Columbus St. Agatha marked the conclusion of the Catholic Church’s liturgical year on Sunday, Nov. 23, the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, by consecrating the parish to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.

Father Mark Summers, the church’s pastor, said he desired to enhance the spirituality of the parish and its members.

The church, located in northwest Columbus’ Upper Arlington suburb, features a statue of Jesus revealing His Sacred Heart with St. Margaret Mary Alacoque kneeling at His feet.

With the statue as a signature feature of the church, Father Summers considered the Lord’s Heart “already enthroned here, in a manner of speaking,” he said. “So I’m calling it a consecration or a dedication of St. Agatha’s parishioners, both present and future, to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.”

The dedication took place during the parish’s 11 a.m. Sunday Mass on Nov. 23.

A ritual for parish enthronement offered by Welcome His Heart Sacred Heart Enthronement Network, based in Columbus, was used for the dedication. 

The network received diocesan approval from Columbus’ then-Bishop Robert Brennan in August 2020. Bishop Earl Fernandes also encouraged enthronement through Welcome His Heart in an August 2023 letter.

Diocesan parishes enthroned to the Sacred Heart include Newark St. Francis de Sales, Delaware St. Mary, Cardington Sacred Hearts, Reynoldsburg St. Pius X, Westerville St. Paul the Apostle and Worthington St. Michael the Archangel.

Chuck and JoAnn Wilson, whose daughter, Emily Jaminet, serves as national executive director of the Sacred Heart Enthronement Network, are actively involved with enthronements and approached St. Agatha’s pastor about the possibility.

“They knew that I wanted to do this, and they came to me, offering to help in whatever way they can,” Father Summers recalled.

To consecrate the parish on the final Sunday of the liturgical year, Father Summers recited a prayer at the ambo and the 12 Promises of the Sacred Heart given to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque in 17th-century Paray-le-Monial, France.

He preceded to the church’s alcove that envelops the Sacred Heart statue, offering prayers with responses from the faithful.

The pastor blessed the image with incense and sprinkled holy water around the statue. The congregation was also blessed with holy water.

The ceremony included a series of petitions, praying the Litany of the Sacred Heart of Jesus as a parish and offering a prayer of Thanksgiving.

“The participation of the faithful is critical,” the pastor explained, “because they are the ones … being consecrated to the Sacred Heart.”

In His 12 promises, Christ assured the grace of final perseverance to faithful who receive Holy Communion on First Fridays for nine consecutive months. The Lord promised that such devotees will not die with receiving the sacraments, and His Heart will be their refuge in the last moment.

Father Summers said he hopes to offer several opportunities for Sacred Heart devotion in the parish, such as the sacrament of reconciliation and exposition of the Blessed Sacrament on First Fridays.

The parish regularly offers Eucharistic exposition in the church on Wednesdays and Thursdays.

“When I’m in there praying with the Blessed Sacrament, I can’t help but think about the Sacred Heart of Jesus,” Father Summers reflected, “and how, even as I gaze at the host in the monstrance – the consecrated Body and Blood – I see the Heart of Jesus even in that plain white host.”

St. Agatha’s pastor also considered numerous popes who wrote about the devotion during the past few centuries, discovering “it’s not only a pious practice to be devoted to the Sacred Heart. It’s absolutely necessary to our spiritual advancement.”

Father Mark Summers sprinkles a statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus with holy water.

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