Although its founders almost all returned to Connecticut after the Civil War, the little church has managed to hold itself together.
Today, the monsignor's church manages the project.
Prosecutors Moving In Until recently, the church has managed to keep most of the legal cases involving sexual abuse by priests out of court.
By 1917, the church had about 15,000 membership and also managed a school (Petrischule), a hospital and an orphanage.
The church managed to avoid any nationalistic conflict between its Lithuanian peasant members and the still predominant Polish nobles.
While the church managed to keep its bells in the First World War, in 1942 they were seized and melted down for war requirements.
Despite initial frictions, the two churches gradually managed to co-exist side by side peacefully.
Depending on the issue, the church manages to form alliances on Capitol Hill across the continuum.
Pentecostal churches have managed to distance themselves to such a degree they were largely unaffected by Chiluba's fall.
The church had wide spread tithing rights and managed a large parish.