Fr. Clarence E.
Fr. Clarence E. Williams, Jr., C.PP.S., 1950-2023
Fr. Clarence E. Williams, Jr., C.PP.S., 73, died on Saturday, July 8, 2023, at Jennings Nursing Home, Garfield Heights, Ohio. He had been in failing health in recent years.
He was born on May 10, 1950, in Tuscaloosa, Ala., to Clarence E. Williams Sr. and Lula Belle (Woods) Williams. Raised in Cleveland, he entered the Congregation in 1965 at Brunnerdale, the Missionaries’ former high school seminary near Canton, Ohio. He was ordained in Cleveland on October 28, 1978.
Fr. Williams was a writer, preacher and pastor who throughout his more than 40 years as a priest was an advocate for Black Catholics and for racial justice and understanding.
After his ordination, Fr. Williams entered parish ministry at St. Anthony Church, first as an assistant then as pastor.
In 1995, he was assigned to the Archbishop Lyke International Center in Detroit. He also served as director of African American ministries for the Archdiocese. In all, he ministered in the Archdiocese for more than 25 years.
In 1998, he received a doctoral degree in global education and cultural communication from the Union Institute and University of Cincinnati. He authored three books, many articles and gave presentations throughout the country on the theme of Racial Sobriety, a term with which he described his process for dealing with racism as a social illness, and a treatment program to help individuals and groups overcome racism. He established an institute, Recovery from Racism, dedicated to forming leaders and creating programs to counter racism. His work gained much attention from the Church, and he was invited to speak in many dioceses in the U.S. and abroad.
He was also the co-founder of Building Bridges in Black and Brown, a national dialogue between African American and Hispanic American communities. Through this initiative, he helped others explore the possibilities of a “pluricultural” world, a way to honor each individual as a child of God yet appreciate the complexities and gifts of each culture, and how they might benefit each other.
In 2007, Fr. Williams was named the director of racial equality and diversity for Catholic Charities USA, based in Washington, DC. Throughout these years of ministry, he was also active in multi-media productions, acting as executive producer on a number of video projects, including several that highlighted the history and gifts that Black Catholics bring to the Church.
He also continued in parish work, serving from 2010-12 at Holy Innocents-St. Barnabas in Roseville, Mich. From 2012-18, he was pastor of St. James the Less Church in Columbus, Ohio. He continued to give presentations on Racial Sobriety and other topics.
Fr. Williams’ many awards include a lifetime achievement award from the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus; the Dr. Martin Luther King “Keep the Dream Alive” Award during his time at St. Anthony Church in Detroit; and the Msgr. Phillip Murnion Award for Pastoral Excellence from the National Pastoral Life Center in New York.
He could speak compellingly to a crowd, yet make a solitary person feel completely heard and understood. A cheerful extrovert, he was happy to reach out to people from all walks of life. His educational achievements helped him excel as a communicator, but he never talked down to people and always appreciated the gifts they brought to the table of faith and fellowship. Despite his busy schedule, he supported his religious community in many ways, including serving as director of formation and as a member of its provincial council. He was a good friend to his fellow Missionaries and offered them encouragement and affirmation.
Though health issues plagued his final years, he never lost his sense of optimism and hope that the children of God could learn to live together, free of racism and hate. Even on his worst days, he longed to get back to his active ministry to further the cause of healing through the Precious Blood of Jesus.
Fr. Williams is survived by his father, Clarence E. Williams, Sr., of Cleveland; four younger brothers, Thomas D., Charles (Donna), Willie E. (Mercedes), and Carl (Cheryl), all of Cleveland; and numerous nieces and nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Lula Belle.
A funeral Mass will be celebrated at St. Charles Center, Carthagena, Ohio, on Monday, July 17, at 2 p.m. with Fr. Jeffrey Kirch, C.PP.S., provincial director, presiding. Fr. William O’Donnell, C.PP.S., will be the homilist.
Viewing at St. Charles will be held on Sunday, June 16, from 2-5 p.m., with a prayer service at 5 p.m. led by Fr. Andrew O’Reilly, C.PP.S.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at St. Adalbert Church, Cleveland, at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, July 18. Fr. Richard Friebel, C.PP.S., will preside. St. Adalbert was Fr. Williams’ home parish, and he attended the parish school.
Viewing will be held at St. Adalbert from 11 a.m. until the time of Mass on Tuesday.
Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery, Cleveland. He will be laid to rest next to his mentor, Fr. Gene Wilson, C.PP.S.
