Gee, why didn't they do something like this for St. Mary's?
Our Lady of Vilnius, NYC
"An intelligent person fights for lost causes, realizing that others are merely effects."
e.e. cummings
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Cardinal Dolan Receives Award for Fundraising Effort to Rebuild Notre Dame Cathedral
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
May 27th Zoom Meeting About St. Mary's Future
“At this point St. Mary’s can only be saved by the people who care.” These are the words of Brody Hale, the attorney who is guiding St. Mary’s through the intricacies of Canon Law. Brody will be holding a Zoom meeting at 7:00 PM on May 27, 2026. If you care, please attend. The more who are there, the better the chance that things go well for the church in the future.
- What needs to be done to save St. Mary’s from permanent closure.
- The canonical appeal.
- Actions the Archdiocese of New York may choose to take in the coming weeks.
- What parishioners can do to avert the loss of the church if they choose to act.
- We know that you have questions about many things. This will be a forum in which all of those questions can be answered.
Saturday, May 09, 2026
St. Mary's Faithful Shut Down At May 6th Yonkers Landmarks Preservation Board Meeting
If the faithful of St. Mary's were shocked when the City of Yonkers signed off on a legal settlement removing landmark protection from the Parish Hall and the interior of the church in March, they were dumbfounded when proceedings of the Yonkers Landmark Preservation Committee began on the evening of Wednesday, May 6th.
Tuesday, May 05, 2026
City of Yonkers Landmark Preservation Board to Review Application to Landmark Interior of St. Mary's Tomorrow @ 7:00 PM
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE YONKERS LANDMARK PRESERVATION BOARD
To the membership of the City of Yonkers Landmark Preservation Board:
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Former St. Brigid's School is On the Market as a Development Site - What is $20 Million Anonymous Donor Thinking?
Monday, April 27, 2026
Archdiocese of New York Throwing a Hail Mary Pass to Avoid Bankruptcy?
"The news about the latest round of forced fundraising about to hit the parishes will not be widely discussed and pastors will not take the case to their parish communities. “It is not going to be totally democratic,” acknowledged a pastor."
- Keith Kelly, The Spirit
"Instead, the archdiocese will be sending representatives to meet individually in the next few weeks to meet with pastors, the two lay trustees of each parish and the financial committee to determine how much each parish will be asked to contribute."
It sounds like these get togethers are going to be more like a vote than a consultation, given the presence of the lay trustees. I hope the trustee know that they are voting. It may not be formal.
Please read all about it at The Spirit. Mr. Kelly does a good job of placing this development in the context of archdiocesan finances and real estate transactions: Archdiocese to Pastors: Raise Millions for Sexual Abuse Victims or go Bankrupt
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Offertorio: Am I Bankrolling the Demise of My Parish?
Every Sunday at St. Mary's I put some cash in the basket. Since Cardinal Dolan issued another decree on December 17th, St. Mary's is not a parish. I am not sure that my gift is being used to promote St. Mary's survival. My crumpled bills accompany the envelopes to St. Peter's Church, the parish church of St. Peter-St. Denis-St. Mary's Parish. I don't know what happens after that or where the money goes. Like the people sitting around me at Mass, the money I put in this basket is a prayer for the future of St. Mary's.
I do know that, despite St. Mary's shifting canonical status, the civil corporation called "Church of the Immaculate Conception" exists. I know this because, on November 14, 2024, the "Church of the Immaculate Conception" joined the Archdiocese of New York in suing the City of Yonkers to remove landmark status from St. Mary's.
The "Church of the Immaculate Conception" is the civil corporation that owns and manages the real assets of St. Mary's Parish. It sued the City of Yonkers to remove the landmark designation that parishioners sought, obtained and celebrated. There was never a ruling in the case. Attorneys representing the "Church of the Immaculate Conception" proposed a settlement that may make it easier to close the church. The City of Yonkers agreed to it.
Did our coins, bills and envelopes pay for a lawsuit that paves the way for the demolition of our church? Maybe. There is no transparency.
Today I was alerted to two articles stating that the Archdiocese of New York is asking parishes to fund reparations to abuse victims to prevent the Archdiocese from declaring bankruptcy:
Archdiocese of NY warns priests of bankruptcy — unless hundreds of millions are raised to pay sex abuse victims by Rich Calder of The New York Post

