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PARISH HISTORY
The Idea
The Site
The Staff
Temporary
Facilities
Parish Name
Our First Mass
Our Church Family
Church Programs
Dedication of
the Church
The Idea
The idea of a new parish in the Rochester Hills area started
in 1988 when St. Andrew's Church in
Rochester
reached 2,500 families. Regional Bishop Dale Melczek encouraged Fr.
Eugene R. Strain, the pastor of St. Andrew's, to look into the
possibilities. Fr. Strain asked parishioner Ken Wigton to take him up
in his single engine Mooney to reconnoiter. They found plenty of homes
and home sites south of Avon and north of M59, roughly in the area
between Livernois and Dequindre which constituted the southern boundary
of St. Andrew's. Fr. Strain invited Bishop Melczek to take the next
flight with him.
Cardinal Edmund Szoka blessed the project by establishing the new parish
of St. Mary of the Hills canonically. The Cardinal next listed the
parish for priests to apply as founding pastor. Fr. Strain spent a long
time discerning the movement of the Holy Spirit and considering his own
capabilities and the risk involved: there was no guarantee anyone would
leave St. Andrew's because it was a great parish with everything built
and practically no debt. On the other hand, the new parish would have
nothing by way of buildings or money. Fr. Strain said "I thank God that
I applied and that the assignment board and the Cardinal gave me the job
which allowed me to experience the truth of Socrates' definition of
happiness: stretching one's abilities for a good cause. Therefore,
after 19 years of teaching seminarians as a member of the Society of St.
Sulpice and after 18 years as a pastor, I had the rare honor and
challenge of starting a new parish. Thank God for vocation!"
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The Site
A word about this site: about twenty years earlier the Archdiocese
bought ten acres at the northwest corner of Hamlin and John R. In its
wisdom the diocese makes purchases in potential growth areas so that
when a parish is eventually proposed, it has land that was relatively
inexpensive; such was St. Mary's case. The site at the time of purchase
was buildable by prevailing State law. However, the new wetland's laws
made it unbuildable. This was learned, after careful study and testing,
at Christmas time 1989; hence, the Lord's first Christmas gift to St.
Mary's was adversity.
St. Mary's started looking for a new site within the Parish boundaries.
There weren't many because a church in this area must now be built on a
main thoroughfare. The search committee settled on John R. Nursery which
became the new site for the parish. There were advantages: no toxic
waste and a lot of trees, many of which were moved and later
incorporated into the landscape design; and proximity to plenty of
parishioners. On the matter of land, Fr. Strain was visited by a
gentleman who owned ten acres east and contiguous to the site. He knew
that the Archdiocese owned two small parcels of land on Livernois that
were not needed for any new parish. He wanted a swap. His land was
excellent: meadowland and woods to the north...and not wetlands. After
some study the Cardinal approved the transaction and St. Mary of the
Hills became the proud owner of a total of twenty prime acres. The
original ten acres cost $50,000 an acre and the second parcel cost
$17,000 an acre, making the average price per acre for land for the
parish pretty good. Thank God for beautiful land!
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The Staff
There were so many events and plans that ran into each other in those
early days and, in fact, still do, which makes life at St. Mary of the
Hills so interesting. There were, at first, two pressing, needs: staff
who would get the parish off to a good start and temporary facilities.
Fr. Strain chose Judy Kozlowski to be office manager and general traffic
director. Her experiences as second secretary at St. Andrew's plus her
efficiency and graciousness made her a good choice. It so happened that
St. Andrew's parishioner, Jan Hall, an experienced Director of Religious
Ed was also looking for new opportunities. After interviews and
observations of her teaching, she was chosen to begin a program. St.
Mary's was offered the opportunity to keep using St. Andrew’s total
program of religious education, but declined so that it could establish
its own identity. Forty parishioners responded to Jan’s call for
volunteer teachers who would open their homes to eight children to study
and discuss faith and a sure way of teaching a God-filled, happy life.
The
third and final search was for a part-time musician(s) to lead St.
Mary's in praise of God at the Eucharistic Liturgy and to start a choir.
Fr. Strain hired a couple to do this who soon changed their mind. This
experience of adversity shows that slammed doors offer new opportunities
and open new doors. Such was Tim Smith who was ready to come into parish
work. By the first Mass St. Mary's had a choir in place and a
congregation ready to sing led by a well educated, talented keyboard
player and composer. Thanks be to God for dedicated staff!
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Temporary
Facilities
The Rochester school administration was helpful in renting to St. Mary's
Reuther Middle School cafeteria for the three weekend Masses. One day
when Fr. Strain was trying to figure out where parishioners could meet
for Mass on weekdays and evening meetings, he was called to
Christian
Memorial Cemetery for a committal service. In the middle of the prayer
it struck him that the chapel where he was standing could be the place.
He called his friend Bernard LePage, the owner, and arranged for lunch.
Mr. LePage was generous in opening up the chapel any time it was needed
(as long as it did not interfere with funerals). A search committee
found office space at 703 Barclay Circle.
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Parish Name
The last thing to be done before the first Masses was getting a name for
the parish. Since the original site was total forest, Fr. Strain
proposed to Cardinal Szoka St. Mary of the Woods. Since there was
already a parish so named in the southern part of the diocese, he then
suggested the present name because of Rochester Hills—Approved.
