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    Basking Ridge Presbyterian Church

    4.7 (3 reviews)

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    13 years ago

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    Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Religious Education - OLPH

    Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Religious Education

    4.7(3 reviews)
    1.7 mi

    Yesterday, I had to attend my friend Joe's funeral, and it made me think of my admittedly spotty…read morehistory with this church. When i moved to the area as a teen, some of the friends I made had been students at its parochial school, St. Elizabeth's, when they were kids. One friend got in trouble and was forced to scrub bird dung off the statue of the Virgin Mary (at least that's the story I heard). Another friend was attending school around the time they outlawed "corporal punishment" in Catholic schools, but my friend's father told the nuns, "It's OK; you can hit my kid if you need to." Not having been raised Catholic, I was never a parishioner here, and I stopped attending the Lutheran church I was forced through childhood to attend when I was 15. When an old friend's mother died some years later, I attended her funeral here. When that same old friend got married, the ceremony was performed here, and I was one of the groomsmen (for a time, I dated one of the bridesmaids, a relationship that didn't last long, although it wasn't all that much shorter than the marriage of my friend). When another old friend's father died a few years ago, I attended the funeral here. Not too long after my re-union with my genetic family, the father of my half-siblings (who were raised Catholic) died (my birth father's name began with "O'" and their father's name ended with "O"), and I thought the respectful thing to do was to buy a Mass Card. I came to Perpetual Help (even though their father had died in Passaic County), not entirely sure of the process. I found a pleasant-looking house which I assumed to be the rectory on the sprawling property, found the office, and a polite woman in civilian clothes (my assumption was she was a nun) made out the Mass Card, and took my money. I'm not sure my half-siblings, who are ardent atheists (my half-brothers anyway), really appreciated the effort, but I felt better for having done it. The property, as mentioned, is sprawling, wooded and peaceful. The school stands alongside the church. It evidently was started in 1900. Inside, there's nothing garish or ostentatious, and there's a sedate but nonetheless powerful aura of rectitude, spirituality and history that goes back over 100 years. Generations have worshiped here, mourned here, sought solace here. Dark wood beams in the ceiling support frosted glass panels. The stained-glass windows are tastefully rendered. I've always found the Catholic churches I've been to in my life impressive but sometimes the grandeur of them (St. Patrick's in NYC is awe-inspiring but I can't help thinking about Lenny Bruce's bit about "Christ and Moses" returning to Earth) can ignite the cynic in me. Perpetual Help, by its very simplicity, is all that much more impressive because of it. The last time I was here, a few years ago for the funeral of my friend's father, I found the service a bit unsettling. As a non-Catholic, I never felt excluded when the parishioners went up to take Communion at my birth mother's church (I went as part of the bonding process between us, but I liked the services, and she has been prone to say, "In your soul, you're a Catholic."). It never bothered me. "You're Catholic, I'm not, I get it." At one point, a parishioner returned to the pew after partaking, and said with a smile, "Next time it'll be you." It wasn't me next time, and it hasn't been, but the comment was made in a friendly spirit, and I was appreciative of his good-natured solicitude about my spiritual welfare. At the service for my friend's father, a young priest bid the Catholics to come up for Communion, and then said, "To our non-Catholic friends, please fold your arms upwards with hands extended," or some such gesture that I was uncomfortable with and didn't do. I guess it was supposed to symbolize unity and solidarity, but I thought it was ridiculous. It didn't at all make me feel like part of a community of family and friends mourning the passing of a loved one and bidding farewell, and I think the priest flashed me a grim, judgmental look, although I guess that could be my imagination. This time? The service was for my friend's (since high school) brother-in-law, also a friend of mine for decades. Joe was one of the nicest guys you could meet. An older priest officiated (thankfully), and there was no need to twist my arms about like a pretzel to show solidarity while highlighting my heathenism, my being "outside the circle" (being an adopted kid, I always felt "outside the circle" anyway). It was a solemn, sad and, conversely, uplifting service. I got teary eyed more than once. The priest spoke of God's "kindness and mercy" and said that when we all reach the end of this mortal coil, the dead that we loved will be waiting to greet us. Not sure I'm any more believing of that now than I was before the service, but it is a nice vision. A lovely service in a beautiful, historic church. If nothing else, my friend is at peace. God bless, Joe.

    It is a lovely little church. I had the opportunity to visit today because my cousin got married…read moretoday at this church. The outside is all stone and the inside all woodwork. Behind the altar is a golden wood panel engraved with the Annunciation scene. A crucifix tablet precedes the altar high on the ceiling. I had trouble finding how to get to the church. The parking behind the church is not well displayed and difficult to enter.

