when he arrived he refused
to accept any money, but his grandmother persisted until he finally took
the envelope assuming that it contained $5 or $10. Imagine his shock when
he opened the envelope and found $1000, a large sum in those days. Though
poor, she long believed that her grandson would study for the priesthood
and was determined to help. The money, eked out of her meager income,
was of immense help.
Anderson completed his studies in an accelerated
year-round program, designed to meet the shortage of priests during the
Second World War. He was ordained on January 6, 1943 by Auxiliary Bishop
Richard Cushing , the future cardinal who continued to play an important
role in the young priest's life.
After celebrating his first mass in his hometown
of Winthrop, Anderson returned to the two-floor house, his family had
long called home. He greeted family and friends and bestowed his first
priestly blessings. A most touching incident occurred in the middle of
the afternoon when an elderly Jewish neighbor, a friend of the family,
hobbled up the front steps to congratulate the new priest saying "it
is so nice that you are a priest. Someday my son Reeven will be a rabbi
and he can come and preach in your church and you can come and preach
in the temple." Anderson never forgot her powerful words and the
day would come when as Bishop of Duluth he would have the opportunity
to preach in a temple, condemn anti-Semitism and apologize for any Christian
actions that contributed to the Holocaust, the mass murder of Jews during
World War II.
Father Anderson's first assignment was at Our
Lady, Comforter of the Afflicted in Waltham, Massachusetts, a parish that
ministered to three hospitals as well as serving a congregation. This
assignment, which tested his mettle, exposed him to the pain and agony
of mental illness, old age and death. The newly ordained priest, who felt
inadequate in the face of his challenging ministry, found the mental hospital
most difficult as he witnessed the horrifying sight of patients locked
in rooms and restrained in straitjackets. Some patients were old and infirm,
not mentally ill, but since they had no other place to go they were left
to languish in the mental hospital. Anderson developed a lifelong concern
for the mentally ill and elderly and years later as a bishop made it a
point to visit mental institutions and nursing homes.
His ministry brought him face to face with death.
The young priest witnessed the anguish of families who mourned the death
of a loved one or even more heart-rending the sight of those facing the
agony and fear of death alone without the comfort of family and friends.
Experiences with mentally ill and dying patients left an indelible mark--a
sense of compassion early in his priestly career. Moreover, his experiences
in the hospitals left him with the firm conviction that Catholics needed
to focus on the essence of the Christian message and cultivate a life
of prayer so that they could deal with the vicissitudes of life. Later,
serving as a bishop in the midst of the rapid changes following the Second
Vatican Council, Anderson insisted that as valuable and healthy as the
ferment was Catholics must not lose sight of the essence of the Christian
faith--the life and message of Jesus. Catholics needed to pray!
Anderson's life and priestly career took an unexpected
turn when he and some of his seminary classmates accepted an invitation
to serve for eighteen months in the Diocese of Sioux Falls. How did five
Massachusetts priests end up in South Dakota? With the end of World War
II and the return of military chaplains, Richard Cushing, now Archbishop
of Boston found that he had a surplus of priests. Cushing informed the
nation's bishops at a 1946 meeting that he would share some of his priests
with any diocese that needed them. Cushing's plan, dubbed "Lend-lease"
after the famed World War II program, allowed priests to serve, in what
the archbishop referred to as the "missionary outpost of our own
country." After eighteen months, the priests could elect to return
to Boston or stay in the new diocese.
Bishop William O. Brady of Sioux Falls, the future
Archbishop of St. Paul, quickly took advantage of Cushing's offer. When
the possibility of serving in South Dakota was broached, Anderson, conjuring
up visions of dust storms and grasshoppers, was decidedly negative, but
his love of adventure and his desire to see a different part of the country
changed his mind. Anderson and four of his seminary classmates, John J.
McEneaney, John D. Hausman, Leonard Stanton, and James L. Sullivan, decided
to serve in South Dakota. Cushing, taking an active interest in the five,
invited them to his home for dinner the night before they left and wrote
letters of encouragement as they adjusted to life on the prairie.
Leaving behind the hills and ocean beaches of
his native state, Anderson found it difficult to adjust to the wide-open
spaces and incessant wind of South Dakota. He also missed his family.
When the eighteen-month assignment was coming to an end, Anderson and
his classmates decided to go home, but Bishop Brady, telling them he would
have to close parishes, pleaded with them to seek an extension. Ultimately,
Anderson remained in South Dakota until he became a bishop two decades
later. Two of his classmates remained as well. McEneaney became vicar
general of the Diocese of Sioux Falls and was named a protonotary apostolic
with the title monsignor. Stanton served numerous parishes, became chaplain
to the Boy Scouts of the diocese, and in 1966 was appointed national chairman
of the Scout's Altare Dei Award program.
Anderson, after serving as an assistant pastor
in three parishes, became administrator of St. Catherine's Church in Oldham
in 1947 and worked hard to rejuvenate the 43-year-old frame structure.
His efforts went up in smoke. On May 7, 1954 he was awakened early in
the morning by a telephone call telling him that the church was on fire.
"By the time he ran from the rectory to the burning building, the
heat was so intense that he was unable to enter by either the front or
back doors. In a matter of minutes flames burst through the roof and the
tower collapsed, carrying with it the 1,200-pound bell which had been
installed less than a year before." The story has a happy ending.
Thanks to the prayers and financial sacrifices of the parishioners, Father
Anderson was able to build a handsome brick church that was blessed and
dedicated by Bishop Brady on June 18, 1956.
Reflecting back on his years in Oldham, where
he served from 1947 to 1959, he realized how close he had become to the
people and how much "practical and psychological support" they
gave him. His attachment to the people of South Dakota increased while
he was pastor of St. Patrick's Church in Montrose from 1959 to 1962. Once
again, the approachable priest shared meals, conversations, laughter,
and precious memories becoming part of many families. Father Anderson
of Sioux Falls just like Father Anderson of Boston was people-oriented
and family-oriented.
In 1962 Anderson was named pastor of St. Mary's Church in Salem. It was
during this memorable assignment that he developed many of his ideas about
the People of God, Christian community and layministry. Seven couples
joined him in dealing with the problems that plagued the town. Thirteen
years later, Anderson, now a bishop described the situation in Salem:
"Catholics were severely divided from Protestants. Public school
and parochial school had little in common and what they did have they
never discussed. Rural Electrification Association (REA) and Northern
Power (NSP) were fighting in the courts. National Farmers Organization
(NFO) and their opponents clashed in episodes that left barns painted
yellow in the middle of the night and tires slashed on vehicles carrying
cattle to market."
Anderson and the couples "observed, judged
and acted." Divisions were healed! "When Pope John XXIII died,
the Protestant churches in town tolled their bells of requiem.... I saw
the time come when the superintendent of the public school met with the
head of the Catholic school each week at the rectory.... And who do you
think installed the new fire detection system in St. Mary's school? Employees
of the REA and NSP, working side by side, joking and laughing far into
the night. The struggles of the family farm still continue, but Sr. Thomas
More called together the heads of farm organizations and got them talking
of an American Federation of Agriculture. And so it went. Conversion,
reconciliation, peace and community were born through the dedicated prayers
and efforts of a handful of people." His experience in Salem, convinced
Anderson that the People of God joined together in small communities could
effectively implement Gospel values.
In Salem Anderson actively participated in the
Christian Family Movement and gained first-hand experience with lay action.
Historian Jay P. Dolan explains that the Christian Family Movement, born
in Chicago, "grew out of a unique Catholic Action movement that captured
the imagination of many young people in the 1930s and 1940s. Developed
by a Belgian priest, Joseph Cardijn, it...stressed the reform of society
through the formula of 'observe, judge and act.'" Dolan notes that
the CFM movement "was militantly lay-oriented. Priests had an advisory
role, but lay people controlled the groups."
Sally Cunneen, founding co-editor of CROSS CURRENTS
and widely published in the field of women's religious experience, adds
that CFM included women as equals. It "took steps that would eventually
help to shatter the vague idealization of women which had marked their
exclusion from leadership positions in the Church. Men and women met together,
breaking the earlier custom of most church groups to assemble separately
by gender." She notes that "the committed priests who became
CFM chaplains saw a mission in the world for Catholic lay people just
as the married couples did. And for women in particular, the CFM provided
an education in critical thinking and action as part of the Church."
Historian Jeffrey M. Burns stresses that CFM was
a harbinger of Vatican II since its stress on the Mystical Body of Christ
and its understanding of the theological implications of this concept
led to the popularization of a new model of the church. Laymen and women
were told that they were the church! Burns notes that CFM clearly anticipated
Vatican II's concept of the People of God. It is no surprise that Father
Anderson was ready for Vatican II.
