User:Yx7791/Sandbox/St. Francis Chapel

St. Francis Chapel is a Catholic Franciscan chapel, sponsored by the Holy Name Province of the Order Friars Minor. It began in the Northway Mall in Colonie, NY on December 28, 1970. It is now located at Wolf Road Shopper's Park at 145 Wolf Road in Colonie, NY. According to the St. Francis Chapel Mission Statement, its purpose is to continue the tradition of St. Francis of Assisi who preached in the marketplace.

Although the chapel is physically within the boundaries of the Catholic Diocese of Albany, this chapel is not a parish and is not a diocesan church. The friars who serve at the chapel reside at St. Bernardine of Siena Friary at Siena College. The current director of St. Francis Chapel is Father Gerard Lee, OFM.

Masses and Confession
Masses are offered four times each day on weekdays, (10am, 12:10pm, 5:10pm, and 6:30pm) twice during the day on Saturday (10am and 12:10pm) and three times on Saturday evenings (4pm, 5:30pm, and 7pm). The chapel is open from 9am to 7:30pm and is staffed by five Franciscan priests. The Sacrament of Confession is available throughout the day, most of the time when Masses are not taking place.

Devotions
St. Francis Chapel has devotions as follows:


 * Eucharistic Adoration: Mon-Fri after 10am Mass until 11:50am
 * Benediction: Mon-Fri at 11:50am
 * Blessed Mother: Mondays at all Masses
 * St. Anthony: Tuesdays at all Masses
 * St. Jude: Thursdays at all Masses
 * Sacred Heart: Fridays at all Masses
 * Mass for the Sick: Wednesdays at 12:10pm Mass

Northway Mall (1970 - 1998)
The original chapel location included a sanctuary, a front counter staffed by a priest, and a consultation room where anyone, Catholic or otherwise, could receive guidance from members of the clergy. It was located on the western side of the mall between Almart's and the Motherhood Maternity Shop. Like any other store in the mall, they paid rent based on square footage, at retail rates.

The chapel was originally supposed to be opened in November, 1970, but could not open until December, 1970, due to construction delays.

Informal Opening
The chapel informally opened on December 28, 1970. Initial staff included Rev. Fabian Joyce, rector, Rev. Malcolm MacDonald (d. March 2, 1995, age 73, served seventeen years at the chapel ), Brother Lawrence McLeod, and Rev. Conall Hart. The chapel space was ninety-nine by thirty-three square feet. Initial hours were 10am to 9pm, Monday through Saturday. It was the only area Catholic church closed on Sundays. The intent of the chapel was to provide spiritual services to both shoppers and store employees. Masses took place at 10am, 12:10pm, and 5:10pm on weekdays. Mass times at ten minutes after the hour were intended to accommodate store employee lunch or dinner breaks.

Thirty-five people attended the first (concelebrated) Mass at the chapel without any announcement or advertising. In the initial days since it opened, an average of 500 people visited the chapel. While furnishings were waiting to be received, nearby stores loaned items to be used in the chapel.

First Rector
Fr. Fabian Joyce, ordained 1943, came from Worcester, MA and had been serving at Our Lady's Chapel in New Bedford, MA for the six years prior to becoming rector of St. Francis Chapel.

Formal Dedication
On the afternoon of March 10, 1971, the Most Rev. Bishop Broderick, D.D., of the Albany, NY Catholic Diocese, blessed the altar of St. Francis Chapel in a concelebrated dedication Mass. The bishop commented that while traditional forms of worship like the Rosary, Stations of the Cross, and Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament were falling out of favor, it was good to see evidence of them at St. Francis Chapel. It was estimated that approximately 25,000 people had visited the chapel between its unofficial opening in late December, 1970, and its official dedication. Fr. Fabian Joyce, rector, joked about one of the initial visitors mistaking the chapel for a bank and the priests as tellers.

Late 1970s
By the late 1970s, Masses were being held four times per day. Eight Masses were held on Saturdays. Weekday masses attracted thirty to forty people while Saturday vigil Masses for Sunday obligation attracted around 200. After a few years at the mall, Fr. Joyce suggested that the location has brought people back to the faith. The chapel in the mall attracted people from many faiths who came in to worship as they saw fit.

1997 - 1998
Despite liquidation sales taking place at Montgomery Ward and other stores exiting the Northway Mall, attendance at the chapel remained strong. On weekdays, around 600 people would visit and on Saturdays, the number would go up to 1,500.

The chapel was temporarily relocated in the former Northway Mall during its final months in the mall.

Wolf Road Shoppers Park (1998 - Present)
St. Francis Chapel relocated to the Wolf Road Shopper's Park on December 16, 1998, when the former enclosed Northway Mall was closed in preparation for demolition in 1999. The formal dedication of the chapel's new location was scheduled for January 7, 1999. The new location increased the size of the chapel by about 2,300 square feet and allowed easier parking.