Fulfilling a quest
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Quests for space are nothing new for Father Vincent
Gilmore.
When he arrived at Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church to begin
his new assignment as a parochial vicar three years ago, the crammed
conditions were all too familiar.
As a high school teacher at his monastery in Trabuco Canyon, Gilmore,
a member of the Order of Norbertine Fathers, had been involved in
fighting a proposed housing development that would have completely
altered the abbey’s way of life.
He soon realized Newport Beach’s largest Catholic church needed a
change as well.
Our Lady’s 4,800 members couldn’t possibly fit in the church’s
sanctuary, which is designed to seat 750. The parish school, which
includes students from kindergarten through eighth grade, had a waiting
list of more than 100 families.
Looking around Our Lady’s Eastbluff neighborhood, another religious
institution caught his eye.
“Have you ever talked to the Presbyterians about finding another
site?” he asked Msgr. William P. McLaughlin, Our Lady’s pastor and
Gilmore’s boss.
Separated only by a parking lot and a small street, the congregations
at Our Lady and St. Mark Presbyterian Church had been neighbors for about
four decades after their respective sanctuaries went up at about the same
time in the early 1960s. They’d formed bonds over the years and organized
ecumenical ministries, blood drives and Thanksgiving services together.
While McLaughlin hadn’t talked to the folks across the street, he gave
Gilmore the go-ahead to approach Gary Collins, St. Mark’s pastor.
“It was kind of a weird idea,” Gilmore said Thursday. “But I kept
pushing it.”
Now, about two years later, both churches have officially opened a new
chapter in their respective histories.
The city’s planning commissioners were expected Thursday to initiate
general plan amendments requested by Our Lady’s and St. Mark’s leaders.
While it represents only a first step in a monthlong process, St. Mark’s
eventually hopes to find a new home on vacant land at the corner of San
Joaquin Hills Road and MacArthur Boulevard that is owned by the Irvine
Co. In return, Our Lady’s church will acquire its neighbor’s old land and
build a larger sanctuary to hold 1,200 congregants. And the Catholic
congregation will shoulder about $25 million, which the change is
expected to cost.
Experts said such cooperation across denominational lines remains
unusual. But Christians have begun viewing each other as part of one
church rather than competitors.
“There’s also the realization that we’re all struggling to find a
place in the new [secular] setting,” said Mike Regele, an ordained
Presbyterian pastor and president of Percept, a Rancho Santa
Margarita-based consulting firm for religious institutions.
Friends in high places
As Gilmore began scouting out possible sites for St. Mark’s new
church, McLaughlin recommended checking with some of Our Lady’s members.
Gary Hunt, at the time the Irvine Co.’s executive vice president, was
one of the first who came to mind.
While visiting Hunt in his Newport Center office, Gilmore said Hunt
simply turned to his window with views of the city and picked out two
possible properties. Eventually, all parties settled on the now proposed
lot.
However, some of the city’s environmentalists say they are concerned
about the plan for a site that is designated as open space. Building on
the site would further reduce the city’s scarce open space, said Bob
Caustin of Defend the Bay.
Because the company would receive money from the sale of the site, it
should dedicate another lot as open space in return, he added.
Members of St. Mark’s said the congregation had initially hesitated
about occupying the empty site.
“How can we dare touch the site?” Kay Gustafson remembered hearing. A
group called Ecophilians has been active inside the St. Mark church for a
long time and a cart with literature and brochures about conservation is
displayed on Sundays.
Gustafson’s husband, Curt Webster, who works as St. Mark’s director of
outreach and special ministry projects, said the church’s mission
includes a commitment to preserving nature. Congregants began seeing the
protection of the site’s environment, which includes a canyon area, as a
calling.
“The more we looked at the San Joaquin site, the more it became
obvious that it’s consistent with who we are,” Webster said. “To be able
to care for a campus where we can visually [care for God’s creation],
that is amazing. This [site] is so St. Mark’s.”
Finding a suitable location was one thing. Turning the vision into
reality and overseeing the project’s planning was another.
But again, Gilmore didn’t have to look far for help. Teaching a class
for prospective Catholics, one of his students seemed perfect for the
job.
Gilmore “asked if I could be of any assistance in facilitating the
transaction,” said Councilman Dennis O’Neil, who served as Newport
Beach’s mayor at the time. Along with fellow convert Carol Hoffman, a
former Irvine Co. vice president and supporter of the church’s project,
O’Neil officially joined the congregation in April.
Since then, O’Neil has helped coordinate meetings with planners,
consultants and officials of the company, city and diocese. He said he’s
“really excited” about this plan, adding that he hopes his fellow City
Council members will approve the initiation of the general plan
amendments at their Feb. 27 meeting.
After consulting City Atty. Bob Burnham, O’Neil said he expects to
vote on the plan because he has no financial interests in the project.
He added that he would recuse himself from the decision if it would
jeopardize the project’s success.
O’Neil’s not the only one behind the dais that has close ties to the
Catholic church.
Councilman John Heffernan has been a member of the congregation for at
least 20 years but said he knew little about the proposed changes.
“I’m waiting to be filled in,” Heffernan said Thursday, adding that he
could not say whether he’d support the project. “It’s a pretty
complicated deal.”
Unexpected opposition
While Gilmore and others promoting the plans were able to rely on
support from influential church members, they had more trouble with
officials in another high place: the Catholic diocese of Orange.
Although the congregation at Our Lady had pledged to raise the
necessary money, the church’s hierarchical organization initially opposed
the deal and required approval from church leaders as well.
“You guys are billing the [Catholic] church for somebody else,”
Gilmore remembered as a comment from church officials. “They said no at
first.”
Our Lady was planning to pay $6.7 million to the St. Mark’s church for
the land -- a lot more than the actual value of the four-acre site.
If the deal goes through, the money will pay for St. Mark’s new
sanctuary. Arrangements to buy the land will be worked out separately
with the company, said Gilmore, adding that he couldn’t disclose details
of the negotiations.
Other churches in the diocese were struggling to make ends meet,
officials told Gilmore. They couldn’t support giving millions to a church
of a different denomination while their own parishes suffered.
Gilmore and others at Our Lady eventually convinced church leaders by
offering to tithe about $2 million for use in the diocese’s poorer
parishes as part of the project.
Just as St. Mark’s congregants had been concerned about fulfilling
their “green” mission, Our Lady members wanted to ensure that social
justice was served, Gilmore said.
“We help each other to have our missions realized,” he said.
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