CFM's idea that laymen and women were responsible
for one another led naturally to layministry. Anderson's involvement in
the movement helped shape his conviction that laymen and women were gifted
and called to ministry. Later, as a bishop and member of an important
committee on the laity, his views were decisive in the use of the term
"ministry" to describe certain lay actions.
The popularization of the Mystical Body concept
may also have shaped Anderson's thoughts on individualism, social justice
and community. As Burns explains "the concept of the Mystical Body
undercut the individualism of modern American society, undercut selfish
concerns about one's own success and one's own family. CFM taught that
salvation was not simply an individual matter between God and the person.
Salvation was communal. The person's purpose in life--to know, love, and
serve God--could be worked out only within the context of the human community."
Father Anderson became pastor of St. Martin's
Church, Huron in 1965 and in this, his last assignment before being named
to the episcopacy, he instituted programs that foreshadowed some of his
best known ideas as Bishop of Duluth. To surface the ideas and views of
parishioners he conducted a survey followed by small discussion groups.
This grassroots approach reflected his People of God view of the church.
In Anderson's eyes, the people were the church and a pastor, valuing their
opinions, should lead and not dominate. This approach stood in sharp contrast
to the prevalent model of the church as a triangle with the pope on top,
followed by cardinals, archbishops, bishops, and priests with the laity
assigned to a lesser, more passive role. Later as Bishop of Duluth, he
instituted a rather elaborate plan to discern the ideas and goals of all
the People of God.
As pastor of St. Martin's, Anderson eliminated
fund-raising gimmicks such as bazaars and raffles instituting a "Fair
Share" plan. The plan encouraged parishioners to become tithers giving
5 percent of their income to the parish church and 5 percent to charity.
This plan raised St. Martin's income from $800.00 to $3,000.00 a week
in three years. His skill at fund-raising was perhaps decisive in his
promotion to the office of bishop and his assignment to the financially
troubled Diocese of Duluth. Moreover, his long tenure as editor of THE
BISHOP'S BULLETIN (1950-1963) provided an opportunity for Bishop Lambert
A. Hock and the chancery staff to know and appreciate his talents.
Not only was Anderson not seeking the office of
bishop, he was shocked--indeed thrown into turmoil--when the letter offering
the promotion arrived. On vacation in the Boston area, he prayed constantly
walking around the city, sitting on the commons, and in a Paulist chapel,
but often the only prayer he could muster was "God help me."
He was painfully aware that it was a difficult time to be a bishop and
felt unsuited to the office since he did not want the authority and pomp
that usually accompanied the promotion. He wanted to live simply rather
than in a mansion.
A candidate for the episcopacy, while he is considering
whether or not to accept, can only share the news of the promotion with
his confessor. Anderson was especially blessed since he was on vacation
with his seminary classmate and best friend John J. McEneaney who told
him: "You can do it!" Anderson, who felt that McEneaney should
have been named a bishop instead of him, later realized that his friend
was the vehicle that God used to convince him to accept the appointment.
Finally, he went to a Western Union office and sent a coded telegram of
acceptance to the pope's official representative in the United States,
Archbishop (later Cardinal) Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate (1967-1973).
When Anderson met with Raimondi, the archbishop
asked how he felt about the appointment. The bishop to be, realizing that
he held no graduate degrees and had no chancery experience pointed out
that he had only been a pastor. Raimondi had the perfect answer: "Well
what do you think you're going to be now?"
On July 17, 1968 Paul Francis Anderson was named
a coadjutor bishop with the right of succession to the ailing Bishop of
Duluth, Francis J. Schenk. Paul VI had assigned Anderson to a far-flung
diocese, established in 1889, which included the following counties in
northeastern Minnesota: Aitkin, Carlton, Cass, Cook, Crow Wing, Itasca,
Lake, Pine, Koochiching, and St. Louis. The Diocese of Duluth served almost
109,000 Catholics and maintained 90 parishes and 35 mission churches.
At Anderson's ordination, held on October 17,
1968 in the Huron Arena, a stirring homily was delivered by Cardinal Cushing
of Boston, the man who had played such a pivotal role in Anderson's life
and career. In "thundering tones" and in words Anderson would
never forget, the cardinal spoke about the role of a bishop and the needs
of the time. Cushing declared that "a bishop should know how to listen.
One of the most profitable ways of learning is to listen, and when we
cease listening we most often stop learning. When we stop learning, we
really stop living." He then applied this maxim to Anderson's new
office arguing that a bishop needed to know the thoughts, attitudes and
fears of the people he served. "Sometimes bishops in our country
are described as administrators, and truth to tell, a diocese--especially
a large one--demands a great deal of administration. For all of that,
the wise bishop, in my judgment, is out of his office more than he is
in it. And he should not be out preaching all the time." A bishop
should spend some of his time listening. "Not everything he hears
will be helpful and not everything will be pleasant to hear. But, in most
cases, he will come home wiser than he went out." With those words
of wisdom in mind, Paul Francis Anderson journeyed to Duluth to begin
his new challenging ministry as a bishop in the post-Vatican II church.
II
MESSENGER
OF HOPE
Arriving
in Duluth in late October 1968, Anderson was struck by the oceanlike beauty
of Lake Superior and the steep, wooded hills. The scene, so different
from the prairies of South Dakota, evoked powerful memories of the ocean
and hills of his native New England. "It was almost like being home
again." An avid outdoorsman, he drew strength and inspiration from
nature and he soon came to love the natural beauty of the area he now
called home. As Monsignor McEneaney so eloquently put it, Anderson "reveled
in the beauty of creation. How he loved the lakes, the woods and hills
of Northern Minnesota! Unique among all episcopal vehicles in the United
States was his automobile, with canoe on top, bicycle on the back, and
camper in tow."
Meeting Paul Anderson was an experience never
to be forgotten. The 51-year-old six footer with black hair and striking
eyes--eyes alive with warmth and compassion--related to people more as
a person than as a bishop. Anderson believed that an authentic minister
of the Gospel did not allow his office or professional expertise to stand
in the way of Christlike service. Father Stanton, a long-time friend,
described the bishop's great gift: he made every person feel special,
he made every person feel he or she was his "particular, very special
friend."
Interested in people since his youth, the new
bishop loved gatherings. He continued the open house at Christmas started
by Bishop Schenk enlisting all available help, staff and friends, to decorate
the house and prepare for guests, some of whom had no place to go for
the holidays. Anderson greeted his 30 or 40 guests at the door, personally
cooked dinner and prepared elaborate desserts. Lively conversation and
the singing of carols created the family atmosphere that he treasured.
Some of Anderson's happiest moments were spent
with families--camping, hiking, biking, swimming, and visiting. Always
sensitive to children, he was a grandfriend to many. Families treasure
warm memories of hours spend with this remarkable man who, like a ray
of sunshine, brightened their lives and served as a reflection of God's
love.
Anderson's love of people and community also explains
his joy at the annual Ojibwa celebration held over the Memorial Day weekend.
Community was fostered with mass, visiting and feasting. At this all-day
event, the bishop, who had been close to the Sioux when he served in South
Dakota, came decked out in his Sioux headdress and enthusiastically joined
the celebration visiting with Ojibwa friends.
Those lucky enough to spend time with the charismatic
bishop soon discovered that he was bright and well read keeping abreast
of the latest developments in theology, biblical studies, ministry, and
spiritual direction. Despite his obvious intelligence, Paul Anderson was
haunted by self-doubt about his intellectual ability; he harbored painful
memories of being called stupid and of his struggle to pass Latin.
Though conversant with the latest ideas, the bishop
never forgot that he lacked advanced degrees. His expertise was being
a parish priest and most of his ideas were based on lived experience and
common sense. Paul Anderson was an introspective and highly sensitive
person, with an acute awareness of the human dimension--people's needs
and concerns. Inclined to be supportive and nonjudgmental, he had difficulty
with the disciplinary aspects of his office. On the other hand, his ability
to empathize and provide emotional support was ideal for the pastoral
side of his episcopal role.
First and foremost, Anderson was a pastor and
he took to heart Cushing's advice that a bishop should be out of his office
more than he was in it--indeed it came naturally for him since he never
cared for administrative tasks or paper work. He would gladly stop whatever
he was doing to greet visitors and give them his undivided attention.
Most of his time was devoted to counseling, advising and above all encouraging.
He was so interested in people that it was difficult for him to focus
on essential matters of administration.
