Christ the Good Shepherd Catholic Community
Bishop John L.
Morkovsky
on April
1, 1978.
Fr. Ed Abell was our founding pastor and he served over eleven years.
Msgr. Bill Robertson
became our pastor in 1990.
The parish boundaries
were carved out of Prince of Peace to the west, St. Edward's to the northeast
and St. Anne's in Tomball. (The parish split again in 1986 when St.
Ignatius was formed between us and Prince of Peace). Originally we had 370
families; today we have
more
than 3,000 families.
The parish was "born" in the oil boom days of the late '70s when
Houston was bursting at the seams.
The bishop instructed Father Al
Doga,
Pastor of Prince of Peace, to begin acquiring property for expansion.
Father Doga and Father Eugene
Francis, pastor of St. Edward's, also began
advising their parishioners of the pending expansion, encouraging them to pray
about it, mentally preparing them to leave.
Out of this encouragement to pray, many prayer groups
were formed. They prayed for strong leadership, divine guidance and
the kind of spirit that has become contagious in our community.
The rectory where Father Ed first lived was a home in Wimbledon Estates
subdivision. It also served as our chapel for weekday and special worship
services as well as the parish office. We grew quickly and by early 1979
we leased storefront office space on FM 1960 for religious and sacramental
education. A good example of our rapid growth was registration for our
first Religious Education program in the fall of 1978 - 1,200 youth enrolled!
We began weekend worship at Benfer Elementary School, affectionately known as
St. Benfer's and later moved to Strack Intermediate School, Our Lady of Strack.
We were a very transient parish in those days; Sunday after the last mass we
packed our supplies in a van and drove them across the street to store in
Ron
and Virginia Hassett's
garage in Cypressdale.
Sue Frey
was our Liturgist for a few months in our beginning stages until Mary
Ann Greco came on board as
the full time Liturgist.
Vic and Jan Norton
helped form the first nursery under the stairwell at Strack.
The Strack custodian,
Johnnie Elias, retired from Klein ISD about the time we
moved to our new church and we hired him as our first custodian in the new
church.
Sister Alice Meenan
was the first employee of the pastoral staff. She
interviewed with Father Ed over the kitchen table in Wimbledon. Mary Ann
Malone,
a former secretary at Prince of Peace, was our first secretary, traffic cop and
general organizer. Fr. Frank
Rossi, then a seminarian, spent the summer of '78
helping out, before we rated an Associate Pastor.
One of the many things Sister Alice was responsible for is R.C.I.A., the Rite of
Christian Initiation for Adults. In 1979, it all began with a traditional
inquiry class. Then Lani Mock attended a conference in Seattle, outlining
the new R.C.I.A. procedures. We kicked it off in 1979-80 with Alice,
Father Oliver Bourgeois and
Jane Weatherford, then fresh out of the University of Texas, headed our first
Music Ministry. Jane and the other members laid the foundation for a very
strong music program.
It didn't take long to organize a Building Committee. Terry Malone
was the
first chairman. He was joined by George
Haberman, chairman of the original
Finance Committee. Surveys of parishioners were taken to find what we
wanted in the new buildings.
Father Don Neumann of the bishop's staff met with us to discuss American
Catholic Bishop's "Art and Environment for Catholic Worship." We
were probably the first church built using these guidelines. Sister Mary
Peter Tremonte, O.P., was hired as our liturgical consultant; architects
and general contractors were retained and we were on our way.
Formal
groundbreaking for our new church and parish activity center was Dec. 23,
1979. We moved into
the new 17,500 square foot Parish Activity Center and
Administrative Office Building in November 1980. One of the more memorable
occasions was our first Thanksgiving mass there, celebrated by Father John
Keller upstairs in what we called the "upper room".
We packed
the room, sitting cross-legged on the floor, but we knew we were home at last.
Our first Mass in the new 19,500 square foot Church was celebrated on May 2,
1981. However, official dedication ceremonies were held on Sunday, June
7. The Church was packed and it was a most joyous and emotional
afternoon. Both Bishop Morkovsky and McCarthy were in attendance. On
that day Bishop McCarthy told us that this wonderful building wouldn't truly be
our "home" until we had gone through a full generation of baptisms,
marriages and funerals. We fully understand those words. We have
felt the joy and the sorrow and it certainly is "home" now.
However, like any growing family, the house we call home seldom stays big enough
for long. For ten years we lived with "the slab", poured at the
same time as the original building, but held off until we could afford to
expand. In 1990, Al Hardey agreed to head up a new building committee and
Rick Jones took on finance. We broke ground in the fall of 1990 and moved
into the 16,800 square foot addition that houses badly needed kitchen
facilities, as well as additional classrooms and large meeting rooms. At
the same time, we made extensive modifications to the original PAC, creating a
special tiered choir room, offices for our four deacons, a bride's room, youth
room and "board room" for adult meetings. Ramps and elevators were
also installed for handicapped access.
Christ the Good Shepherd has been blessed to have had twelve outstanding
Associate Pastors.
First was newly ordained Rev. Pat Cummings who served
from Dec. 1978 until March 1979. He was followed by Rev. Oliver Bourgeois
who was reassigned in June 1980. Then came Rev. John Keller who ministered
with us through July 1983. Rev. James Anderson was with us until Oct.
1983.
Rev. Gary Wanzong, who also served at the prison in Huntsville, was our
associate to June 1985. Rev. Joe
Plummer, one of our most beloved and
remembered associates, served until his reassignment in June 1988.
Tragically, he passed away in October of that year. Our Knights of
Columbus chapter is named after Fr. Joe. Rev.
Norbert Maduzia
came in June
1988 and was with us until July 1992. Rev.
Paul Richard was here from
1992 until 1993. Rev. Brendan Cahill
arrived in 1993 and
blessed us until 1995. Rev. Frederick Valone
joined us in 1995 until
1997. Rev. Frank Quezada served our community from
1997 until 1999. Rev. John
Upton, who is currently our
pastor, began as an associate pastor in 1999 until June 2002. In
2001 we received a blessing from the other side of the world, India,
as Rev. Sunny
Plammoottil joined our
community until the summer of 2006. As we said goodbye to our beloved
Fr. Sunny, God brought to us Rev. Joe Hoang Bui.
Steve LaBonte,
who was our first
starting in 1978. Glen Cupier was a part of our community from
1981 until 1982.
Pat
Camerino has blessed CGS
since February 1984, when he completed his diaconate training. Also, Barry
was with us until August of 1984, Bob DeGrave until June of 1985,
John
Charnisky,
Jr. was with us until October of 1985,
Al O'Brien until September of 1993,
Les
Cooper until June of
1995. John Rooney,
our first Youth Minister, received his diaconate training here at CGS. Our community
was blessed by the Holy Spirit to receive two
deacons, C.J. Mangano
in January 2003 and Alberto
Patetta in February
2003; Alberto
continues to serve here at CGS. Christ the Good Shepherd's latest gift
from the Lord is our new permanent deacon, Pat Hancock, in February 2007.
Our church comfortably seats just over 1,000 with
space for music and
other liturgical ministers. There have been quite a few Sundays and
special holidays where we have far exceeded the 1,000 and some have questioned
the term "comfortable." Consequently, on Easter we now use the
Jewish Community North for additional Masses and overcrowding has
been reduced. We also have a chapel which is open
24 hours for individual prayer.