I’ve always been impressed at the surprisingly large number of cops and former cops who find themselves attracted to the diaconate. There are a number of them in the Diocese of Brooklyn — each enthusiastically continuing the vocation to serve that is a hallmark of life on the beat or in the precinct.
Now, the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin has run a story the man who happens to be the only Philadelphia police officer who is also a deacon:
Joe Cella was on the altar Nov. 7 for the funeral of slain Philadelphia Police Officer Chuck Cassidy. Mr. Cella, 50, a Catholic deacon from Our Lady of Consolation Parish in the Tacony section, read one of the Gospel passages. It was from John 15 and includes the famous “Greater love hath no one than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”
The Cassidy family picked that verse and the Rev. Carl Janicki, president of Cardinal Dougherty High School, Mr. Cassidy’s alma mater, used it as the focus of his homily, saying that Mr. Cassidy had indeed laid down his life for “friends” in battling crime on the city’s streets.
On Oct. 31, Mr. Cassidy was fatally wounded when he checked on a Dunkin’ Donuts in the 6600 block of North Broad Street. Twenty-one-year-old John Lewis, an Olney High School dropout, confessed to the killing.
Mr. Cassidy’s murder, as well as the murder of Officer Gary Skerski in 2006, resonates with Mr. Cella in a way that most clergymen could not appreciate. You see, Deacon Joe Cella is also Detective Sgt. Joe Cella.
“The Skerski and the Cassidy families, let me tell you something, they are posters for good, wholesome, American families,” says Mr. Cella. “One being the good strong Polish-Catholic family. The other being the good, strong Irish-Catholic family. Both individuals were faithful to their children, faithful to their wives, involved in their parish and their parish community.”
The murders of Messrs. Cassidy and Skerski, as well as the recent spate of non-fatal shootings of police officers, once again spurs the timeless indictment of belief in a loving God. Why do bad things happen to good people, anyway?
“What is bad in the world, God does not want, God does not bring, God does not wish upon us,” says Mr. Cella, who recently stepped down after 14 years as the chaplain for the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police. “Someone looks at something evil that happens and says, ‘Well, that must have been God’s will.’ It was not. That was the exercise of free choice, the most powerful gift that God gives us. It’s the poor choices of human beings that bring the evil into the world. The influence of temptation. The influence of Satan.”
Regarding evil as a malignant force, and not just the absence of good, helps both Deacon Joe and Detective Joe try to improve the city’s environment. “Both [vocations] find their nature in service to the poor,” says Mr. Cella. “I use ‘poor’ in a biblical way: poor in spirit, not necessarily poor in temporal goods.”
Too many Philadelphians, he says, have their spirits broken by being victims of crime. As a result, “Maybe they don’t go out and enjoy life. They don’t enjoy God’s creation. The way they could, the way they should, the way God wants them to. For fear. Our presence tries to allay those fears. Our presence tries to put down and eradicate the evil.”
The problem is “greater than the police,” he adds. It’s societal. “We have to look at the structure of families these days,” says Mr. Cella, who’s been with the Philadelphia Police Department for 30 years. “As God has been taken out of our world, there’s no fear of repercussion. Sometimes I talk to people and they quote ‘give it up’ and give you the confession because they need a little rest. Going to prison’s like getting rest. They’ll get three hot and a cot. They don’t have to work for it, they don’t have to rob for it.”
Mr. Cella, the only deacon on the Philadelphia police force these days, says cops of all faiths can appreciate these general precepts. In fact, though he’s there for any fellow officer who might need to talk, Mr. Cella is careful not to proselytize.
“Having taken some courses in ecumenism, I am sensitive to these things,” says Mr. Cella.
He relates how one young cop from North Philadelphia noticed that he gave out Bibles from the FOP to the families of police officers who’ve died.
“She said, ‘That’s really nice. Do you have any of ours?’ I said, ‘What’s ours?’ And she said, ‘Jehovah’s Witnesses.’ I said, ‘To be honest with you I thought you use the King James Bible,’ and she said, ‘Oh, no. We have our own scripture books.'”
She asked if Mr. Cella would give out the Jehovah’s Witnesses Bibles to the families that practice that faith. He said, “Sure.”
“You would have thought I gave her a million dollars,” he recalls.
God bless Deacon Joe Cella, and may St. Michael protect him.