Anderson was committed to the ideas of Vatican
II and worked to implement them with every ounce of his energy and strength.
He realized that education was needed to prepare Catholics for new forms
of religious life. The liturgy had been a central symbol of the unchanging
nature of the church. As reforms were implemented from 1964 to 1970, the
language of the mass was changed from Latin to English, altars were simplified
to look more like tables, and arranged so that priests faced the people.
Laymen and women were more actively involved in the liturgy as lectors
and Eucharistic ministers. Architecture changed as Catholics built modern
rather than medieval looking churches. Meatless Fridays, an important
symbol of Catholic identity, eventually disappeared. Confessions became
far less frequent. As theologian Patrick W. Carey explains, "these
mutations were not matters of small consequence, because they touched
the lives of many Catholics who had been accustomed to thinking about
their religious life and their own religious identity in terms of these...practices
and customs."
The reform of church governance, with a timid
move away from monarchical authority, was another important result of
the council. This trend was very near to Anderson's heart and he enthusiastically
supported the establishment of pastoral councils: parish, regional and
diocesan.
Anderson's leadership was rooted in his deep conviction
that Vatican II renewal must not be limited to external things such as
liturgy and governance; it needed to reach much deeper changing hearts
and minds. He stressed education. The bishop took pains to explain current
practices and the reasons for them. Committed to the Vatican II vision
of the church, Anderson tried to foster a new attitude toward the diocesan
church arguing that it was the entire People of God and not just the bishop,
the chancery and the priests. Renewal required a new attitude. The people
needed to accept freedom and responsibility if the church was to move
away from decisions made by the bishop alone to decisions made by the
consensus of many.
Anderson took on more responsibilities as the
ordinary of the diocese, Francis J. Schenk, suffering from an inoperable
malignant brain tumor, became less and less able to administer the diocese.
On May 1, 1969 Anderson became Bishop of Duluth. Believing that ordinaries
were not effective for long periods of time, he decided that his tenure
in Duluth would be limited. After a period of time, Anderson hoped to
turn the position over to a younger man, better suited to carry the heavy
burdens, while he moved to a new ministry.
Among the burdens of his office were the sharp
and bitter disputes over the meaning of Vatican II. Anderson was nettled
by complaints from conservatives who argued that the church was in danger
of losing its way and that heresy was rampant. Some, influenced by a conservative
organization, Catholics United for the Faith (CUF), accepted Vatican II's
documents, but opposed liberal interpretations. They were strongly opposed
to unauthorized liturgical experiments, to what they perceived as Modernism
(condemned by Pope St. Pius X in 1907), to the ideas advanced by certain
theologians and biblical scholars, and to the weakened authority of the
magisterium, the teaching authority of the pope and bishops. At an October
1974 CUF-sponsored talk, Father Daniel Lyons, S.J. told his Iron Range
audience that the church was threatened by the ideas of Modernist theologians
such as Father Hans Kung, University of Tubingen in Germany and Father
Richard McBrien, University of Notre Dame in the United States. Conservatives
expected Anderson to end what they regarded as unauthorized liturgical
practices.
In contrast, some liberals argued that he was
too attached to the clerical system. Caught in the crossfire, Anderson
suffered sleepless nights and finally concluded that the vehement debate
was diverting attention from the real issue: people in need. Who would
feed the hungry? Who would care for the ill?
In the face of pessimism, the bishop was determined
to be a messenger of hope: "My mission seems to be to supply the
encouragement and the hope that is so lacking in many of God's people.
This I try to do despite the whirlwinds of pessimism that blow all around
us." He warned that it was unrealistic to expect a return to the
"apparent serenity" of the pre-conciliar era since the world
was experiencing broad cultural change that was impacting the church.
Convinced that Catholicism would eventually emerge renewed and revitalized,
Anderson looked forward to a bright future. In the meantime, he urged
Catholics to deal with the turmoil by remembering the core of the Christian
faith. This would restore hope!
In the March 1972 issue of the diocesan newspaper,
OUTLOOK, the bishop devoted his column to death and resurrection and the
need to focus on the core of the church's message. Recalling many of his
own personal experiences with death, including his traumatic first assignment
when he served patients in three Massachusetts hospitals, Anderson reminded
his readers that a Catholic should never lose sight of the root meaning
of life, death and resurrection. He warned: "Of late we have been
so preoccupied with problems of liturgical change, the authority crisis,
ecumenism, celibacy, vocations, community, relevancy, infallibility and
sundry other problems that affect the contemporary Church, that some of
the more fundamental issues seem to be passed over or even totally neglected....
Certainly the present ferment and seeming turmoil in the Church is necessary
and healthy, for it is a sign of life. But it is also necessary to put
it all in proper focus and understand that the heart of the Gospel message
centers around the person of Jesus."
His ministry of hope proved to be most difficult
in a cynical era haunted by questions raised by the Cold War, nuclear
weapons, and the war in Vietnam. His mission was especially difficult
since many Catholics, both conservatives and liberals, thought the church
had lost its way and was not providing the moral leadership they expected--indeed
demanded. The bishop soon discovered how difficult and exhausting it was
to spread hope. Moreover, while supporting others, he, like every Christian,
had to live with his own weaknesses and insecurities.
The bishop also brought hope by ending the financial
problems that "hovered like a dark cloud over the entire diocese."
The financial plight was discussed at a series of meetings by a small
group of priests and laypeople and a new system was born: United Catholic
Appeal (UCA). This system, based on the plan Anderson had pioneered in
South Dakota, replaced the old method of fund-raising--parish assessments
and special collections. The new approach was centered on the People of
God vision of the church. Anderson opposed bazaars, bingo, raffles, games,
prizes, and other fund-raising gimmicks that obscured Gospel values. He
was in the business of selling religion not raffle tickets. As a man of
faith, the bishop wanted Catholics to realize that they were the church,
the People of God, and that they had a responsibility to learn about poverty--local,
national and global--and to render Christian service. If the Gospel was
as important as Catholics claimed, it should stand on its own merit and
the people of the diocese should develop a Christian attitude toward material
goods.
UCA worked! In January 1972, the bishop happily
reported that UCA had enabled "the diocese to turn a financial corner."
Most importantly, UCA publicity, stressing poverty and the need for Christian
service, was an effective educational tool. A questionnaire mailed to
all the parishes showed that Catholics had become more aware of local,
national and global needs and often developed a stronger sense of belonging
to their parishes. In short, UCA had led to a change of heart and mind.
The bishop thought that Catholics, as the People
of God, had a right to know how their money was being spent. Financial
reports were published in OUTLOOK and people were invited to examine the
books. The clear explanations of the Christian reasons for sharing coupled
with openness about how diocesan money was being spent led to successful
UCA campaigns and eased the financial burden. Over the course of time,
parish quotas and special collections returned, but the original idea
of using the campaign to educate Catholics must never be forgotten. The
bishop's astute observation that Catholics needed to develop a Christian
attitude toward material goods stands as a challenge to this day.
UCA did not end all the problems. Cathedral High
School, which experienced one financial crisis after another, was a serious
drain on the resources of the diocese. Despite the problems, the bishop
was determined, to keep the school open since he believed that an alternative
form of education was needed. To save the school and its religious values,
he enthusiastically endorsed a plan proposed by Robert J. Rich, a 1936
Cathedral graduate. Cathedral changed from a Catholic to an ecumenical
institution based on the Judeo-Christian tradition. It began its first
full year as an ecumenical school in the fall of 1972. Once again, acting
as a messenger of hope, Anderson was instrumental in saving an important
institution, now known as the Marshall School, that is still serving the
greater Duluth-Superior area. It was but another example of his commitment
to a change of heart and mind in accordance with the People of God vision;
he listened to laypeople and was willing to share his power with them.
Bishop Anderson, like many Catholics, was deeply
troubled by a decreasing number of priests and nuns. The national trend
was evident in the Diocese of Duluth which had "146 priests in 1970,
143 in 1975 and 138 in 1979." The number of religious sisters "dropped
from 397 to 367 in 1975 and 346 in 1979." Anderson was painfully
aware that the average age of priests was rising and the number of students
preparing for ordination was steadily decreasing. Closing parishes, because
of a lack of priests, took away an important part of peoples' lives--the
sacred places of first communions, marriages and funerals, significant
markers of personal and family history. What consolation could the bishop
offer? The best he could do was to assure people that their old parish
would live on in their memories. The bishop's effort to console recalls
the sentiments expressed by Rick (Humphrey Bogart) in the movie CASABLANCA.