A memorial Mass will be celebrated on Monday, July 24 at 7 p.m. at St. James the Less Church, Columbus. Fr. Stephen Dos Santos, C.PP.S., to preside and preach.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Missionaries of the Precious Blood, United States Province.
Thanks to The Missionaries of the Precious Blood.
Fr. Clarence E. Williams, Jr., C.PP.S., 1950-2023
Fr. Clarence E. Williams, Jr., C.PP.S., 73, died on Saturday, July 8, 2023, at Jennings Nursing Home, Garfield Heights, Ohio. He had been in failing health in recent years.
He was born on May 10, 1950, in Tuscaloosa, Ala., to Clarence E. Williams Sr. and Lula Belle (Woods) Williams. Raised in Cleveland, he entered the Congregation in 1965 at Brunnerdale, the Missionaries’ former high school seminary near Canton, Ohio. He was ordained in Cleveland on October 28, 1978.
Fr. Williams was a writer, preacher and pastor who throughout his more than 40 years as a priest was an advocate for Black Catholics and for racial justice and understanding.
After his ordination, Fr. Williams entered parish ministry at St. Anthony Church, first as an assistant then as pastor.
In 1995, he was assigned to the Archbishop Lyke International Center in Detroit. He also served as director of African American ministries for the Archdiocese. In all, he ministered in the Archdiocese for more than 25 years.
In 1998, he received a doctoral degree in global education and cultural communication from the Union Institute and University of Cincinnati. He authored three books, many articles and gave presentations throughout the country on the theme of Racial Sobriety, a term with which he described his process for dealing with racism as a social illness, and a treatment program to help individuals and groups overcome racism. He established an institute, Recovery from Racism, dedicated to forming leaders and creating programs to counter racism. His work gained much attention from the Church, and he was invited to speak in many dioceses in the U.S. and abroad.
He was also the co-founder of Building Bridges in Black and Brown, a national dialogue between African American and Hispanic American communities. Through this initiative, he helped others explore the possibilities of a “pluricultural” world, a way to honor each individual as a child of God yet appreciate the complexities and gifts of each culture, and how they might benefit each other.
In 2007, Fr. Williams was named the director of racial equality and diversity for Catholic Charities USA, based in Washington, DC. Throughout these years of ministry, he was also active in multi-media productions, acting as executive producer on a number of video projects, including several that highlighted the history and gifts that Black Catholics bring to the Church.
He also continued in parish work, serving from 2010-12 at Holy Innocents-St. Barnabas in Roseville, Mich. From 2012-18, he was pastor of St. James the Less Church in Columbus, Ohio. He continued to give presentations on Racial Sobriety and other topics.
Fr. Williams’ many awards include a lifetime achievement award from the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus; the Dr. Martin Luther King “Keep the Dream Alive” Award during his time at St. Anthony Church in Detroit; and the Msgr. Phillip Murnion Award for Pastoral Excellence from the National Pastoral Life Center in New York.
He could speak compellingly to a crowd, yet make a solitary person feel completely heard and understood. A cheerful extrovert, he was happy to reach out to people from all walks of life. His educational achievements helped him excel as a communicator, but he never talked down to people and always appreciated the gifts they brought to the table of faith and fellowship. Despite his busy schedule, he supported his religious community in many ways, including serving as director of formation and as a member of its provincial council. He was a good friend to his fellow Missionaries and offered them encouragement and affirmation.
Though health issues plagued his final years, he never lost his sense of optimism and hope that the children of God could learn to live together, free of racism and hate. Even on his worst days, he longed to get back to his active ministry to further the cause of healing through the Precious Blood of Jesus.
Fr. Williams is survived by his father, Clarence E. Williams, Sr., of Cleveland; four younger brothers, Thomas D., Charles (Donna), Willie E. (Mercedes), and Carl (Cheryl), all of Cleveland; and numerous nieces and nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Lula Belle.
A funeral Mass will be celebrated at St. Charles Center, Carthagena, Ohio, on Monday, July 17, at 2 p.m. with Fr. Jeffrey Kirch, C.PP.S., provincial director, presiding. Fr. William O’Donnell, C.PP.S., will be the homilist.
Viewing at St. Charles will be held on Sunday, June 16, from 2-5 p.m., with a prayer service at 5 p.m. led by Fr. Andrew O’Reilly, C.PP.S.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at St. Adalbert Church, Cleveland, at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, July 18. Fr. Richard Friebel, C.PP.S., will preside. St. Adalbert was Fr. Williams’ home parish, and he attended the parish school.
