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St Pius X Catholic Church
Dallas
TX
75228
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Who we are
Welcome to St. Pius X Catholic Church
With Christ’s teaching to Love One Another, the Roman Catholic Church of St. Pius X is committed to the spiritual growth of our community with prayer, service and education.
With Christ’s teaching to Love One Another, the Roman Catholic Church of St. Pius X is committed to the spiritual growth of our community with prayer, service and education.
Street Address
3030 Gus Thomasson Rd
Dallas,
TX
75228
United States
Phone: 972-279-6155
Fax: 972-686-7510
Download St Pius X Catholic Church vCard with Mass Times
Church Pastor
Rev. Salvador Guzmán
Pastor
3030 Gus Thomasson Rd
Dallas,
TX
75228
United States
Phone: 972-279-6155
Fax: 972-686-7510
Download Pastor Rev. Salvador Guzmán vCard
Quote of the Day
1 Timothy 2:5
For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;
For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;
Denomination
Roman Catholic
Roman Catholic churches in Dallas, Texas, United States
Roman Catholic churches in Texas, United States
Roman Catholic churches in United States
All churches in Dallas, TX
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Leadership
Leader Name:
Rev. Salvador Guzmán
Leader Position:
Pastor
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Tel:
Fax:
972-686-7510
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Rev. Salvador Guzmán on Social Media:
St Pius X Catholic Church Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Cindy Pierotti
Admin Position:
Parish Secretary
Admin Address:
Telephone:
Fax:
972-686-7510
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Mailing Address
Driving Directions to St Pius X Catholic Church
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St Pius X Catholic Church Dallas Mass Times
Mass & Confession Times
Weekend Masses
Vigil Mass: Saturday - 5pm (English)
Sunday Masses / Misa Dominical
Sunday: 8am, 10am, 11:30am and 5:30pm (English)
Sunday: 1pm, 2:30pm and 4pm (Spanish)
Weekday Masses:
Monday - Friday: 6:15am and 8am (English)
Saturday: 8am (English)
Reconciliation / Confessions
Tuesday: 6:00pm - 7:00pm
Saturday: 3:30pm - 4:45pm
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament
Tuesday during confessions
First Friday of the Month
Mass at 7pm (Spanish)
Mass Times last updated on the 17th of December, 2017
Weekend Masses
Vigil Mass: Saturday - 5pm (English)
Sunday Masses / Misa Dominical
Sunday: 8am, 10am, 11:30am and 5:30pm (English)
Sunday: 1pm, 2:30pm and 4pm (Spanish)
Weekday Masses:
Monday - Friday: 6:15am and 8am (English)
Saturday: 8am (English)
Reconciliation / Confessions
Tuesday: 6:00pm - 7:00pm
Saturday: 3:30pm - 4:45pm
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament
Tuesday during confessions
First Friday of the Month
Mass at 7pm (Spanish)
Mass Times last updated on the 17th of December, 2017
Worship Languages
Dress code:
Children and Youth Activities
Under 12s:
Under 18s:
Local outreach & community activities:
Other activities & ministries
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2017 Christmas Mass Schedule/Misas de navidad
4TH SUNDAY OF ADVENT MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday, December 23
Vigil Mass @ 5pm
Sunday, December 24
8am, 10am, 11:30am
CHRISTMAS & NEW YEAR'S MASS SCHEDULE
DECEMBER 24
4:00 pm Children's Mass
6:00 pm Children's Mass
12 midnight Mass
DECEMBER 25: 10:00 am
Weekend of December 30th & 31st We will keep our normal Mass Schedule
And the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us, and we saw his glory, the glory as of the Father's only Son, full of grace and truth." John 1:14
JANUARY 1
Feast of the Solemnity of Mary
io:oo am - English Mass
12:00 noon - Spanish Mass
HORARIO DE MISAS PARA EL DOMINGO DE ADVIENTO
sábado, diciembre 23 @ 7pm
domingo, diciembre 24 @ 10am (en Parish Hall)
1pm (en la iglesia)
MISAS DE NAVIDAD
DOMINGO, 24 DE DICIEMBRE
8pm y 12 medianoche
LUNES, 25 DE DICIEMBRE
12 mediodia
El 30 y 31 de diciembre
Tendremos horarios normales de las misas este fin de semana.
