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  March 21, 2005 VOL. 43, NO. 6Oakland, CA

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articles list
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Pope’s role in Holy Week uncertain
as doctors advise limitations of speech

Berkeley professor wins $1.5 million for science-theology dialogue

Church official urges Congress to help
eradicate ‘scourge’ of human trafficking

New Catholic chronicles his labored journey to faith

San Pablo man’s journey to Church began in Rome

Bishop Cummins honored

Priest offers behind-the-scenes guide
to Gibson’s ‘Passion of the Christ’

EWTN to air Holy Week liturgies

Meditation brings peace to women in prison

Prayer has reached
to harshest prisons

Martyred nun remembered as ‘mother’ of the Amazon

Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit shows oldest biblical fragments

Parochial administrator named for Walnut Creek parish

Prominent Catholics join in support of Schiavo

Presentation Sisters to mark 150 years
with April 10 celebration in Berkeley

Fremont priest returns from delivering tsunami aid

Religious educator says faith is best served family style

 

COMMENTARY
Tips for turning travel into pilgrimage

OBITUARY
Sister Mary Ann Whittman, SHF

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

placeholder Parochial administrator named
for Walnut Creek parish

The past several weeks have been a blur for Father James McGee, the new parochial administrator at St. John Vianney Parish in Walnut Creek.

Since his appointment became effective on Jan. 24, the priest has moved to a second parish in the span of six months, met parishioners, conversed with members of the buildings/grounds and finance committees, gotten acquainted with the pastoral staff, handled emergency calls at nearby John Muir Hospital, learned how the parish operates, helped spearhead the parish’s upcoming 40th anniversary … it’s enough to leave a priest breathless. “It’s been a whirlwind,” he said during a rare moment between meetings.

But one thing is clear to the priest — he has landed among good people. “The people here are wonderful, they are wonderfully gracious and very welcoming,” he said.

As the new administrator and the parish continue to get to know one another, Father McGee is enthusiastic about the journey. He brings a suitcase full of skills and experience.

A native of Scranton, PA, Father McGee, 50, earned his bachelor’s degree in economics from the College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts. He received his seminary training at Theological College at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. and earned his Master’s degree in Divinity at Catholic University.

Ordained for the Diocese of Scranton in 1985, he served as an associate pastor at two parishes before joining the Sulpicians (Society of St. Sulpice), a group of diocesan priests who teach in seminaries. Sulpicians are the founders of the first diocesan seminaries.

Father McGee became assistant dean and professor of Christian Spirituality at St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore, the first seminary established in the U.S. He worked there for three years before he moved to the West Coast. He did his graduate studies, in management and organizational behavior, at the Hass School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.

Then he worked at Santa Clara University at the Leavey School of Business and began teaching spirituality and management leadership in the business school there.

He came to the Oakland Diocese in 2002 and became parochial vicar at St. Bonaventure Parish in Concord where his ministry included “a lot of work in the parish council and parish planning.” He hopes to continue to focus on these in his new assignment.

In July 2004, he was named parochial vicar at Christ the King Parish in Pleasant Hill, an assignment that represented a kind of homecoming for the priest.
During his doctoral studies in Berkeley in the early 1990s, Father McGee spent many hours “helping out” at the parish.

“I did more than weekend supply. I was heavily involved in the parish with adult programming, doing spiritual direction, working with planning for their social ministry, things like that,” he recalled.

At St. John Vianney Parish, Father McGee hopes to focus some attention on the link between spirituality and business, an arena of evangelization that the Catholic Church and other religious traditions have neglected, he said. Among the topics he wants to address is how spirituality “serves as the
foundation” of norms for good and just behavior.
“It is a both a need within the Church and society at large,” he said, “particularly when you consider that in the United States 95 percent of the population spends most of its time and energy and resources in the for-profit enterprise, business enterprise.”

He will speak about the issues in homilies and parish workshops and hopes eventually to offer workshops for other parishes as well. “All of that will depend on time,” he said.

In the meantime, he is training his sights on the parish’s plans to commemorate its 40th anniversary — a time to “lift up and honor the past, celebrate our present, and dream a future to enhance our community.” The major celebration is slated for Oct. 1-2.

Other recently announced pastoral assignments include: Divine Word Father Joseph Parekkatt, parochial vicar, to St. Edward Parish in Newark, effective March 15; and Father Dante Tamayo, parochial vicar, to St. Isidore Parish, Danville, effective April 15.

Father James McGee


Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland

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