Heraldnet.com
SUNDAY, MAY 11, 2008 8:53 pm
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Jerry Cornfield
Democratic candidate facing criminal charge
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: New baby brings joy to a grieving Snohomish family
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Marysville toilet training teachers are flush with ideas
Latest gallery

USS Ingraham comes home
May 9. 2008 (12 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Saturday


Heroism emerges from Everett apartment fire
Snohomish rapist surrenders in Arkansas
At 100, he's still throwing a lot of strikes
Friday


Ailing boy makes a wish, and Boeing delivers
Construction set to begin on 'giant cow's stoma...
Barack Obama wins Rick Larsen's backing
Thursday


Real speed racers: Team shoots for land speed r...
Training accident kills Marysville soldier
Everett neighborhood may work out spat over buses
Wednesday


Classmates honor Codey Porter, who died in sand...
Snohomish County's coffers run low for cops, roads
2-year sentence for hit-and-run death of skateb...
Tuesday


Cuts loom for schools across Snohomish County
25 years later, no answers in killing of Arling...
Next hit to your shopping list? Chicken and por...
Monday


Cushy way to camp: new yurt village in Arlington
Bidding frenzy a boon as Everett builds
Mom appalled at racy books in store for teens a...
Sunday


Drivers may see a lot more roundabouts in Snoho...
No easy fix to homeless sex offender problem, s...
Hospital consultant's fee questioned
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Darren Breen / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
The Rev. John Nwanze of Holy Cross Catholic Church near Granite Falls holds the oil used for blessings as incense is dispersed during Mass on Thursday.
(click to enlarge)
Holy Cross Catholic Church choir member Hannah Jordan sings hymns during Mass.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, March 21, 2008

With new building, Holy Cross Catholic Church's two congregations can finally be one

The scent is fresh paint, not an ancient aroma left by decades of lighting candles and burning incense. Holy Cross Catholic Church is brand new.

Last weekend's Masses for Palm Sunday were the first services held in the church, one of three new parish buildings at Lochsloy, between Lake Stevens and Granite Falls.

"Holy Week, Easter, this is really our inauguration," said the Rev. Jay DeFolco, pastor of both Holy Cross and St. Michael's Catholic Church in Snohomish.

From the look of the church in a nondescript building, drivers zipping past on Highway 92 might see Holy Cross as an upstart, a development as new as the housing projects springing up nearby. Looks can deceive. The church has a long history.

On what's now Cascade Avenue in Granite Falls, Holy Cross Church has served the town's Catholics since 1903. Once a wilderness outpost, for a century Holy Cross was a mission church, a satellite of St. Michael's in Snohomish.

While the small, white wood-frame church served Granite Falls, Lake Stevens had no Catholic church at all. Until 2004, Catholics in Lake Stevens traveled to Snohomish, Everett, Marysville or Granite Falls to worship.

In 2004, the Archdiocese of Seattle, which oversees Catholic churches in all of Western Washington, designated Holy Cross as its own parish serving Lake Stevens and Granite Falls. Since then, Holy Cross has held Masses at Northlake Middle School in Lake Stevens and at the old church in Granite Falls. All the while, the people of Holy Cross have been working toward this week, when the two communities join in their new church.

"It's been like an old-time barn raising," said Ed Miller, 57, vice chairman of the Holy Cross parish council. Miller, who raises pigs on his land outside Granite Falls, said it hasn't always been easy blending two very different groups. "It's an old logging town and a community that's more upscale," Miller said comparing Granite Falls with Lake Stevens.

While Lake Stevens worshippers are leaving a middle school, those from Granite Falls are saying goodbye to their 105-year-old church. The old Holy Cross building will be sold, DeFolco said.

"There's sadness, grieving, letting go," the priest said. Even so, DeFolco said Thursday at the new church, "the Granite Falls contingent has been here with flowers, they've been doing the decorating."

Diane Mattingly, 38, comes to the new church from Lake Stevens, where she lives with her husband, Chris, and three school-age children. She was a co-chairwoman of the church's capital campaign.

With many members of the parish, which includes about 265 households, she and her husband worked long hours on the buildings. "It was great to see the whole parish pitch in and make it their own," she said.

The archdiocese bought the 31-acre site in 1998 for $143,000, DeFolco said. The $1.2 million project -- a church, parish hall and administration building -- was built largely by volunteers, said Bill Clough, project director and chairman of the building committee.

Clough, 62, and his wife, Irene, drove across the U.S. 2 trestle every Sunday to Everett's Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church before Holy Cross began services in Lake Stevens.

Mattingly said all the time spent in toil "has given us time to prepare for the merge, and prepare to leave Granite Falls."

"The Granite Falls people and the Lake Stevens people could really become a parish," she said.

Holy Cross was one of three new parishes approved by Seattle Archbishop Alexander Brunett in 2004, said Greg Magnoni, a spokesman for the archdiocese. The others are Blessed Teresa of Calcutta in Woodinville and Holy Innocents in Duvall. There are about 577,000 Catholics in Western Washington who belong to churches, and another 400,000 who identify themselves as Catholic, Magnoni said.

"It's growing," Magnoni said. "Certainly in the Archdiocese of Seattle, it's a joy to be able to open churches and make the faith available to more Catholic people."

At Holy Cross, work is far from done. The 20-year master plan calls for a 700-seat church -- the current one seats about 180 -- plus a larger parish hall and school.

"What we have is our first phase. It looks like a church and feels like a church," DeFolco said.

Inside the new Holy Cross, the past is evident. On the walls, Stations of the Cross figures, representing the final hours of Jesus, were taken from the old Granite Falls church, along with a statue of the Virgin Mary and a baptismal font.

Up the road in Granite Falls, a note taped to the old church door lets visitors know Easter Masses have been moved "to the new site at Lochsloy." The old church will be quiet on Easter morning. At the new Holy Cross, years of celebration have begun.

"It's a new birth," DeFolco said.

Columnist Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460 or muhlstein@heraldnet.com.



1. Heroism emerges from Everett apartment fire
2. Snohomish rapist surrenders in Arkansas
3. At 100, he's still throwing a lot of strikes
4. WESCO NORTH GIRLS TRACK: Arlington's Kjirsten Jensen blows away her shot put competition
5. Boeing, Machinists focus on issues as contract talks begin
6. Arlington area timberland protected from development
7. Ferry evacuated in Edmonds; man in custody after alleged bomb joke
8. USS Ingraham returns to Naval Station Everett
9. Local briefly: Marysville police arrest second suspect in death
10. WESCO SOUTH BOYS TRACK: Mariners' Jenkins races to three victories
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Ferndale elminates Shorecrest baseball
Edmonds politican has Lou Gehrig's Disease
Estate of art
Feeling the sting
Red-hot T-birds roll into state as No. 1 seed
Overcoming obstacles
Voters face choice in upgrading schools technology
Safe passage
Hawks grab state baseball playoff berth
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

Top Jobs
Click to View
 


ADVERTISEMENT