Viewing will be held at St. Adalbert from 11 a.m. until the time of Mass on Tuesday.
Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery, Cleveland. He will be laid to rest next to his mentor, Fr. Gene Wilson, C.PP.S.
A memorial Mass will be celebrated on Monday, July 24 at 7 p.m. at St. James the Less Church, Columbus. Fr. Stephen Dos Santos, C.PP.S., to preside and preach.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Missionaries of the Precious Blood, United States Province.
Thanks to Missionaries of the Precious Blood
Fr Norman Fischer elected National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus president
The Kentucky native was chosen earlier this month to lead the 55-year-old organization in its post-pandemic era.
Fr Norman Fischer, a veteran priest of the Diocese of Lexington, has been elected president of the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus, the organization has announced.
The 50-year-old pastor will head a newly refreshed NBCCC board, chosen by the membership on August 21. He is joined by a new vice president in Fr Kareem Smith of New York; the incumbent secretary, Dcn Michael Taylor of New Orleans; and at-large members Fr Jeffery Ott and Br Herman Johnson, both of whom are members of the Dominican Order.
“To God be the glory,” said President-elect Fischer, who is succeeding Dcn Mel Tardy of Fort Wayne-South Bend in the presidential role.
“I remain a humbled priest son, always keeping before me how I was lifted up by the wisdom of so many great priests—many since deceased—of the NBCCC.”
Fischer is presently the pastor of St. Peter Claver Catholic Church, a historically Black parish in Lexington, where he has served since 2006. Under his leadership, the community recently completed a landmark rebuilding project, resulting in their new $3.5M worship space being dedicated earlier this year.
Himself an Afro-Asian American—likely the first to serve as NBCCC president—Fischer has praised the diversity of his parish, which now includes “Filipinos, Africans, African Americans, Anglo, Germans,” and various other ethnic groups.
The Kentucky native has also served as chaplain of Lexington Catholic High School for more than a decade, ministering to students in the Mass and through his directorship of the school’s Spiritual Life Center.
Fischer credits much of his success in ministry to the support he received from the various organizations with which he will now help convene each year as part of the Black Catholic Joint Conference. He specifically mentioned the influence of the Black women religious who prayed for him during his time in seminary.
“I must say it is crucial to me that the NBCCC be in solidarity with the phenomenal sisters and nuns of the National Black Sisters’ Conference,” he said.
“I’ll never forget how so many of them literally prayed for me and with me at every joint conference leading to my ordination.”
Fischer has previously served as an officer of the National Black Catholic Seminarians Association (NBCSA), which collaborates with the NBCCC as a constituent organization and as a member of the Joint Conference.
The recently elected NBCSA president, James Johnson IV of Charlotte, will serve as an ex officio board member of the NBCCC, which was founded in 1968 to support “the spiritual, theological, educational, and ministerial growth of Black Catholic clergy, religious and seminarians.”
The newly elected priests, deacons, and religious brothers of the NBCCC board will be officially installed on Monday, September 25, in a ceremony known as the Rite of Transition. Ahead of the event, Fischer expressed gratitude for his predecessor’s work in one of the most challenging periods in the organization’s history.
“Deacon Mel truly paved a difficult pathway for us through the COVID-19 pandemic and guided our organization with grace and peace,” Fischer said, adding a note on his hopes for the future.
“I believe I am called to be a bridge connecting the strong wisdom of our elders to the dynamic vision of our youthful Black Catholic religious, ordained, and lay leaders… I look forward to seeing where the Holy Spirit leads us together.”
Nate Tinner-Williams is co-founder and editor of Black Catholic Messenger.
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National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus (NBCCC) Potential Black SaintsMember's DirectoryMission Statement
As a fraternal organization dedicated to the spiritual, theological, educational, and ministerial growth of Black Catholic clergy, religious and seminarians, we serve the people of God — particularly the members of the Black community — in order to more effectively meet their spiritual and social needs.
Formation of NBCCC
In April 1968, amidst a growing sense of Black Nationalism and facing widespread riots and disillusionment in the wake of the assassination of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., roughly half of the then-150 Black Catholic clergy met separately at the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate — the first time the nation’s Black Catholic Clergy had ever gathered as one body.
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2019 NBCCC Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient: Brother Roy Smith, C.S.C.
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