Georgia Bulletin

The Newspaper of the Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta

  • A framed poster of Martin Luther King Jr. is placed near the altar during a Mass in his honor at St. Paul of the Cross Church Jan. 14. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Parishioners enter St. Paul of the Cross Church for the Martin Luther King Jr. Mass held on Jan. 14. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • A parishioner prays before the annual archdiocesan Mass  in memory of Martin Luther King Jr., at St. Paul of the Cross Church, Atlanta. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Archbishop Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., center, stands with Deacon Lennison “Lenny” Alexander of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, left, and Deacon Dennis Dorner, right, at a Mass in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. The Jan. 14 Mass was at St. Paul of the Cross Church. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Deacon Lennison “Lenny” Alexander, of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, reads the responsorial psalm during the annual MLK Mass. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • The faithful listen to the readings during a Mass held Jan. 14 at St. Paul of the Cross Church, ahead of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. Photo by Johnathon KelsoThe faithful listen to the readings during a Mass held at Saint Paul of the Cross Church in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Parishioners and guests stand during the prayers of the faithful during a Mass in honor of Martin Luther King Jr., at Atlanta's St. Paul of the Cross Church. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • The faithful present the gifts of bread and wine to Archbishop Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., center, during a Mass held in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. at St. Paul of the Cross Church. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Passionist Father Jerome McKenna, pastor of St. Paul of the Cross, center, stands with the clergy during the Mass in memory of Martin Luther King Jr. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Archbishop Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., center, and clergy, photographed at the altar at Saint Paul of the Cross Church, during the Eucharistic Liturgy. Photo by Johnathon Kelso
  • Archbishop Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., center, visits with members of the Knights of Peter Claver and its Ladies Auxiliary outside St. Paul of the Cross Church. Photo by Johnathon Kelso

A framed poster of Martin Luther King Jr. is placed near the altar during a Mass in his honor at St. Paul of the Cross Church Jan. 14. Photo by Johnathon Kelso


Atlanta

Mass honors MLK as a ‘great servant of the Gospel’ 

By ANDREW NELSON, Staff Writer | Published January 19, 2023

ATLANTA—With the civil rights movement anthem “We Shall Overcome,” the Archdiocese of Atlanta celebrated its annual Mass honoring native son, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.   

The holiday weekend was dedicated to honoring the civil rights icon, including a youth program at St. John the Evangelist School. As a tribute to Dr. King’s work, students of Catholic schools gathered Sunday, Jan. 15 under the theme: “Joyful in Hope, Patient in Affliction, Faithful in Prayer.”  

A statue of St. Paul of the Cross, founder of the Passionists, is photographed on the grounds of his namesake parish in Atlanta. The parish hosted this year’s MLK Mass. Photo by Johnathon Kelso

The calls to action by the youngsters were written in essays and created on posters displayed at the Hapeville school assembly. A jury of staff and others at the archdiocesan pastoral center selected the student winners.   

On Saturday, Jan. 14, a large crowd attended the Mass at the Passionist-run St. Paul of the Cross parish. Atlanta’s west side was home to a growing Black population when the church was founded in 1957.  

Dotting the pews were women representing the Knights of St. Peter Claver Ladies Auxiliary with yellow striped kente cloth wraps draped over their shoulders.    

Calling King a “great servant of the Gospel,” Atlanta Archbishop Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., said the days of reflection surrounding King’s birthday “commemorate the work, the word and the witness” he left to the world. 

Archbishop Hartmayer celebrated the Mass, along with a handful of priests and assisted by several deacons.   

In his homily, the archbishop said King’s concerns were long—from freedom and equality to forgiveness and change. In a 2021 message to Bernice King, CEO of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center For Nonviolent Social Change, Pope Francis told her those issues raised by the civil rights leader remain timely. Archbishop Hartmayer said King’s concerns must be shared still by those who call themselves Christians.   

Believers must “boldly challenge the status quo,” as King did, said the archbishop. And like King, the “only weapon we have to change hearts is the strength of the Gospel of Jesus Christ,” he said.    

Ashley Morris, the associate director of the Office of Intercultural Ministries, gives a closing reflection at St. Paul of the Cross Church following the MLK Mass on Jan. 14. Photo by Johnathon Kelso

Serving God and one another other “is the essence of Christianity. Christianity cannot be stagnant. It cannot stand still. It is a verb, it must move, it must act, it must reflect, it must witness, it must suffer, it must evangelize,” Archbishop Hartmayer said. “We cannot be passive. We cannot just sit back and watch. Where would we be if that’s all Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. did was stand back and watch? No. He did not. He did not. He walked, quietly. He prayed.”  

The call of today 

The faithful recalled the man, who would have been 94 this month if he had not been shot by an assassin in Memphis in 1968. He died at 39. The racial problems that King turned his attention to still exist. Attending Mass and gathering to pray are ways to both inspire and promote reconciliation. 

Lector Mat Mathews spoke after the archdiocesan Mass about the connection between King and his family’s native India. Mathews, who worships at Our Lady of Assumption Church, is a candidate to the permanent diaconate.   

King learned from Mahatma Gandhi the purpose and meaning of peaceful nonviolence, so there’s a feeling of affection and strong link between the two leaders, he said. Using kindness to confront the evils of their day was the life’s work for the two men, he said. “It’s still our cause and call today,” he said.   

He shared the afternoon with his daughter Laila, who attends Our Lady of Assumption School. Mathews said he likes his daughter to attend the King Day celebration to see the believers of different races and ethnicities who make up the Catholic faith praying together.     

Cynthia Simien attends Our Lady of Hope Church, Lithonia, and is a member of the St. Peter Claver Ladies Auxiliary at Blessed Sacrament Church, Atlanta.   

For her, the Mass is a positive way to kick off the still new year.

It reminds people “to be spiritually fed and be encouraging for the remainder of the year,” she said. There’s the hopeful message here that “we are all one and God’s children,” she said.  

Simien said there’s a need to be hopeful and to work continually for improvements.  

“Once we remember that we will be a better world,” she said.