Y aquel que es la Palabra se hizo hombre), habité entre nosotros. Memos visto su gloria, gloria que le corresponde al unigénito del Padre, lleno de gracia y de erdad. Juan 1:14
1 DE ENERO
Solemnidad de María Santísima, Madre de Dios
12 mediodia
4TH SUNDAY OF ADVENT MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday, December 23
Vigil Mass @ 5pm
Sunday, December 24
8am, 10am, 11:30am
CHRISTMAS & NEW YEAR'S MASS SCHEDULE
DECEMBER 24
4:00 pm Children's Mass
6:00 pm Children's Mass
12 midnight Mass
DECEMBER 25: 10:00 am
Weekend of December 30th & 31st We will keep our normal Mass Schedule
And the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us, and we saw his glory, the glory as of the Father's only Son, full of grace and truth." John 1:14
JANUARY 1
Feast of the Solemnity of Mary
io:oo am - English Mass
12:00 noon - Spanish Mass
HORARIO DE MISAS PARA EL DOMINGO DE ADVIENTO
sábado, diciembre 23 @ 7pm
domingo, diciembre 24 @ 10am (en Parish Hall)
1pm (en la iglesia)
MISAS DE NAVIDAD
DOMINGO, 24 DE DICIEMBRE
8pm y 12 medianoche
LUNES, 25 DE DICIEMBRE
12 mediodia
El 30 y 31 de diciembre
Tendremos horarios normales de las misas este fin de semana.
Y aquel que es la Palabra se hizo hombre), habité entre nosotros. Memos visto su gloria, gloria que le corresponde al unigénito del Padre, lleno de gracia y de erdad. Juan 1:14
1 DE ENERO
Solemnidad de María Santísima, Madre de Dios
12 mediodia
St Pius X Catholic Church Photo Gallery
St Pius X Catholic Church History
History of St. Pius X Church
Reflections on our Parish Community
Like all parishes, St. Pius X was born out of necessity. The far northeastern portion of Dallas was at the beginning of a building boom that would transform thousands of acres of rolling black land pasture into a community. The year was 1954. Dallas was growing at a rapid rate and thousands of families were moving from cities like Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, New York, and New Haven. The new Texans taxed to the limit the public facilities of the city.
Dallas had a progressive coadjutor Bishop in Thomas K. Gorman, a man who thought "big". He had come here two years earlier from the Diocese of Reno which embraced the entire state of Nevada. A Bishop ahead of his time - a builder of churches and schools, of universities and seminaries and a big supporter of the Catholic press. He was a man sent by the Holy Spirit to respond to the demands of a changing city, one whose Catholic population was increasing more rapidly than anyone anticipated. While he did not become the ordinary of the diocese upon Bishop Lynch’s on August 19, 1954, Bishop Gorman's agenda was aleady full speed ahead!
On his way to establishing 20 parishes, 25 schools, reviving the Texas Catholic, re-establishment of the University of Dallas and the founding of Holy Trinity Seminary, five of the parishes that Bishop Gorman established were in one year, 1954. Among them was St. Pius X. The parish was established February 26, carved out of the easternmost portion of St. Bernard Parish. There were 192 families in the new parish when the founding Pastor, Monsignor Vincent Wolf, first walked across the black gumbo soil of the church site located far out on a country road with the unlikely name of Gus Thomasson.
It has been said that "only those who can see the invisible can do the impossible". There was nothing to be seen by Monsignor Wolf that day but cotton; but he was a man who could see the invisible. He didn't see cotton fields. He saw a church, a school, a convent, but most of all, a community of Catholics who could see with him the invisible future. Together, pastor and parishioners set out to accomplish the impossible by turning a field of dirt clods and chopped cotton into a parish, a real Christian community.
Sometime in 1954 Monsignor Wolf commissioned F.J. Woerner & Co. to produce a study to determine configurations of the various buildings that would be needed on the property. Three outlines were produced and the one selected was used to guide construction of all buildings conceived of at that time. Interestingly some 12 years later the 'new' church was built exactly where one of the three master plan outlines suggested. Sometimes we are tempted to measure progress and accomplishment in terms of brick and mortar, and St. Pius X has an impressive amount of that. But people make it a place of worship or a center of learning.
And after all, people are what St. Pius X parish is -- people who have done the impossible because they could see the invisible. That first year was one of hardship as well as fun. There are memories of bingo games in the back yard of the rectory at 2736 San Vicente; of daily Mass in the rectory dining room/chapel; of the parish bazaar held in the uncompleted Casa View drug store and of moving the portable altar onto the stage of Casa View School auditorium each Sunday so the community could celebrate Mass together.
ur first assistant pastor Father Raphael Kamel was assigned in April right after he was ordained. This is Father Raphael saying Mass in our first church. We were watching the parish grow in numbers each week and listening to the piano being played during Mass because there was no organ.