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    Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Religious Education - My cousin's wedding

    My cousin's wedding

    Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Religious Education
    Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Religious Education - OLPH

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    OLPH

    The Shrine of St Joseph

    The Shrine of St Joseph

    4.9(11 reviews)
    3.6 mi

    During the pandemic, I would routinely walk here from Summit: 9 hours one way - a good part up…read morehill. 9 miles back. Typically 8 hours round trip. I walked 800 miles and lost 75 miles over lockdown. This was a holy place higher than religion. It represented the blessing that was Joe Biden's arrival after the horror of the last reign. Walking. Most great religions and philosophies were invented that way.

    I've passed this place countless times in the years I've resided in the area without having any…read moreinclination to enter its grounds and explore. It was a shrine (although I know technically what a "shrine" is...as a teen, I had 1 set up in my bedroom to actress Nastassja Kinski...I never quite knew the difference between a "church" and a "shrine" and had no real desire to find out), and it sat up on a hill, surrounded by trees. My relationship to "religion" and "spirituality" has been complicated. Compelled to attend Protestant church as a kid, I had developed enormous hostility to religion. At 17, motivated by an inherent sense of fairness, I recognized that I didn't necessarily know what I was hostile about, and sat down to read the Bible. It wasn't an easy process, but I found the New Testament dealing with Jesus enlightening. At the risk of sounding blasphemous, I found Him to be a sort of proto-Marxist (even though my 17-year-old conceptions of Marxism were pretty inchoate and uninformed), not the button-down conservative with blond hair I had been raised to believe He was. He healed the sick, He championed the poor and destitute, He excoriated the moneychangers and drove them from the temple. What was not to like? Reading the Bible didn't necessarily make a believer of me, but it made me less hostile. In the years since then, I've tried to explore all aspects of spirituality. I've read books dealing with Islam, Judaism, Hinduism (I like their tradition of tolerance, their belief that all religions have the same goal, and can be equally good), Buddhism, etc. (For writings pertaining to the historical Jesus, I recommend the work of Prof. Bart Ehrman). Catholicism always intrigued me. As an adopted kid raised as a Protestant in a largely Catholic-Jewish neighborhood, it seemed a more colorful, less rigid "club" that I wasn't able to join. Later, when I was re-united with my Catholic birth mother, I attended services with her and liked a lot of what I witnessed (it should be noted that my 2 half-brothers, raised Catholic, are staunch atheists now). At some point, I learned that the Catholic Bible has more chapters, or books, in it than the Protestant version I had read so long ago (I guess Luther or King Henry VIII or Calvin decided to remove the chapters they felt weren't necessary). I decided I was going to have to re-read the Bible, but the Catholic version this time. I guess it was timely that in riding around with my old friend, who was raised Catholic, we pulled into the shrine. When I looked inquiringly at him, he said, "I used to come here when my mom was dying. It gave me some peace to come here." There was plentiful parking, the grounds were beautiful, and we entered the main building, which contains a church (or chapel) and a gift shop. A Mass was being conducted, and we didn't stay long (evidently, they also have Masses in Spanish). There's another chapel being built in another part of the grounds. There's a monument outside on the sprawling lawn to those who died in 9/11, with an impressive structure of bells that sound off periodically (I had the misfortune to be standing under 1 when it went off...loudly...and for a few minutes I feared that the bells would accomplish the total deafness that all those Ramones and Black Sabbath concerts hadn't). The gift shop had much for sale, and I ended up buying the Catholic Bible for about $45 (I couldn't help but reflect on those free Bibles the Gideons used to put in hotel rooms way back when). It's a wonderfully crafted edition, with historical explanations, graphs, colorful illustrations, etc., and I have started reading it. I must confess (Sorry, Father, that's "confess" with a small "c") that the Old Testament is a tough slog, but I intend to see it through. They sell other religious books, CDs, DVDs, jewelry (crosses, etc.), and other items pertaining to Catholicsm. They had a statuette of St. Michael with his foot on the Devil's head that I was tempted to buy, but I figured $45 for one day was enough. The proprietor of the gift shop was pleasant and friendly. Am I ready to convert? No. As I face the reality of oncoming death, I envy those with some firm spiritual faith to grasp on to. Protestantism isn't for me; it reminds me too much of Howard Johnson's 28 flavors of ice cream-- take your pick. But I don't know that I can, as a sentient adult, say, "Yes, I'm no longer Pro-Choice, I support celibacy in the priesthood and the 2nd class status of women, and I agree that some of these harmless vices that are common to humanity are grave sins that I need to repent of in order to find forgiveness and redemption." And I don't think Christianity is the only way to find God, if He or She actually exists. Still, the shrine is a lovely, tranquil place for the faithful to engage in reflection, meditation, and expressions of their faith. Or for those who, as I am, are willing enough to at least investigate the possibility of having such a faith.

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    The Shrine of St Joseph
    The Shrine of St Joseph
    The Shrine of St Joseph

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    Basking Ridge Presbyterian Church - churches - Updated May 2026

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