To comfort Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) and himself as they parted, presumably
forever, Rick pointed out that they would always have their beautiful
memories of their romance in Paris. Though memories are important, they
are not a complete answer and Anderson, messenger of hope though he was,
could not make the pain disappear. His hope for the future centered on
lay ministry.
Despite his profound sorrow at the loss of so
many talented men from the active priesthood, Anderson remained a true
friend to those who left. He responded to their departure on a deep personal
level. When James P. Shannon, an Auxiliary Bishop of St. Paul, resigned
and married, Anderson expressed what was in his heart: "I suppose
I am one of the countless many that is making a real effort to adjust
my thinking and my feelings to your new life style. Somehow or other your
picture in the NCR [NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER], attired as you were in
jacket and tie and standing beside your new wife, left me with mixed emotions.
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. I guess I just felt that things
shouldn't be this way."
Anderson was quick to apologize for not offering
the emotional support that Shannon needed: "At the moment I feel
sad to be numbered among the many around you who made little effort to
offer you the sympathy, understanding and love that you most sorely needed
during these past trying months. For this I ask your pardon. All that
I can offer you now is my daily prayers that God's grace will guide you
in the fulfillment of His holy will." Anderson and Shannon continued
to correspond. Shannon, in his autobiography, RELUCTANT DISSENTER (1998),
wrote: "Paul Anderson...was the kind of bishop Jesus Christ had in
mind when he put together the original team."
Even closer to home, when Francis X. Shea, president
of a Catholic College in Duluth, St. Scholastica, left the active priesthood,
Anderson visited Shea's parents to ease their pain and help in the healing
process. In January 1975, the bishop scolded TIME magazine for branding
Shea, then chancellor of Antioch College an "apostate." This
"was more than a misuse of language, it was an attack on one of man's
most cherished possessions his reputation." Shea was still a Catholic
and had left the Jesuits in accordance with canonical procedures. The
bishop was quick to add that Shea had served St. Scholastica and the Duluth
community well.
Bishop Anderson also provided hope for those who
believed that laymen and women should be involved in the decisions that
impacted their religious lives. To form the People of God, the bishop
had to nudge many pastors and parishioners to form parish councils, an
action urged by his predecessor Bishop Schenk. Anderson faced a dilemma:
if he used his authority to force parishes to establish councils he would
be returning to the authoritarian ways of the past, but if he did nothing,
he would not be able to implement his vision. His answer was education.
In 1976 Father William Rademacher, a professor
at St. John's Seminary in Plymouth, Michigan, offered workshops in the
diocese. Father Rademacher, like Bishop Anderson, viewed parish councils
as communities. Councils, he argued, should do more than deal with parish
finances; they should foster prayer and play an active role in peace and
justice issues. Education was the only viable approach for the bishop,
but it was a slow way to implement his vision.
In addition to parish councils, five regional
pastoral councils were formed: Brainerd-Case Lake, Hibbing-Grand Rapids,
Virginia-Border Area, Cloquet-Pine City, and Duluth-North Shore. His next
step was to establish a diocesan pastoral council to coordinate social,
economic and educational activities.
The bishop had reason to be pleased since the
diocese was moving in the direction that he advocated, but as he himself
realized there was a problem. In December 1972, writing to Monsignor William
Granville, a Massachusetts friend, Anderson confided, "we are right
in the middle of setting up a Diocesan Pastoral Council and meetings seem
to be proliferating all over the place. Sooner or later, we will have
to get rid of some of our organizations and limit the number of meetings
that we can attend. Whether we do so or not voluntarily, I think it will
happen." Anderson's concern was telling, especially in light of the
large geographic spread of the diocese, harsh winters and poor driving
conditions. How many meetings could people fit into their busy lives?
There was an even larger question that the bishop never asked. How long
would the rather elaborate structure of councils--parish, regional and
diocesan--last without his charismatic personality to draw people to meetings?
The bishop had managed to lead the diocese in
the direction of shared responsibility. He now came up with a bold plan--so
bold that it sparked a steady stream of criticism. To foster renewal,
Anderson planned a large Easter celebration for all the parishes in the
City of Duluth. His plan flowed from who he was. It reflected his love
of large celebrations, his sense of adventure, but above all his desire
for the physical presence of the People of God.
On Easter morning 1972, 8,000 men, women and children
packed the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center. The service, drawing
people together from diverse areas and economic groups, allowed them to
see the city's priests join their bishop in a moving liturgy. The Easter
celebration, one of the highlights of Anderson's years in Duluth, did
not just happen--it was the result of careful planning, spiritual programs,
talks by teams of religious sisters, and pastoral visits to all the parishes
by the bishop himself.
Deeply touched by the enthusiastic response--people
moved to tears during the celebration and happy faces in the parking lot--Anderson
described it as "simply fantastic." The bishop rejoiced that
people were still filled with enthusiasm weeks later and was pleased with
national coverage in publications such as WORSHIP, LITURGY MAGAZINE, LIVING
WORSHIP, and the NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER. A major high point in his
life, the celebration gave him an experience of the Risen Lord. The bishop,
a messenger of hope to others, now felt JOY in his own heart. The seeds
were planted that would lead him to the charismatic movement.
Chapter
III
Prayer,
Social Justice and Diocesan Governance
Believing that prayer was at the very heart of
renewal, Anderson wrote that an important part of Catholic reform began
with the all-city Easter celebration. In a January 1975 interview, published
in NEW COVENANT, he stressed that Catholics had become caught up with
external things such as changing the liturgy, with different formats,
altars and language, yet there was "still a depression in the hearts
of people, a sadness that pervades the church." Spiritual conversion
was needed! Amplifying this theme in a letter, he explained that the reform
that the Vatican II popes, John XXIII and Paul VI, had "prayed and
longed for was a reform and a renewal of man's spirits not really of external
structures." Once again, Anderson was calling for a change of hearts
and minds, through prayer and a new attitude.
Knowing that many devotions had disappeared in
the post-Vatican II church, Anderson feared there was a vacuum in many
hearts and was pleased that charismatic prayer was helping to fill the
void. As Patrick Carey explains, the Catholic charismatic movement, calling
attention to gifts of the Holy Spirit such as speaking in tongues and
healing, was "one of the most dramatic, ecumenical, long-lasting,
and widespread movements of the post-conciliar period."
In an effort to foster spiritual growth, an essential
ingredient of renewal, Anderson actively participated in charismatic services.
Though enthusiastic about the movement, he was aware of the danger of
elitism. "In some few instances I have meet people who were quite
distressed that everyone did not agree with them and immediately rush
out to join a charismatic prayer group." The bishop was also concerned
about the tendency of some to adopt a fundamentalist view of scripture.
Because of this, Anderson encouraged priests "to continue their studies
in sacred scripture and spirituality and give sound direction."
Anderson's desire to foster prayer and community
led to an important decision in regard to his mansion residence. Residing
in a splendid house did not fit his simple lifestyle and weakened his
message of social justice. He seriously considered moving to the rectory
on Minnesota Point, a beautiful strip of land that juts into Lake Superior,
where he could live simply in touch with nature. After more reflection,
he decided that the mansion could serve the diocese as a house of prayer
where support groups could form and flourish. Deeply concerned about resignations
from the active priesthood, the bishop invited groups of priests to the
house for prayer and discussion, a powerful antidote against the isolation
that was all too common in the far-flung diocese.
St. Francis House, named for Anderson's patron
saint, became a Mecca for priests, sisters and laypersons looking for
a place to pray and think. Many came to the house to experience the bishop's
warm personality and deep spirituality. It should be noted that Anderson,
in his effort to help others, had created a community that encouraged
his own emotional, spiritual and intellectual growth. Many of the bishop's
ideas developed in the context of this community formed by mass, prayer
and discussion. Father Stanton, a classmate and friend, observed that
St. Francis House was the "dynamic heart of the Diocese of Duluth."
Anderson believed that if priests grew spiritually
their parishioners would soon follow. He therefore embarked on a three-year
program for priests under the direction of a Trappist monk, Vincent Dwyer,
associated with St. Mary's College in Winona, Minnesota.
Father Dwyer, like Bishop Anderson, was concerned
that Vatican II renewal was focusing almost exclusively on structures
and other external matters while ignoring spiritual growth and the message
of Jesus. To help priests develop positive self-images, Dwyer added the
methods of the behavioral sciences to classic forms of spirituality. He
encouraged priests to join support groups. Bishop Anderson, pleased with
the results, thought that Dwyer's program had sparked a spiritual revolution
in the diocese creating a strong foundation for other initiatives such
as the United Catholic Appeal, the Priests' Senate and the Diocesan Pastoral
Council.