May 29, 1954 was a great day for the parish. We became legitimized on that day with the canonization of Pope Pius X, and parishioners proudly claimed to be the first parish named in honor of the new saint. The celebration included a field Mass on the Church site, with Auxiliary Bishop Augustine Danglmayr as the celebrant. Marie Gorman became the first religious vocation from the parish when she entered the Sisters of the Holy Ghost and Mary Immaculate on August 15, 1954, the Feast of the Assumption. Appropriately, Marie took the name of Sister St. Pius.
1954 was a year of beginnings. It was a time of starting traditions--traditions that are as rich and as strong today as they were then. The Men's Club was organized, the Ladies Society with its circles was established, and the St. Pius X Choir was founded. But there was one central thought in everyone's mind: to build a church and a school.
As plans for a church progressed, it was a thrill to see the field come to life growing buildings instead of cotton. In making this dream come true, another tradition was begun--fund raising to meet the needs of our parish community. There was an early recognition that the parish had no As plans for a church progressed, it was a thrill to see the field come to life growing buildings instead of cotton. In making this dream come true, another tradition was begun--fund raising to meet the needs of our parish community. There was an early recognition that the parish had no great wealth and no great poverty. It was a community of struggling young families, all strapped with mortgages and the expenses of starting and rearing a family. But there was also the realization that all shared in the responsibility of providing for the parish's needs. Our present Budget Sunday is a far cry from that first fund drive when the men gathered at Casa Linda Lodge; but it is a direct and proud descendant.
Speaking of pride, that was the key word on May 29, 1955 when the first Mass was celebrated in the newly completed church auditorium (our present Parish Hall). It was a hectic and happy day on May 28 as parishioners moved the altar into place and cleaned up the last of construction debris.
That same year witnessed the beginnings of St. Pius X School, modest of course with five classrooms and a cafeteria; but like the mustard seed, it was destined to grow. The Sisters of the Holy Ghost and Mary Immaculate were invited to administer and teach in the new school. From the start, they enlisted dedicated lay teachers as their co-workers in the classroom. Sister Mary Fintan was named the first principal, a post she would hold until May of 1959.
The first St. Pius X football team should probably be described more in terms of the beginning of a dynasty rather than a tradition; but the great program of sports and sportsmanship had its roots in that first school year. Other "seedlings" planted in 1955 that have grown to giant proportions were the first Cub Scout Pack, Boy Scout Troop, Explorer Post, Girl Scout and Brownie Troops.
History is a tender combination of beginnings and endings. In 1956, we lost our founding pastor, Monsignor Wolf, who was made rector of the co-cathedral in Ft. Worth. Monsignor Thomas S. Zachry was appointed as the interim pastor.
After Monsignor Zachry served for only two months the diocese decided on a permanent pastor. Little did we know how fate had smiled kindly on the parish. Fate and the wisdom of Bishop Gorman that is. On May 24, 1956, Father Thomas W. Weinzapfel was named pastor. The results of his tenure will be obvious throughout this narrative.
This was an important time in the history of our parish community. The original parish community had grown from 192 to 700 families. It was during that time that the parishioners and pastor decided to undertake their first major, fund-raising campaign. Money was needed at that time to build four more classrooms and a convent to house ten sisters. A building committee was appointed that was to evolve into another key parish group, the Finance Committee.
Another St. Pius X tradition, that of reaching out to others, began in 1957 with Operation Understanding. It was a program to welcome our non-Catholic neighbors to the Church to visit, see and understand what their Catholic neighbors were doing up there on the hill. More than 200 visitors were shown through the Church and School during the Open House.
New things were still happening. The nurses of the parish organized the Health Committee to assist in the school health program. The first Christian Family Movement group was organized by Father Weinzapfel, and the first of many "Welcome Nights" was held. Another new addition to the parish was a second assistant pastor, Father Charles B. King, who had been ordained earlier in Rome.
And the parish was still growing like a wildfire. Ground was broken for eleven additional classrooms and two bathrooms. The expansion can be seen on the east (left) wing in this picture. By 1958, we had grown to 900 families when Bishop Gorman dedicated the completed classrooms and a two room addition to the temporary rectory on San Vicente. That rectory would be temporay for the next 10 years!
The tradition of awards that have filled several trophy cases had already begun by the school teams, but the entire parish started getting into the act in 1958 when Bishop Gorman awarded the parish the Bishop's Award for Operation Understanding. That same year, St. Pius X pledged twice what any other Dallas parish pledged for the construction of the new St. Paul Hospital.
