Monday, May 31, 2010

Plans to eliminate Masses, visits from priests to minister to the ill & bless newborns at county owned and operated Santa Clara Valley Medical Center have been scuttled.

This story reminded me when I worked as a Lieutenant in a private hospital in New York City, we had Mass in a small chapel on Sundays and Holy Days for the doctors, nurses and employees who had to work that day. I assisted the celebrating priest many times as deacon. What was also wonderful, there was a tabernacle in the chapel where Our Lord was always present and Communion could be brought to a dying patient as Viaticuum even in the night! What a blessing for the sick and dying! And this was a secular hospital too!
Deacon John


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"Not just spend money on Catholic rituals"

Compromise reached, plan to end Masses at Santa Clara County's public hospital cancelled – for now


Plans to eliminate Masses and visits from priests to minister to the ill and bless newborns at county owned and operated Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose have been scuttled after the parties involved were able to reach a compromise, the San Jose Mercury News reports. 

The county had threatened to eliminate the Masses, which have been offered at the hospital for more than 25 years, as a cost-cutting measure and to downplay Catholicism in favor of a more ecumenical viewpoint. The county had planned to terminate the Masses in February. 

"Valley Medical Center had intended to end the Mass and regular priestly visits for two reasons: to save the county an annual $30,000 it had contracted with the diocese, and to develop a program that better reflected the rainbow of religions in the county, and not just spend money on Catholic rituals," the Mercury News reported May 26. "Thus far no other religious group has asked for regular services at the hospital, although clergy members from various faiths do visit when patients request them." 

But, when 76-year-old Theresa Asquith learned in late February only one more Mass was planned at the hospital, "she phoned up high-powered players to uphold the religious tradition," the newspaper reported. Asquith, said the 
Mercury News, is "the retired co-founder of Mother's Milk Bank, who has attended Mass at the county hospital for more than 25 years." 

Among the leaders who became involved was Santa Clara County Supervisor Dave Cortese, a parishioner at St. Francis of Assisi Church in San Jose, who contacted all the parties involved, according to the newspaper. "Over the past three months, this agreement has been hammered out by Cortese, the California Province of the Society of Jesus, the vicar general at the Diocese of San Jose, and Sylvia Gallegos, acting director of the Santa Clara Valley Health & Hospital System," said the 
Mercury News

The details of the compromise, said the San Jose newspaper, include: "The two Jesuit priests, the Revs. Gene Corbett and William Stout, who are both semiretired and in their 70s, will continue to lead Saturday and Sunday Mass in the meditation room, for free, as long as they are willing and able. They will also be available to visit hospital patients, where one in four are Catholic, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m." 

"But these are older gentlemen, and they won't be taking the emergency night calls anymore,'' Fr. Alfred Naucke, an assistant to the Jesuit Provincial in Los Gatos, told the 
Mercury News

"That responsibility will now fall to the diocese, which can send out priests for after-hour calls, which is what they do for all other non-Catholic hospitals," said the newspaper. "There are no promises that once Corbett and Stout stop celebrating Mass and visiting the sick that replacements will step up."


Article came from http://www.calcatholic.com/