Vatican II renewal also required a change of heart
and mind in regard to ecumenism. In describing Pope John's efforts to
improve Catholic-Jewish relations, historian Egal Feldman starts with
John's pre-papal career as a Vatican diplomat during World War II. As
Angelo Cardinal Roncalli, he had "exerted heroic efforts to prevent
Jews from being transported to death camps. While serving as papal nuncio
in Istanbul, the future pope offered baptismal certificates to many Jews
in order to prevent their deportation."
As pope, John removed offensive phrases and passages
from Catholic prayers such as "unbelieving Jews." The innovative
pope continued his efforts to improve Catholic-Jewish relations, and at
the suggestion of Jules Isaac, a prominent Jewish historian, the pope
put this issue on the Vatican II agenda. John appointed Augustin Cardinal
Bea, S.J. (1881-1968), the retired rector of the Biblical Institute in
Rome, to head a committee that would prepare a draft of what became known
as NOSTRA AETATE NO. 4. This important document approved by the council
on October 28, 1965, was a blueprint for improving Catholic-Jewish relations.
It rejected the notion that Jews were guilty of deicide and called for
Catholic-Jewish dialogue.
In Duluth, improved relations between Catholics
and Jews were sparked by the friendship of Rabbi Bernard Gelbart and Bishop
Paul Anderson. When Gelbart, a teacher at Cathedral High School, invited
Anderson to speak at the temple, the bishop seized the opportunity to
improve Catholic-Jewish relations.
What should he wear on such an occasion? The rabbi
suggested he dress the way Bishop Fulton Sheen did on his popular television
show, "Life is Worth Living." Anderson, digging the appropriate
apparel out of closets and draws, appeared all decked out in black cassock,
purple feriola, zuchetto, ring, and pectoral cross. The trappings of his
office proved important since they emphasized his official position when
he departed from his prepared text and movingly spoke about the Holocaust,
the genocide of European Jews by the Nazis during World War II. Anderson
"could not remember any Catholic Church leader expressing sorrow
to the Jewish people for the death and mutilation of their brothers and
sisters at Dachau, Belsen and the other horror camps of the Third Reich."
In his capacity as Bishop of Duluth, he "begged forgiveness for any
part that the Christian world played in such a catastrophe."
Many in the temple wept openly. Some still remember
Anderson's 1975 talk as one of the most memorable events of their lives.
For Anderson, the occasion was a touching reminder of the old Jewish lady
who 32 years earlier, had came for his first priestly blessing and hoped
that when her son was a rabbi they could exchange pulpits. The ecumenical
actions of Bishop Anderson and Rabbi Gelbart were an important grassroots
contribution to the improvement of Catholic-Jewish relations.
Social justice was another area of great concern
to the bishop since he believed that renewal could only occur when the
laity realized that the entire People of God, not just bishops, priests
and nuns, had a responsibility to become informed about poverty. A change
of heart and mind was needed because there was "a severe dichotomy...between
the way many Americans wish to live and the way outlined by Christ the
Lord." For those who were not happy unless they lived in an expensive
house in a prestigious neighborhood, he wrote: "I guess it is possible
to live in such surroundings and follow the way pointed out by Jesus in
the Gospels, but at best it appears most difficult." He explained
that riches were not evil in themselves, but a Christian had to remember
that only God was good. The message of Jesus was to share! Anderson maintained
that the real question was "not how much one has or does not have.
It is a question of whom or what is the central value of one's life. Who
or what sits on the throne of one's heart."
In addition to trying to awaken Catholics to the
problems of world-wide hunger and encouraging them to share, the bishop
took action to deal with poverty in his own backyard. Devastating conditions
in the taconite industry, backbone of northeastern Minnesota's economy,
prompted him to establish the Damiano Center in 1982; the center housed
agencies that provided badly needed services to the needy. Bishop Anderson
believed that for Vatican II renewal to flourish, the People of God had
to put Gospel values first and realize that they were their brother's
brother and their sister's sister.
The second class status of women in the Catholic
Church was a thorny issue for the reformed -minded bishop. Despite his
strong conviction that women should be ordained, obedience was important
to him, and he adhered to church law. Anderson could not fulfill women's
dreams of equality at the moment, but he looked to the future with hope.
Although Pope John Paul II was opposed to the ordination of women, Anderson
declared, that "no one has the capacity to see how the spirit will
move in the future."
Bishop Anderson did what he could to improve the
statues of women in the diocese asking the Diocesan Pastoral Council to
establish a task force to examine the issue of women in the church. This
led to a two-day meeting at St. Francis House in mid-May 1976. The discussions
at the conference were a clear indication that the church needed to change
the second class status of women.
In 1980 the bishop secured permission from the
Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura to appoint Mary J. Donahue
a defender of the bond. Donahue was one of the first laywomen in the country
to be appointed to this position on a diocesan matrimonial court.
Though papal policies on the ordination of women
compromised Anderson's stand on social justice, the U.S National Conference
of Catholic Bishops (NCCB) issued statements that provided welcomed guidance
on moral issues raised by the war in Vietnam and violations of human rights
in Central America. Breaking with tradition, the bishops opposed U.S.
military efforts in Vietnam. It was a dramatic change since the bishops
had a strong tradition of vigorously supporting the government in every
military conflict from the War for Independence in the 1770s to World
War II in the 1940s. This patriotic stance, reflecting the minority status
of U.S. Catholics, was part of an effort to prove that Catholics were
"true" Americans and to deflect anti-Catholic bias.
The tradition of supporting U.S. military efforts
continued for much of the Vietnam War, but finally in 1971 the bishops
called for an end to the fighting "with no further delay." In
fact, they called for a Marshall-like plan for Southeast Asia: "We
recognize our nation's moral obligation, together with other nations,
to contribute mightily to the restoration and the development of Southeast
Asia. After World War II, our country launched an unprecedented program
of economic assistance and social reconstruction of war-torn countries.
Certainly we can do no less now." Bishop Anderson strongly supported
the 1971 statement.
Likewise, Anderson's opposition to President Ronald
Reagan's decision to supply arms to El Salvador must be seen in the context
of the NCCB's 1981 "Statement on Central America." Some who
angrily telephoned the bishop to denounce his stand may have been surprised
by the views of the U.S. Catholic Conference.
Though strongly opposed to Communism, the bishops,
reminded Catholics that "the Latin American Church has repeatedly
stated in the last decade that external subversion is not the primary
threat or principal cause of conflict in these countries. The dominant
challenge is the internal conditions of poverty and the denial of basic
human rights." They added "any conception of the problems in
Central America which is cast principally in terms of global security
issues, military responses, arms transfers, and preservation of a situation
which fails to promote meaningful participation of the majority of the
population in their societies is, in our view, profoundly mistaken."
Clearly, the bishops were appalled by the murder of Archbishop Oscar Romero
of El Salvador and four United States women serving as missionaries in
that country.
Bishop Anderson publicly supported the statements
issued by the NCCB on the Vietnam War and Central America. Given the strong
anti-Communist ideology of many Catholics, it is not surprising that he
faced opposition and even anger, but he was convinced that the NCCB was
right and that a renewed church actively pursued social justice.
In addition to fostering renewal through social
justice, Bishop Anderson embarked on a bold diocesan initiative, "Call
to Action," designed to implement the People of God vision. Duluth's
"Call to Action" surfaced grassroots concerns and fostered greater
shared responsibility. Laymen and women participated in setting diocesan
goals and objectives. The rather complicated process involved discussions
in the parishes, a survey, and a 1977 plenary session of over 200 parish
representatives and members of the Diocesan Pastoral Council. The goals
were to be announced at an all-diocese mass to be held on Pentecost Sunday
1978.
Bishop Anderson announced his plan for a diocesan-wide
celebration of Pentecost at a 1975 pilgrimage in Rome urging those present
to spread the word and spark enthusiasm. He hoped to gather 40,000 or
50,000 or more so that the congregation could see that the church was
people! Thick fog and cold rain led to a much-smaller-than-expected gathering
at Griggs Field in Duluth. It was heartbreaking for the bishop, but the
Eucharist was celebrated and the "Call to Action" goals were
proclaimed: strengthening families, renewing spirituality and developing
community. It was indeed a tribute to the bishop that so many braved the
weather.
