... our History
This church has a very rich history of prayer and adoration
before our Eucharistic Lord. The history begins on December 8 1935 with
the dedication of the church as St. Cements shortly after Cardinal O'Connell
purchased the former Universalist Church. St. Clement was needed as an auxiliary
church to assist St. Cecilia parish in a time of immense growth o f the
Back Bay and Fenway districts. On September 25, 1944, Archbishop Richard
Cushing succeeded Cardinal O'Connell and within a few months a new page
in the history of St. Clement would begin. Early in 1945, Archbishop Cushing
paid a visit to St. Cecilia's. At dinner the cardinal was inquired as to
what extent do you need St. Clement right now? When the pastor commented
that the need was not as great as ten years earlier, The Archbishop suggested
the church become a Eucharistic Shrine, a spiritual powerhouse, as they
both phrased it, for the whole diocese. It is impossible to express adequately
the role St. Clement shrine played in the lives of countless people in the
Boston Archdiocese. The syndicated Catholic journalist, Father Daniel Lord,
SAJ wrote in 1953 that the Archdiocese of Boston seems toilmost center on
the Eucharistic Shrine.
Cardinal Cushing asked the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary to staff the church, a congregation newly dedicated to the Eucharist. From the moment of the sisters occupied the church two sisters knelt daily in front of the Blessed Sacrament in silent adoration. A large grille separated the semi-cloistered Sisters from the rest of the people in the church. St. Clement began a Nocturnal Adoration Society. Catholics, who were recruited to spend an hour a month before the Blessed Sacrament, formed this society. By December 1945 there were 575 enrolled in the society. In the late sixties the Fenway churches saw a decline of numbers as a result of the construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike through the Back Bay, the shrine was transformed into a ministerial center for college students. The Newman Center changed its name to St. Clement student parish.
Twenty years ago the shrine changed hands and is now presently occupied by the Oblates of the Virgin Mary. Oblate priests that live here staff the St. Francis Chapel at the Prudential center, chaplains to local hospitals and make up at Our Lady of Grace Seminary. Today the shrine functions as a seminary. In the past year there has been a renewed awakening at the shrine. Cardinal Cushing expressed &laqno; Over the years the attendance at the shrine has declined, despite its being so well located. I hope that there well be a renewal of devotion to Christ in the Eucharist and that the students and residence in the area will find at the shrine, both in the liturgy and in the direction of the priests, the strength to give a Christian witness. » This has become our dream, to fulfill the late Cardinal's words. We have made numerous repairs and embellishments in the last year. The roof is fixed, the walls cleaned and painted in statues and tabernacle are being restored. All this is to help you our guest to have a wonderful place to meet your God. We thank you for reading this history of St. Clement. We hope that you will come inside and enjoy the prayerful atmosphere and be one of the many people who have honored the lord with there presence at this shrine.