One Catholic Ohana

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home St. Michael the Archangel Church

St. Michael the Archangel Church

E-mail Print PDF
User Rating: / 8
PoorBest 
St. Michael's Church, date unknown.  Photo courtesy of Bishop Museum.

St. Michael's Church, date unknown. Photo courtesy of Bishop Museum.

Dedicated in 1855, St. Michael’s Church was a large structure in its day. Built of lava rock and coral sand mortar; the floor was simple, hard-packed dirt. The small second floor was used as living quarters for priests. A bell from France tolled to the faithful in Kailua-Kona. Father Joachim Marechal, who toiled two years to build the church, was interred beneath the building upon his death in 1859.

More than a century later, the church was remodeled with a $100,000 facelift, offering parishioners the comfort of air conditioning. The church suffered damage from extensive flooding in 1968, 1974 and 1982.

In 1993 parishioners and Father Ron Gronowski transformed the dirt parking area into a paved lot with 80 parking spaces. The church grounds were landscaped and the beautification earned St. Michael’s a Kona Outdoor Circle award in 1995. Next, the church’s interior was spruced up with a new altar, pews, statuary and flooring. Local artisans were commissioned to craft several stained glass windows.

In October 2006, St. Michael’s Church was damaged by earthquakes and eventually deemed unsafe and beyond repair. The church was vacated and Mass moved to a tent on the church grounds. The church was decommissioned during a Farewell Service on November 2; demolition will follow shortly thereafter and Father Marechal’s remains will be put in a safe place until they can be re-interred under the new church.

Find more info on St. Michael’s mission churches in the 2009 book, “North Kona’s Catholic Heritage….remembered.” It’s for sale in the parish office and bookstore on the grounds of St. Michael’s Church in Kailua-Kona, 326-7771.


 

Location:  75-5769 Ali'i Drive - Kailua-Kona, HI  96740

From Address:

 


More info...
Last Updated on Tuesday, 13 July 2010 08:38  

Translate

Readings

The Twenty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Reading I – Wisdom 9:13-18b

Reading II – Philemon 9-10, 12-17

Gospel – Luke 14:25-33

Embracing Your Cross - We often speak of the “crosses” we must carry in life.  These can range from loss of a job to a serious or terminal illness to unhealthy relationships, and so on.  The cross has become the wide-ranging metaphor for the trials, ills, and discomforts that are part and parcel of every human life.  While we all understand this use of the word “cross,” it does a disservice to what the Jesus of the Gospels means by it.  For Him, a “cross” is not something that fate, bad luck, or unfortunate circumstances foists upon one.  It is, instead, something one chooses, something one embraces.

For Jesus, carrying the cross in discipleship was the rejection of earthly possessions or status, it was the sundering of bonds of kinship or friendship.  It was, above all, the necessary kind of self-sacri-ficing, self-surrendering choice one had to make in order to be a true strength to bear it.  If we are to be true disciples, we must also pray for the strength to reach out and willingly accept a cross as well.  To bear up, with God’s grace, under the burdens that are not of our own choosing does take a strong faith.  But to walk willingly under the weight of the cost of discipleship shows an even stronger desire to spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Copyright, J.S. Paluch Co.



Newsflash