Paul Anderson, deeply committed to renewal and
the People of God vision of the church, was very encouraged by "the
new direction" set by Pope John Paul I. When John Paul's predecessor,
Paul VI, died on August 6, 1978, Bishop Anderson was hiking in the White
Mountains of New Hampshire. The next morning, in a country store in Lincoln,
he learned of the pontiff's death. Having registered at the North American
College in Rome for a month of prayer and study, the bishop was looking
forward to spending time with 44 U.S. bishops and to being present for
the "coronation" of the new pope.
There was no "coronation." John Paul
I was not crowned with the tiara, the triple crown, but chose instead
to inaugurate his ministry with the pallium--an inch-wide circular band
of white wool with two pendant strips, one in front and one in back. The
circular band, worn around the shoulders by the pope, archbishops and
some bishops, is marked with six dark purple crosses. A symbol of the
plentitude of the pontifical office, it rests for a night on the tomb
of Saint Peter. The moving ceremony took place on September 3, 1978.
Anderson penned a graphic description of the colorful
scene. "Dignitaries came: African diplomats wearing native dress,
Indian women in their saris, queens from Spain and Belgium wearing their
high lace mantillas, finely tailored diplomats from Latin America, people
from China and Japan and the islands of the South Pacific, not to mention
American and European ambassadors and charges d'affaires. They spoke powerfully
of the universality of the Church and the world-wide importance of the
See of Peter."
The bishop was impressed with the new pope and
filled with hope: "I don't think I shall ever forget the feeling
of peace and joy that overwhelmed me that night." At an audience,
held on Thursday, September 21, 1978, John Paul talked about many things,
but what stood out boldly in Anderson's mind were the pope's words about
bishops as pastors. John Paul urged the bishops to stay close to the people
telling them how he would "visit parishes and stay sometimes for
two or three days at a time." His "frank and open style"
and his relaxed mood made the audience a "family-like" visit.
John Paul, with his pastoral emphasis, touched Anderson's heart and mind.
The new pope was a kindred spirit. Anderson declared: "Coming away
that day I am sure that we bishops felt the Church was embarking upon
a new era of warmth, trust and collegiality that was so personified in
this personal, humble and loving man John Paul I."
Before Anderson left Rome, John Paul was dead.
If the pope had lived would he have fulfilled Anderson's high expectations?
We will never know. His thirty-three day pontificate was far too brief
to accurately assess his vision of the church. The Duluth bishop, grieving
at the loss of the pope, made a final visit to the tombs of the two popes
who led the Second Vatican Council, John XXIII and Paul VI, and wondered
where John Paul I would be placed. After a short visit to Ireland, he
returned to Duluth and continued his efforts to foster renewal.
Chapter
IV
The
Laity: "Called and Gifted"
After his return to Duluth, Bishop Anderson continued
his efforts to implement the People of God vision of the church stressing
pastoral councils, small neighborhood communities, and social justice.
In addition to his work in the diocese, he played an important role on
a national committee that drafted a document on the role of the laity.
The document, "Called and Gifted: The American Catholic Laity 1980,
Reflections of the U.S. Bishops," addressed a wide-range of topics
including lay ministry, a vital aspect of Vatican II renewal.
Anderson's interest in lay ministry was in the
tradition of one of Minnesota's most notable prelates, Archbishop John
Ireland of St. Paul. At the turn of the twentieth century, the archbishop
advocated greater lay initiative. He declared, "Let there be individual
action. Layman need not wait for priest, nor priest, for bishop, nor bishop
for pope."
Ireland was deeply interested in the history of
the church in the upper Midwest. He wrote lay persons "were the vanguard
of the priesthood, they prepared the way and drew after them the priesthood,
and before the priesthood came they did, as far as they could do, the
work of the priesthood, instructing children in the faith and meeting
together for prayers on Sunday. The tradition of early settlements handing
down in their respective districts the names of laymen familiarly styled
priests or bishops, give proof of this lay apostolate."
It is obvious that Ireland both recognized and
appreciated the laity's important role in the history of the church in
the upper Midwest. Without using the words "lay ministry," Ireland
was clearly pleased that laypersons did the work of the church. Despite
his efforts lay ministry remained a controversial idea in the Catholic
Church. Some priests opposed it fearing that it threatened their authority
and prestige.
Bishop Anderson was fully aware that lay ministry
raised troubling questions about the relationship between priests and
laity. Despite the problems, he thought that lay ministry was essential
in keeping the church truly alive. With the steady decline in the numbers
of priests, the church, more than ever, needed to awaken the sleeping
giant of lay ministry.
Given his exposure to the lay-oriented Christian
Family Movement, Anderson was ready, indeed eager for lay ministry. The
Mystical Body concept that informed CFM prepared Anderson for the Vatican
II understanding of the church as the People of God. Historian Jeffrey
Burns explains that "CFM was one of the earliest Catholic groups
to vigorously popularize the concept of the Mystical Body of Christ and
to push it to its logical conclusion. Given authority by Pius XII's 1943
encyclical on the Mystical Body, the concept introduced a new model of
the Church." In St. Paul's analogy, the "Church is a living
body, of which Christ is the head and the faithful are the members. This
was heady stuff for the laity, who were now being told that they were
the Church."
Moreover, the concept of the Mystical Body "suggested
a new approach to relationships within the Church. Rather than reinforcing
the traditional hierarchical structure of the Church, the Mystical Body
instructed that each person was responsible to and for other members of
the Body." Burns adds, "few groups were better suited to implement
the council's call for renewal." After all Vatican II's "new
definition of Church as the People of God came as nothing new to CFMers,
who had been steeped in the theology of the Mystical Body and who had
been told for close to two decades that they were the Church."
Bishop Anderson, utilizing the principles of CFM,
argued that lay ministry would be effective only when Catholics realized
that the church was all the People of God, not just the pope, bishops
and priests. He maintained that laypeople played a vital role in ministry
since they lived in both the church and the world and brought the church
and its Christian message to a waiting world and the issues of the world
to the church. Anderson was given a rare opportunity to help shape the
national discussion on lay ministry when he was invited to serve on a
committee drafting a document on the laity for the U.S bishops. The bishops
planned to issue this document of pastoral reflections in 1980 to commemorate
the 15th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council's Decree on the Apostolate
of the Laity.
Kathleen Walsh puts the Vatican II decree into
context, explaining that "the idea of organized lay apostolic action
is usually traced back to Pope Pius XI (1922-1939), under whose inspirations
many lay organizations were started. It was described as 'Catholic Action,'
and in it the laity were intended to operate under strict episcopal direction.
This reflected the belief that the hierarchy's was the true apostolate
and the laity's derived from theirs." In contrast, the Vatican II
Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity opened with the "emphatic statement
that the call to the apostolate comes to every Christian with baptism."
She adds that the Vatican II document was designed "to acknowledge
a demand for and assumption of greater responsibility and autonomy of
organization and action on the part of an increasingly better-educated
laity, and to intensify and broaden this action."
To commemorate this important Vatican II decree
the bishops issued "Called and Gifted," written by the Committee
on the Laity chaired by Bishop Albert H. Ottenwaller of Steubenville,
Ohio. Ottenwaller, like Anderson, had extensive experience as a parish
priest and he was eager to have the Duluth bishop on the committee knowing
that he would speak from a pastoral perspective. Anderson more than met
Ottenweller's high expectations thoughtfully articulating the following
positions: the document should be succinct, in non-technical language,
and should speak to the heart as well as the mind. In the deliberations,
Anderson stressed that the laity was gifted and should play a significant
role in the mission of the church arguing that the term "ministry"
should be applied to certain lay activities.
Though based on his own deep spirituality and
extensive pastoral experience, Anderson discovered that his use of the
term "ministry" to describe lay activities, was very controversial.
Some on the committee argued that the term should be limited to the clergy
and that lay actions should be considered "service" while some
others were willing to extend the definition of ministry to include lay
church professionals. In contrast, Anderson opposed narrow definitions
stressing that laypeople ministered to each other and that helping Catholics
realize this was an important part of renewal. To resolve the dilemma,
he suggested regional meetings to learn what laymen and women had to say.
This broke the deadlock! As committee members listened they realized that
laypersons did in fact minister to one another. Thanks to Paul Anderson,
the U.S. bishops did apply the term "ministry" to lay actions.
As Anderson wished "Called and Gifted"
was succinct, used nontechnical language, spoke to the heart as well as
the mind, and opened with the People of God vision of the church. The
bishops recognized that "one of the chief characteristics of laymen
and women today is their growing sense of being adult members of the church.
Adulthood implies knowledge, experience and awareness, freedom and responsibility,
and mutuality in relationships. It is true, however, that the experience
of laypersons 'as church members' has not always reflected this understanding
of adulthood. Now, thanks to the impetus of the Second Vatican Council,
laywomen and men feel themselves called to exercise the same mature interdependence
and practical self-direction which characterize them in other areas of
life."
