Valerie Gerlich was helping plan the church's sesquicentennial dinner in September when she got the news: St. Michael — a church nearly as old as the state of Minnesota — would be closing its doors. Its last mass will be celebrated Sunday.
The dinner became a modest luncheon — ham sandwiches in the gym — devoted to saying goodbye to a 150-year-old West St. Paul parish.
"It was devastating," said Gerlich, a 20-year member of the parish. "The timing couldn't have been worse."
Church leaders say a depleted parish and dwindling contributions led them to the painful decision to close. Parishioners, some crestfallen or angry, are now scrambling for new places to worship.
It's a familiar scene. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis called for a dramatic round of church closings and consolidations about five years ago. Things have stabilized since, and St. Michael is the only metro-area church to close this year.
Between 2012 and 2015, St. Michael was "clustered" with two nearby parishes, meaning they shared a pastor. In 2012, its school combined with several other schools to form Community of Saints.
It wasn't enough to save St. Michael, a church that served about 230 households, according to the archdiocese's newsletter.
"I'm just really sorry that St. Michael has to be closed," the Rev. Andrew Brinkman, a parish priest, told the congregation recently. "I feel my own helplessness in the midst of it all."