By 1959, we had reached 1,000 families and reached for more brick and mortar, too. The capacity of the convent was doubled to 20 rooms in June. Al Salem (in the jacket) reviews the blueprints of the expansion job with the construction foreman. And Sister Mary Eulalia was named to replace Sister Mary Fintan. St. Pius X again won the Bishop's Award, this time for its Budget Sunday program. But there was also another parting, as Father Kamel, our first assistant, was reassigned to the Chancery Office in August to become the secretary to the Bishop. This was not the last we would see of Father Kamel. He played an important part later in the next decade helping with the administration of contracts to build our new church. Father Hugh Reilly replaced Father Kamel.
Reflections on our Parish Community
Like all parishes, St. Pius X was born out of necessity. The far northeastern portion of Dallas was at the beginning of a building boom that would transform thousands of acres of rolling black land pasture into a community. The year was 1954. Dallas was growing at a rapid rate and thousands of families were moving from cities like Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, New York, and New Haven. The new Texans taxed to the limit the public facilities of the city.
Dallas had a progressive coadjutor Bishop in Thomas K. Gorman, a man who thought "big". He had come here two years earlier from the Diocese of Reno which embraced the entire state of Nevada. A Bishop ahead of his time - a builder of churches and schools, of universities and seminaries and a big supporter of the Catholic press. He was a man sent by the Holy Spirit to respond to the demands of a changing city, one whose Catholic population was increasing more rapidly than anyone anticipated. While he did not become the ordinary of the diocese upon Bishop Lynch’s on August 19, 1954, Bishop Gorman's agenda was aleady full speed ahead!
On his way to establishing 20 parishes, 25 schools, reviving the Texas Catholic, re-establishment of the University of Dallas and the founding of Holy Trinity Seminary, five of the parishes that Bishop Gorman established were in one year, 1954. Among them was St. Pius X. The parish was established February 26, carved out of the easternmost portion of St. Bernard Parish. There were 192 families in the new parish when the founding Pastor, Monsignor Vincent Wolf, first walked across the black gumbo soil of the church site located far out on a country road with the unlikely name of Gus Thomasson.
It has been said that "only those who can see the invisible can do the impossible". There was nothing to be seen by Monsignor Wolf that day but cotton; but he was a man who could see the invisible. He didn't see cotton fields. He saw a church, a school, a convent, but most of all, a community of Catholics who could see with him the invisible future. Together, pastor and parishioners set out to accomplish the impossible by turning a field of dirt clods and chopped cotton into a parish, a real Christian community.
Sometime in 1954 Monsignor Wolf commissioned F.J. Woerner & Co. to produce a study to determine configurations of the various buildings that would be needed on the property. Three outlines were produced and the one selected was used to guide construction of all buildings conceived of at that time. Interestingly some 12 years later the 'new' church was built exactly where one of the three master plan outlines suggested. Sometimes we are tempted to measure progress and accomplishment in terms of brick and mortar, and St. Pius X has an impressive amount of that. But people make it a place of worship or a center of learning.
And after all, people are what St. Pius X parish is -- people who have done the impossible because they could see the invisible. That first year was one of hardship as well as fun. There are memories of bingo games in the back yard of the rectory at 2736 San Vicente; of daily Mass in the rectory dining room/chapel; of the parish bazaar held in the uncompleted Casa View drug store and of moving the portable altar onto the stage of Casa View School auditorium each Sunday so the community could celebrate Mass together.
ur first assistant pastor Father Raphael Kamel was assigned in April right after he was ordained. This is Father Raphael saying Mass in our first church. We were watching the parish grow in numbers each week and listening to the piano being played during Mass because there was no organ.
May 29, 1954 was a great day for the parish. We became legitimized on that day with the canonization of Pope Pius X, and parishioners proudly claimed to be the first parish named in honor of the new saint. The celebration included a field Mass on the Church site, with Auxiliary Bishop Augustine Danglmayr as the celebrant. Marie Gorman became the first religious vocation from the parish when she entered the Sisters of the Holy Ghost and Mary Immaculate on August 15, 1954, the Feast of the Assumption. Appropriately, Marie took the name of Sister St. Pius.
1954 was a year of beginnings. It was a time of starting traditions--traditions that are as rich and as strong today as they were then. The Men's Club was organized, the Ladies Society with its circles was established, and the St. Pius X Choir was founded. But there was one central thought in everyone's mind: to build a church and a school.