Moreover, baptism and confirmation empowered laypeople
to perform certain ministries that they exercised in both the world and
the church. Turning first to the world, the bishops declared that "Christian
service or ministry broadly understood includes civic and public activity,
response to the imperatives of peace and justice, resolution of social,
political and economic conflicts, especially as they influence the poor,
oppressed and minorities." The laity were in the vanguard. They were
engaged "directly in the task of relating Christian values and practices
to complex questions such as those of business ethics, political choice,
economic security, quality of life, cultural development and family planning."
"Called and Gifted" also praised the
development of lay ministries in the church such as service on pastoral
councils, school boards and committees dealing with finances, liturgy
and ecumenism. Others exercised special roles as ministers of the eucharist,
teachers and pastoral assistants. The document provided the bishops with
a welcomed opportunity to acknowledge and thank the laymen and women who
were serving in the missions.
Highlighting the contributions of women, "Called
and Gifted" declared that "special mention must be made of women,
who in the past have not always been allowed to take their proper role
in the church's ministry." While the document called for "an
increased role for women in the ministries of the church" it did
not endorse Anderson's view that women should be ordained.
In committee deliberations, Anderson insisted
that laymen and women were gifted, and he urged church leaders to listen
to their ideas and concerns. "Called and Gifted" recognized
that the laity was "making an indispensable contribution to the experience
of the people of God" and that the full impact of their contribution
was only in its "beginning form in the post-Vatican II church."
The bishops made it clear that they had "spoken only to listen."
It was not their intention to rigidly define or control the discussion.
They simply wished to take their place and exercise their role "among
the people of God." They now waited for the
next word.
The document also dealt with another area close to Anderson's heart and
mind: small Christian communities. He used a Neighborhood Renewal Ministry
to encourage the formation of small Christian communities. Core team members
included: Father James Scheurer, a diocesan priest, Sister Patricia Schneider,
S.S.N.D., Sister Joan Gerards, O.S.F., and Father Thomas Maney, M.M.,
and 30 lay volunteers. This successful program, which attracted regional
attention, shaped the bishop's views and convinced him that Vatican II
renewal really took place in small communities. "Called and Gifted"
recognized that since laypeople experienced "intimacy, support, acceptance
and availability in family life, they seek the same in their Christian
communities." This was "leading to a review of parish size,
organization, priorities and identity."
Anderson's ideas about lay ministry were in the
end decisive. Aware that he had no graduate degrees and unsure of his
intellectual ability, he spoke from his own deep faith and pastoral experience.
He was convinced that lived experience gave concrete meaning to theological
concepts.
Paul Anderson's legacy is not found in buildings.
He was not a brick and mortar bishop. His major contributions were his
profound impact on people and his ideas that grew out of his interaction
with them. Much of his intellectual legacy is preserved in "Called
and Gifted." Many of the ideas in this document are a challenge to
this very day. The church still needs to awaken the sleeping giant of
lay ministry if it is to bring Christ to a waiting world.
Chapter
V
FINAL
YEARS: "CALLED TO BE AN INTIMATE FRIEND OF THE LORD"
Bishop Anderson had incessantly worked to renew
the church in his diocese and beyond. He finally realized that he had
to take care of himself as well as serve others. Having long appreciated
art, he began to take painting lessons from an accomplished artist, Sister
Mary Charles McGough, O.S.B. Painting with water colors changed his life!
He learned that painting helped him focus, relax and forget the burdens
of his office. Moreover, art enabled him to be creative, something the
structure of the church often did not.
In fall 1982, a beaming Paul Anderson posed for
a photographer with one of his paintings. The photograph, which appeared
in OUTLOOK, was used in an announcement of his exhibit, "Simple Gifts"
at the College of St. Scholastica. His art even helped the poor. Writing
to Sister Mary Evelyn Jegen, Anderson mentioned that when the Damiano
Center for the poor opened in Duluth, he had "painted a picture of
San Damiano to be hung in the building. Someone suggested that we have
prints made and perhaps offer them to people who would donate to the cause
of helping the poor.... We have only had them for two days and already
700 dollars have come in from 7 separate donors. When I started this painting
a few years ago, I never imagined that some day it would be put at the
disposal of the poor."
Though creative in art, Anderson found that heading
a diocese was often not creative. Moreover, it prevented him from doing
the pastoral work that he felt called to do. Always more of a pastor than
an administrator, he was eager for a new more creative ministry--a ministry
that was closely connected with Vatican II renewal. He wanted to spark
spiritual growth that would lead to a change of heart and mind. The way
to do this, he argued, was to work with priests who in turn would share
spiritual values with parishioners. Believing that a bishop should not
head a diocese for more than ten or twelve years, he hoped to conclude
his service in Duluth and purse a new ministry in spiritual direction.
In 1978 he discussed his intention to seek a new
ministry with officials of the Sacred Congregation for Bishops in Rome.
He learned that the Holy See expected bishops to administer their dioceses
until age 75, unless suffering from significant health problems. Despite
this negative response, Anderson, at the end of his tenth years in Duluth,
requested permission to resign from the Duluth post and assume a new ministry.
Permission was denied.
He tried again in 1982, discussing his ideas for
a new ministry with Archbishop John R. Roach, Metropolitan of the Province
of St. Paul. The Duluth bishop hoped to work with Father Vincent Dwyer
in the field of priestly renewal--leading retreats and serving as a spiritual
director. When he listed possible assignments, he did include returning
to the Diocese of Sioux Falls to assist Bishop Paul V. Dudley and serve
as the diocesan Vicar for Spiritual Renewal. Though returning to Sioux
Falls was not his top choice, it did appeal to church officials who thought
that 65 was too young to retire from administration and preferred to keep
him in the familiar structure.
On August 17, 1982, Anderson held a press conference
to announce his resignation as ordinary of the Diocese of Duluth. He made
it clear that he was not retiring, but pursuing a new ministry and that
he would continue to head the diocese as apostolic administrator until
a new bishop was named.
Anderson's 14 years of leadership was celebrated
in October with a mass at Holy Rosary Cathedral and a dinner at the Duluth
Arena-Auditorium. Given the bishop's close ties with the Jewish community,
it was most appropriate that Isadore Crystal, a member of the Temple Israel
Synagogue, gave the innovation. Monsignor Patrick McDowell, speaking what
was in many hearts, addressed the bishop: "You have grown and you
have given us a chance to grow. You have helped us to understand what
it means to be a Catholic Christian in 1982." McDowell's remarks
were indeed appropriate! Though many of Anderson's programs, especially
in diocesan governance, have not endured, his deep faith, spirituality
and commitment to the People of God vision of the church touched and changed
many lives. His Vatican II renewal program had achieved its central purpose:
it had fostered internal changes of heart and mind. Because of his efforts
many developed a new sense of prayer and changed their attitudes about
themselves and their role in the church.
Paul Anderson, in his own gentle way, had sparked
a spiritual revolution. As the bishop's brother Philip so accurately predicted:
"Because so much of what we learn is hindsight, I rather suspect
that many people in Duluth will suddenly realize who their bishop was
after he has left them."
The departing bishop handled public farewells
with grace and charm, but his heart was heavy. Leaving Duluth proved far
more difficult than he had ever imagined. He fretted about his new assignment:
Would he be able to concentrate on spiritual direction or would he become
mired in the duties of an auxiliary bishop? Moreover, as the time for
departure drew near, he became more and more anxious about the impending
separation from friends--friends he had laughed and cried with, friends
who had provided emotional support, enriched his life, and sparked spiritual
growth.
In light of his anxieties, it was indeed fortunate
that he was able to make a retreat in the summer of 1983. His retreat
at the Avila Centre of Spiritual Renewal in Thunder Bay, Ontario prepared
him to say goodbye to his life in Duluth. Thanks to the advice of his
spiritual director and his own fervent prayer, the move to South Dakota
became less and less traumatic as he realized that it was a homecoming--once
again he would be serving with his two seminary classmates and friends,
Monsignor John McEneaney and Father Leonard Stanton.
nbsp; Extended reflection produced an important insight
into his core goal as a bishop. Who were the Apostles, he asked? His answer
was telling: they were the intimate friends of the Lord! If bishops were
to be successors to the Apostles, they must be intimate friends of the
Lord. Deep prayer was needed. With renewed energy and a sense of purpose
he focused on his core goal: to become an intimate friend of the Lord!
