One Catholic Ohana

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home St. Peter's by the Sea Church

St. Peter’s by the Sea Church

E-mail Print PDF
User Rating: / 3
PoorBest 
St. Peter's Church, Kahalu'u, date unknown.  Courtesy of Maryknoll Mission Archives.

St. Peter's Church, Kahalu'u, date unknown. Courtesy of Maryknoll Mission Archives.

A popular photographic subject on postcards, picturesque St. Peter’s by the Sea Church was built in 1880 across from La‘aloa Beach Park and named after Peter Kahulamu.  Noah Kanewa allowed the church to use that initial property. The tiny church was relocated in 1912 to its current location at Kahalu‘u’s Ku‘emanu Heiau, a Hawaiian surfing temple in Keauhou.

Josephine Kaomea Aiu donated “use” of the Kahalu‘u church site. Catholic families in Kahalu‘u “worked together” to erect the church, moving it more than a mile to its present location on donkeys.

Located on the makai side of Ali’i Drive, the church was pushed off its foundation twice by hurricanes. Father Benno Evers added the church’s belfry and porch in 1938. In 2007, St. Peter’s got new flooring, paint and the walls were reinforced. The rock walls outside the church were neatly restacked and fortified with concrete. The street fronting the church is the annual location of Aid Station Run #5 for the Ford Ironman World Championship—a popular spot with spectators.

Find more info on St. Michael’s mission churches in the 2009 book, “North Kona’s Catholic Heritage….remembered.” It’s for sale in the parish office and bookstore on the grounds of St. Michael’s Church in Kailua-Kona, 326-7771.


Location:  78-6684 Alii Dr. - Kailua-Kona, HI  96740

From Address:


More info...


Last Updated on Thursday, 10 June 2010 09:53  

Translate

Readings

Eighteenth Sunday in OrdinaryTime

Reading I – Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:21-23

Reading II – Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11

Gospel – Luke 12:13-21

Values to Live By -  Today’s Scriptures contain some catch phrases that are still quite familiar in our world:  “All is vanity,” and “Eat, drink, and be merry” are both Scriptural in origin.  In the same way that it is easy to pray last week’s Lord’s Prayer thoughtlessly, it is easy to let the potent passages of Scripture that are built on these common sayings glide right off our slick ears.

Last week’s Scriptures instructed us to listen attentively to the Lord, so that we might pray carefully.  Our listening and our prayer are intimately connected.  In the same way, this week we learn that our values and our living are connected as well.  It has become quite common to ask, “Do you own your possessions or do they own you?”  Like the familiar maxims from today’s Readings, we might be tempted to quote this saying flippantly, and think that in the quoting of it we have truly considered it, perhaps lived it.  Not true, Qoheleth, Paul and Jesus tell us today.  It is not wrong to treasure or cherish things of earth or of our own humanity; it is only wrong when those things we cherish are not of God, are not of the self-giving Christ.  Copyright, J.S. Paluch Co.



Newsflash