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dailynewstranscript.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=47940
**Josoma: Keeper of the faith at St. Susanna’s Church
**By Kit Kadlec / News Staff Writer
Monday, January 3, 2005
DEDHAM – Ask any St. Susanna parishioner why they attend church, why they still have faith in Catholicism despite recent turmoil in the Boston archdiocese stemming from the sex abuse scandal, and the Rev. Stephen Josoma is always at the center of their answer.
Code:And when the archdiocese announced in May it planned to close St. Susanna's Church, along with 65 other parishes in the area, once again Josoma was named by parishioners as one of the reasons they would fight to keep their church and community together.
Code:"Because of (Josoma), people really go to church now because they want to, not because they feel they have to," said parishioner Marilyn Weber.
Code:At a time when local Catholics needed something to believe in, someone to rally around, Josoma has provided that beacon of hope.
Code:And its for those reasons that the Daily News Transcript has chosen the Rev. Josoma as its first Man of the Year for 2004.
Code:In understanding who Josoma is today, a 49-year-old priest with 24 years of experience in the archdiocese often described as progressive, it takes an understanding of his past.
Code:He was brought up in a Catholic community in Brighton, by his mother, who was a housewife, and his father, who was a chemist/technician at MIT's Draper Laboratory.
Code:"We weren't rich, but we weren't poor," Josoma said of his childhood, often sheltered from the surrounding poverty in other parts of Boston. "Growing up, I thought everybody was like us."
Code:When he reached high school, he said his eyes were opened to his greater surroundings, and Josoma said he got swept up in the movement at the time to change the world.
Code:He said he looked up to world leaders at the time like Martin Luther King Jr., John F. Kennedy and Pope John XXIII.
Code:It was a changing time in Catholicism, Josoma said, which was one of the factors that attracted him to the priesthood. He wanted to be part of it all.
Code:Josoma said on June 30, 1965, he served his first Mass. He was told by his priest at the time to recite the Mass in Latin, which required the memorization of four pages of prayers in a language in which he and parishioners were not fluent.
Code:But on July 1, the next day, Mass was changed throughout the archdiocese to English.
Code:This was one of the changes to Catholicism that Josoma saw as positive, "making it more tangible." He also supported a movement of no longer studying the Bible strictly in the literal sense.
Code:"Once you open that door, it changes everything," he said.
Code:In many ways, Josoma has carried the spirit of a more approachable church and faith to his parishioners even today.
Code:"We're taught that the church has all the answers, but there's no room for individual growth that way," he said.
Code:Josoma has now structured his church to appeal more to younger people, trying to focus his sermons more on topics all his parishioners can relate to.
Code:"He always talks about things in a very personal, real way that I can relate to," said parishioner Sam DePhillipio, who joined the Catholic faith two years ago.
Code:Josoma said he wants parishioners to feel less restricted, open to finding their own faith. "You don't have to give them all the answers," Josoma said. "You encourage them to find their own answers, and to trust in their answers."
Code:It was this approach that began to revitalize St. Susanna when Josoma began as its priest in 2001.
Code:"It's because of him that we have remained the vibrant parish that we are," said parishioner Dot Winslow.
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