Once in South Dakota, he found that his duties
as an auxiliary bishop--masses, confirmations, parish visits, ordination
of deacons, and talks--occupied most of his time; the long distances between
parishes made this important ministry especially time consuming. Although
he had the title Vicar for Spiritual Renewal, Anderson was not able to
focus on spiritual direction to the degree he wished.
His hope for a nontraditional ministry did not
fully materialize, but he was blessed with the beginnings of a Christian
community. His warm personality and infectious spirituality drew people
to the new St. Francis House, a cottage on the shores of Lake Kampeska,
where guests could pray and heal. As always, Paul Anderson was a sympathetic,
nonjudgmental spiritual advisor, but above all a friend.
The South Dakota years also included one of the
highlights of his life. In Advent 1985 he traveled to Central America
to lead a two-and-a-half-week retreat for priests and sisters who staffed
the mission in San Lucas Toliman, Guatemala. Anderson was blessed with
kindred spirits: his friend and spiritual advisor, Father Richard Rice,
S.J., and a missionary from the Diocese of New Ulm, Minnesota, Monsignor
Gregory T. Schaffer. Anderson's talks, infused with his positive attitude,
stressed heartfelt themes--the People of God, the need to listen to the
people and lay ministry.
A learner as well as a teacher, Anderson was impressed
with the materially poor, but spiritually rich Guatemalans. He thought
that North Americans could learn a great deal from their culture with
its stress on the extended family, cooperation and community. Lay catechists
were vital to the success of the mission and reinforced Anderson's conviction
that lay ministry was an effective instrument in spreading the Gospel.
Despite his blessings, his final years were clouded.
In October 1986 he wrote to Monsignor John Tracy Ellis, an eminent church
historian, expressing his deep concern that the church was moving away
from the spirit of Vatican II. In particular, Anderson was distressed
by the controversy surrounding Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen of Seattle.
Conservative Catholics, riled by change and turmoil,
organized to protest what they regarded as destructive ideas and practices.
They wrote letters to Rome denouncing reform minded bishops and theologians,
who in their eyes had capitulated to modernity or even worse drifted into
heresy. As historian Gerald P. Fogarty, S.J. explains a letter-writing
campaign to church officials had "contributed to an apostolic visitation"
of Hunthausen "and late in 1985, to the appointment of Donald Wuerl
as auxiliary bishop with special faculties over certain aspects of the
administration of the archdiocese. By the summer of 1986, the situation
became so untenable that Hunthausen announced his inability to administer
his diocese under such restrictions."
Writing to John Tracy Ellis, Anderson stated that
the controversy over Hunthausen must be a heavy burden for Ellis as he
documented "the history of the Church for this day and age."
He declared that it was "also a burden for someone like myself who
became so caught up in the wonderful reform of Vatican Council II."
Recalling happier days, he remembered when Archbishop Jean Jadot was named
Apostolic Delegate. Jadot, a Belgian, who served from 1973 to 1980, was
noted for his informal style and his efforts to promote episcopal candidates
who were pastoral and collegial. Anderson noted that the Jadot era was
such a promising time, "but now it seems that history has taken another
turn." Out of favor in Rome, Jadot became the only delegate to the
United States never to be created a cardinal. Anderson, with faith in
the Holy Spirit, believed that things would change again and that the
future held bright promise.
Planning to retire at age 75, Anderson looked
forward to living on Duluth's Park Point, where he would be close to nature,
enjoy the company of friends and deepen his spiritual life. It was not
to be.
On December 31, 1986, suffering from prostate
cancer, he underwent surgery at St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota.
After postoperative care, he was returned to his own room, where he greeted
his sister Dorothy Antonucci and Bishop Dudley. He mentioned that he was
in pain. To control the pain, a nurse gave him an injection of Demerol
and he went into a deep sleep. Dorothy noticed that her brother was not
breathing and summoned help. Although resuscitation returned his heartbeat
and blood pressure, it was too late.
Arriving in the afternoon, Sister Mary Charles
was shocked to find the bishop on life-support and could tell that the
doctors thought that he was brain dead. Sister Mary Charles, Bishop Dudley
and Dorothy stayed with him praying, singing and touching. Others came:
Monsignor John McEneaney, Donna Effinger, the bishop's brother Leo, with
his wife Ellen and their sons Phil and Paul, Father Richard Rice, Father
James Scheuer, Margaret Gates, and Pat Leib.
With heartfelt emotion, Sister Mary Charles details
the events of the bishop's last four days. His vital signs weakened several
times and in the early morning hours of January 4, 1987, the Feast of
the Epiphany, the 44th anniversary of his ordination, friends and relatives
gathered to see him "off on the journey of new life." They prayed,
shared memories and sang hymns. Mary Charles vividly describes the "gentle
beauty" of the verses of "Kumbayah" which were "sung
over and over, like a mantra." The community sang "'how we love
him, Lord, Kumbayah.... Take him home, my Lord, take him home.'"
Paul Francis Anderson died as he had lived, surrounded by a loving Christian
community.
On January 7, 1987, Paul Anderson's life and ministry
were celebrated at a memorial mass in St. Joseph's Cathedral in Sioux
Fall. In his homily, Father Leonard Stanton, a friend from seminary days,
recalled the bishop's joy in living, story telling and his special gift
of encouraging and healing. Stanton's well-drawn sketch identified an
enduring trait: Paul Anderson was real--he never pretended to be someone
other than who he really was.
In Duluth the mass of Christian burial was celebrated
on January 9 in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary. Archbishop John
Roach, Bishop Robert Brom and Bishop Paul Dudley presided. Bishop Anderson
was buried in a simple plywood coffin made by the Benedictine monks of
Blue Cloud Abbey, Marvin, South Dakota. Blue Cloud held a special place
in his heart since he felt the Holy Spirit had touched him there. He was
buried in his plain "beat up" miter, which was so typical of
his simple lifestyle and symbolic of his commitment to social justice
for the poor. His "heavy-soled walking shoes" were fitting for
a man who loved the outdoors and drew strength from nature.
In his moving homily, Monsignor John McEneaney
captured the essence of his seminary classmate, confidant and close friend.
McEneaney's reflections, published in Sioux Falls' BISHOP'S BULLETIN,
are a remarkable tribute to Anderson's life and ministry. He pointed out
that Anderson loved life and the beauty of nature. The bishop's appreciation
of beauty could also be seen in his gift for painting. He "captured
some of the beautiful things he saw in God's creation."
McEneaney emphasized one of Anderson's greatest
gifts: the ability to be a true friend. When he was "a parish priest
in South Dakota, his rectory was always a Mecca for his brother priests.
People were welcomed, especially the lonely, the shy and the troubled."
Later as a bishop his "residence was a marvelous house of hospitality--it
was a place of refuge and renewal--it was a house of prayer--it was a
home filled with love." The bishop "had an extraordinary gift
for reaching out to people, touching them and making them feel accepted,
bringing out the best in them." McEneaney reminded the congregation
of Anderson "rare gift of making one feel as though he were the only
one enjoying his full attention, and he had all the time in the world
for you."
Clearly, the Vatican II vision of the church as
the People of God was central to Anderson's ministry and understanding
of the church. McEneaney stressed that Anderson was open to the Holy Spirit
and "caught the true sense of the renewal called for by the Fathers
of the 2nd Vatican Council. He read widely and studied; above all, he
prayed and with contagious enthusiasm and a fine sense of balance, he
led his people to remarkable growth."
McEneaney was right! Anderson had loved, prayed
and led people to the realization of what Vatican II was all about--a
change of heart and mind. His work on "Called and Gifted," the
1980 document on the laity, and his leadership in Duluth and Sioux Falls
helped engender a new attitude toward the church and the role of laymen
and women. The bishop, viewing the church as the People of God, believed
that laymen and women ministered to each other and that lay ministry was
central to renewal.
In a powerful conclusion, McEneaney highlighted,
Anderson's warm personality, enthusiasm for life, love of nature, and
contagious faith in God. "If Bishop Paul could speak to us today
in his charmingly relaxed way--after telling us a story--I suspect he
would say something like this:
"I've had a full and exciting life. I've
loved my family, my friends, all the people whom I was called to serve,
and have been blessed with their love. I delighted in the seashore and
other treasures of my native New England, the great prairies of South
Dakota, the woods and lakes of Minnesota. I thank God for my Catholic
faith, for his Church, and for the gift of my priesthood and episcopacy.
"My reluctance to leave these, and all of
you in this life is [made] easier by the confidence that the new life
will surpass it!
"SEE
YOU THERE"
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