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Our First
Mass
Finally the big day,
Sunday, July 9, 1989, arrived for the first Masses. Joe Petruzello was kin d in giving St. Mary's the use of his catering
establishment. Now that there are 1500 families registered, it
is easy to say this embryo lives, but there was no guarantee
until 8:50 that day when people came streaming in for the 9:00
Mass. That day two hundred families registered. The Lord
determined that St. Mary's was to live (some parishes have not)
and thrive. A very happy day for parishioners who accepted the
risk, burden and fun of a new parish. Thank God for hospitality.
St. Mary's First Mass at Petruzello's
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Our Church Family
As the summer of 1989 passed into fall, the Administration commission
correctly assumed that the parish would reach 500 families by the end of
the year. Therefore the parish would be in a good position to start a
financial drive for a building. It hired McCarthy & Associates to help;
this proved to be a good choice. Fr. Strain never forgot the meeting at
Reuther school in November when he asked for volunteers to go door to
door for pledges. The cafeteria was packed with 200 volunteers. He knew
and often said that this would be a great parish sometime in the future
when it had buildings, but it was already a great parish now because of
the people who, after all, are the church.

First Anniversary Mass
Almost
500 families pledged $1,000,000.
This allowed the parish to ask
permission from Cardinal Szoka to hire Jack Brown as architect and to
open a line of credit from diocesan funds. Groundbreaking took place on
September 16, 1990.
The first phase of construction was completed on
November 23, 1991
with a dedication by then Archbishop Adam Maida in a beautiful liturgy.
St. Mary's had a home that was a joy thanks to Brown Associates, the
building committee and the woodworkers who designed and built the chapel
furniture.
When the
pledges were paid off in three years, the parish decided to promote
sacrificial giving (tithing) rather than begin another capital campaign.
This has been a blessing for parishioners and the parish alike. To give
a good example, the Stewardship Commission decided to increase tithing
of the Sunday collection from 5% to 10%, where it is now. Fr. Strain was
convinced that God gives spiritual and physical growth because of
tithing, as the Bible promises. Presently St. Mary of the Hills gives
to charities, missions, and works of Christian education approximately
$100,000 annually.
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Church Programs
Over the last seventeen years St. Mary's has expanded services and
programs. Religious Formation has added adult activities in addition
to the (RCIA) Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults; Youth Ministry
includes both a junior and senior high program, St. Mary's also has a
Stephen Ministry Group (peer help for hurting people), a volunteer
coordinator, and a preschool for three and four year old children.
Staff has increased to fourteen full time and twenty-four part time
employees.
An
exciting and innovative Religious Formation program was embarked upon in
2005. G.I.F.T. (Growing in Faith Together): a monthly faith
development program which includes everyone regardless of age. It
begins with a meal, breakout sessions (age appropriate), teaching,
sharing, discussion and activities, then a return to the original
setting to end with a closing activity that focuses on the topic.
G.I.F.T. has replaced our after school program for children. This new
format was endorsed and implemented in over 60 dioceses and 1000
parishes nationwide when St. Mary's began it in 2005. Currently 700
families are involved.
Christian Service has expanded to include many Ministries. The ministry
with the largest participation is S.O.S. (South Oakland Shelter). For
the past 10 years approximately 30 homeless are provided food, shelter,
entertainment, and rides for one week a year. Approximately 2,000
volunteer hours are given to accomplish this.
Hundreds
of parishioners have sacrificed their time and talent for the parish in
various capacities during the years. God knows who they are and they
know what they have done for St. Mary’s. Mary Bomarito, and Bill and
Catherine Sabanos stand out among those who were especially helpful in
bringing the parish to life from its beginning.
St.
Mary's delights in the fact that it provides for the poor and for
ministries of the Archdiocese. In past years it has met and surpassed
its quotas for the annual Catholic Services Appeal and for the
Archdiocesan Endowment Fund called Stewards for Tomorrow.
The quick
growth of the parish is due to the generosity of many individuals among
them being the late Miss F. Evelyn Cunningham, who left the parish 30%
of her estate valued at over $1,000,000. This was very good of her
considering she was not a member. Memorial plaques honoring her and her
parents as well as other generous donors can be found in the chapel.

Church Construction -
Second Phase
The
Three Arches are in honor of the Trinity. They also signify the victory
of a Christian by following the laws of justice, service and charity as
taught by Jesus.
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Dedication of the Church
The
new church building was dedicated by Cardinal Adam Maida on
December 21, 1996, eight to ten years earlier than expected. An
emphasis on tithing provided the needed funds to repay all loans for the
building of a noble and inspiring church. Thanks to a dedicated
building committee (Dave Reece, Judy Rhoads, John Hesch, John Hundiak,
George Burkett, Carol Pociask, Jerry Hamling, and Kenneth Heck), a great
architect (Jack Brown and Associates), an efficient construction company
(Rewold & Company), and talented woodworkers (Clifford Durand, James
Soisson, Timothy Lechtenberg, Gregory Okoniewski and Gary Rhoads), the
church was completed on time and within budget.
"Not to us but to your name give glory."
Te Deum laudamus.
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