As plans for a church progressed, it was a thrill to see the field come to life growing buildings instead of cotton. In making this dream come true, another tradition was begun--fund raising to meet the needs of our parish community. There was an early recognition that the parish had no As plans for a church progressed, it was a thrill to see the field come to life growing buildings instead of cotton. In making this dream come true, another tradition was begun--fund raising to meet the needs of our parish community. There was an early recognition that the parish had no great wealth and no great poverty. It was a community of struggling young families, all strapped with mortgages and the expenses of starting and rearing a family. But there was also the realization that all shared in the responsibility of providing for the parish's needs. Our present Budget Sunday is a far cry from that first fund drive when the men gathered at Casa Linda Lodge; but it is a direct and proud descendant.
Speaking of pride, that was the key word on May 29, 1955 when the first Mass was celebrated in the newly completed church auditorium (our present Parish Hall). It was a hectic and happy day on May 28 as parishioners moved the altar into place and cleaned up the last of construction debris.
That same year witnessed the beginnings of St. Pius X School, modest of course with five classrooms and a cafeteria; but like the mustard seed, it was destined to grow. The Sisters of the Holy Ghost and Mary Immaculate were invited to administer and teach in the new school. From the start, they enlisted dedicated lay teachers as their co-workers in the classroom. Sister Mary Fintan was named the first principal, a post she would hold until May of 1959.
The first St. Pius X football team should probably be described more in terms of the beginning of a dynasty rather than a tradition; but the great program of sports and sportsmanship had its roots in that first school year. Other "seedlings" planted in 1955 that have grown to giant proportions were the first Cub Scout Pack, Boy Scout Troop, Explorer Post, Girl Scout and Brownie Troops.
History is a tender combination of beginnings and endings. In 1956, we lost our founding pastor, Monsignor Wolf, who was made rector of the co-cathedral in Ft. Worth. Monsignor Thomas S. Zachry was appointed as the interim pastor.
After Monsignor Zachry served for only two months the diocese decided on a permanent pastor. Little did we know how fate had smiled kindly on the parish. Fate and the wisdom of Bishop Gorman that is. On May 24, 1956, Father Thomas W. Weinzapfel was named pastor. The results of his tenure will be obvious throughout this narrative.
This was an important time in the history of our parish community. The original parish community had grown from 192 to 700 families. It was during that time that the parishioners and pastor decided to undertake their first major, fund-raising campaign. Money was needed at that time to build four more classrooms and a convent to house ten sisters. A building committee was appointed that was to evolve into another key parish group, the Finance Committee.
Another St. Pius X tradition, that of reaching out to others, began in 1957 with Operation Understanding. It was a program to welcome our non-Catholic neighbors to the Church to visit, see and understand what their Catholic neighbors were doing up there on the hill. More than 200 visitors were shown through the Church and School during the Open House.
New things were still happening. The nurses of the parish organized the Health Committee to assist in the school health program. The first Christian Family Movement group was organized by Father Weinzapfel, and the first of many "Welcome Nights" was held. Another new addition to the parish was a second assistant pastor, Father Charles B. King, who had been ordained earlier in Rome.
And the parish was still growing like a wildfire. Ground was broken for eleven additional classrooms and two bathrooms. The expansion can be seen on the east (left) wing in this picture. By 1958, we had grown to 900 families when Bishop Gorman dedicated the completed classrooms and a two room addition to the temporary rectory on San Vicente. That rectory would be temporay for the next 10 years!
The tradition of awards that have filled several trophy cases had already begun by the school teams, but the entire parish started getting into the act in 1958 when Bishop Gorman awarded the parish the Bishop's Award for Operation Understanding. That same year, St. Pius X pledged twice what any other Dallas parish pledged for the construction of the new St. Paul Hospital.
By 1959, we had reached 1,000 families and reached for more brick and mortar, too. The capacity of the convent was doubled to 20 rooms in June. Al Salem (in the jacket) reviews the blueprints of the expansion job with the construction foreman. And Sister Mary Eulalia was named to replace Sister Mary Fintan. St. Pius X again won the Bishop's Award, this time for its Budget Sunday program. But there was also another parting, as Father Kamel, our first assistant, was reassigned to the Chancery Office in August to become the secretary to the Bishop. This was not the last we would see of Father Kamel. He played an important part later in the next decade helping with the administration of contracts to build our new church. Father Hugh Reilly replaced Father Kamel.
St Pius X Catholic Church Historical Photos
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