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On the Road: The History of Paulist
Missions
by Father John E. Lynch, C.S.P.
On January 16, 1875, the first Paulist
missionaries to California set sail from
New York, traveling around the horn of
South America. They were Father Adrian
Rosecrans, Father Joshua Bodfish, Father
George Deshon, Father Walter Elliott,
Father William Dwyer and Father Edward
Brady.
Other missions followed
in rapid succession. Within the first
year, missionaries had traveled to New
York City, Rhode Island, Kentucky,
Michigan, and even Quebec. The New York
newspapers took note of the quality of
preaching that drew overflow
congregations: "As early as four o'clock
every morning the streets in the
vicinity of St. Mary's were literally
alive with crowds of men and women
advancing towards the church."
On a mission, over the
course of one or two weeks, an
instruction was given every morning at
5:30 and a formal sermon preached at
7:30 in the evening. The sick were
visited; school children encouraged;
confessions heard. The mission journals
note that sinners repented, rum sellers
reformed, children were baptized. The
community grew in numbers, and by 1875
they were preaching missions in
California and Nevada.
In San Francisco, a
record 9,000 people received communion
during a mission. Father Alexander
Doyle, the first native Californian to
be ordained a Paulist, founded the
Apostolic Mission House on the campus of
The Catholic University of America in
Washington, D.C., in 1904 to train
diocesan priests in the art of
preaching.
With the advent of radio, the Paulists
established Station WLWL in New York
City in 1925. A decade later they
outfitted three motor trailers as
chapels, with generators to provide
light and power for public address
systems. The trailer missions brought
Catholicism to the rural areas of South
Carolina, Tennessee and Utah.
When television became
available after World War II, the
Paulists sought opportunities to
proclaim the Gospel in that medium. A
popular attention-grabber, both on the
screen and in an auditorium or church,
was the pulpit dialogue, a quasi-debate,
in which one priest would present the
Catholic position and another assume the
persona of a learned objector.
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