Soon after ordination he accepted the offer of Bishop Modeste DeMers of Vancouver Island to join his diocese. After several years of ministry mainly among the Indians, Aerden had unspecified difficulties with the Bishop which were serious enough to get him suspended. He moved to California on February 28, 1851, and for several years worked, as a layman, in the mines at Marysville and Grass Valley.
One Sunday, after the Mass he was attending, he introduced himself to the celebrant, Fr. Thomas J. Dalton, and corrected a point of doctrine in his sermon. Evidently Dalton was impressed with Aerden (if not with the correction!), for he wrote to Archbishop Alemany and told him of the suspended priest. Alemany invited Aerden to return to the exercise of his priesthood and, the invitation accepted, the suspension was lifted. Fr. Vilarrasa welcomed him back into the Order in Benicia on November 4, 1856. From then on his name appears frequently in the documentation and records of the congregation, indicating an active and fruitful ministry, both internal to the Order and external in the Archdiocese at large.
He was such a good missionary because he spoke French, Spanish and German, as well as English. After a time in Benicia, he was put in charge of St. Brigid's Parish in San Francisco, then far on the outskirts of the city and built the first church there. From 1864 to 1874 he was the pastor of St. Francis church, which is now the shrine. He then moved to Martinez, where he built the church. He died of a stroke in 1896 as the much loved first resident pastor of St. Catherine's in Martinez after long service there.
Soon after ordination he accepted the offer of Bishop Modeste DeMers of Vancouver Island to join his diocese. After several years of ministry mainly among the Indians, Aerden had unspecified difficulties with the Bishop which were serious enough to get him suspended. He moved to California on February 28, 1851, and for several years worked, as a layman, in the mines at Marysville and Grass Valley.
One Sunday, after the Mass he was attending, he introduced himself to the celebrant, Fr. Thomas J. Dalton, and corrected a point of doctrine in his sermon. Evidently Dalton was impressed with Aerden (if not with the correction!), for he wrote to Archbishop Alemany and told him of the suspended priest. Alemany invited Aerden to return to the exercise of his priesthood and, the invitation accepted, the suspension was lifted. Fr. Vilarrasa welcomed him back into the Order in Benicia on November 4, 1856. From then on his name appears frequently in the documentation and records of the congregation, indicating an active and fruitful ministry, both internal to the Order and external in the Archdiocese at large.
He was such a good missionary because he spoke French, Spanish and German, as well as English. After a time in Benicia, he was put in charge of St. Brigid's Parish in San Francisco, then far on the outskirts of the city and built the first church there. From 1864 to 1874 he was the pastor of St. Francis church, which is now the shrine. He then moved to Martinez, where he built the church. He died of a stroke in 1896 as the much loved first resident pastor of St. Catherine's in Martinez after long service there.
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