Former pastor returns to help
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Deirdre Newman
A familiar face will return to St. Joachim Catholic Church in January
when Father Jerome Karcher returns to the parish he served for five
years in the 1990s.
Karcher will temporarily fill the void when Father Joe Robillard
leaves Dec. 31 for a six-month sabbatical. When Robillard returns, he
will be assigned to another parish.
Karcher will fill in for six months only, as he is the full-time
pastor at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Huntington Beach. He
will serve as an administrator, which means he will have the
authority of a pastor but won’t be leading the services every Sunday.
Robillard’s departure comes on the heels of tension between some
Latino parishioners and himself. Some of those disgruntled
parishioners said the parishioners hope that Karcher’s arrival will
encourage those who have left St. Joachim to return.
“When Father Joe is not here anymore, we can start working with
the new priest and start making changes in the church,” Hugo Espinoza
said. “Until then, not a lot of people want to come back.”
Karcher said he is looking forward to the challenge of helping
heal the schism within the parish. He emphasized the need for
patience.
“If there’s a need for healing, healing takes a long time,”
Karcher said. “If there’s a need for positive growth, that takes a
long time. The body of Christ is a living organism, and as the living
body of Christ, it takes time to move from one place to another.”
He also said his abilities to communicate, collaborate and lead
will help during the transition period.
Karcher was a parochial vicar at St. Joachim from 1990 to 1995
before moving to St. Vincent de Paul, where he has been for the last
eight years.
Father Joe Fenton, director of media relations for the Diocese of
Orange, said Karcher’s experience and popularity at St. Vincent de
Paul will serve him well at St. Joachim. He also touted Karcher’s
fluency in Spanish.
“He’s been a very successful pastor where he is, and he built a
new church, and the people like him,” Fenton said. “And he’s very
experienced.”
Karcher founded Mercy House, a nonprofit organization that serves
the homeless with a variety of facilities, mostly in Santa Ana. The
services help the homeless acquire new skills, start savings
accounts, take care of bills and find permanent homes, Karcher said.
St. Vincent de Paul will continue to be his main commitment and
home. He will spend about one-fourth of his time at St. Joachim, he
said.
In Costa Mesa, he will continue working on a building project that
Robillard helped develop to refurbish the parish and surrounding
property.
Over the weekend, a large group of parishioners threw a farewell
party for Robillard, and he received an award from the Orange County
Congregation Community Organizations, Karcher said.
“He’s very well loved by many of the parishioners,” Karcher said.
Fenton said that as far as he knows, there is no permanent
replacement lined up for Robillard. Usually, new pastors are
announced in late May, he said.
One of 12 children, Father Karcher is the son of Carl Karcher, the
founder of the Carl’s Jr. fast-food chain.
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