NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE
B section
Hospital community recognizes Mercy Sisters
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he St. Mary’s Hospital community bid a formal farewell to the Sisters of Mercy at an appreciation reception for them Dec. 16, only 12 days before the 88-yearold North Knoxville medical center closed its doors for good. Special guests included Sister Martha Naber and Sister Albertine Paulus, the last two sisters living in Mercy Convent at the hospital, known in recent years as Physicians Regional Medical Center, founded by the sisters’ community in 1930. Also present for the reception were East Tennessee residents Sister Yvette Gillen of Our Lady of Fatima Parish in Alcoa and Sister Pat Soete of St. Jude Parish in Helenwood. Coming in from Nashville, where they have retired, were Sister Margaret Turk, Sister Janice Brink, and Sister Thomasetta Mogan, all of whom served at St. Mary’s. They were joined by doctors, nurses, hospital employees, and priests. Some 200 people attended in all. The reception offered an opportu-
nity to view photos of current and former Sisters of Mercy, see a hospital 60th- and 75th-anniversary historical display, and enjoy a sisters’ oral and written history project. When Sister Martha and Sister Albertine retire to Mercy Convent in Nashville in February, it will mark an end to the Sisters of Mercy’s service in Knoxville after 123 years. The sisters first came to the city to serve at St. Mary School at Immaculate Conception Church downtown. “It is the end of the era,” Sister Albertine said. “It’s the Sisters of Mercy leaving Knoxville, which is this hospital right now. There was a time when we were the only act in town. We had the schools that were Catholic we taught in. The Catechism up and down the highways, we taught on Sundays, we went to Upper East Tennessee—that was all us. This period is over now, just like so many eras of history. This one is over. “We came here in 1896 to staff St. Mary’s School up on the hill, and
Greeting from a Sister of Mercy Sister Martha Naber, RSM, speaks to Maureen Bounds at the reception.
By Dan McWilliams
DAN MCWILLIAMS (2)
Before St. Mary’s closes for good, staffers say goodbye to the community that founded the medical center
A round of applause Sister Albertine Paulus, RSM, enjoys an ovation from those attending the reception Dec. 16, including (from left) fellow Sisters of Mercy Janice Brink, Thomasetta Mogan, Martha Naber, and Margaret Turk. we’ve been here ever since. The sisters came right in the middle of the Depression and built a hospital, which is magnificent. There are those who say it was one of the finest evangelizing moves in the history of East Tennessee.” Sister Albertine added that “I’m so grateful that we’re here, and I’m so grateful that, just as the sisters were here in the beginning, we’re here to close it up. I’m very, very grateful, and so is Sister Martha. We’ve tried real hard to keep the standard high, to give the example, to be as caring as we ever were, because the people who are in this hospital today need our caring help just as much as the first ones did, and that’s what’s important to us.” Sister Martha found joy in the sad farewell reception. “It reminds me of [Sisters of Mercy foundress] Catherine McAuley’s saying that our life is joys and sor-
rows combined,” she said. “That’s what I’m experiencing today: a lot of joy in the experiences that so many of our employees and physicians and volunteers and community people have had as a part of St. Mary’s. That brings me great joy, to know how God has been such a part of this hospital for over 88 years.” Many people at the reception greeted Sister Martha, who has served at St. Mary’s for more than four decades, and the other sisters. “It’s almost like ‘This Is Your Life,’” Sister Martha said. “Over 46 years of relationships with people— it’s just almost overwhelming, a great blessing.” Sister Margaret said that the “history” of the sisters who have “gone before speaks for itself, and the impact on the community has been a marvelous thing. That’s what I’d like to say. It’s just good that we had Sisters of Mercy continued on page B2
St. Mary in Athens celebrates golden anniversary Bishop Stika calls the active parish in McMinn County ‘a bright star in the history of our diocese’
DAN MCWILLIAMS
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t. Mary Parish in Athens, which originally celebrated Mass in a funeral-home chapel, marked its 50th anniversary last fall in its modern building on Madison Avenue. Bishop Richard F. Stika joined Father John Orr and parishioners Nov. 18 for a golden-anniversary Mass in the church and a luncheon in the parish life center. The bishop formally installed Father Orr as pastor of St. Mary during the liturgy. “As we celebrate 50 years of the existence of this parish, we give thanks to almighty God for the ability to teach the faith,” the bishop said in his opening remarks. In his homily, Bishop Stika told parishioners to “continue to celebrate.” “Continue to be an active parish. Continue to honor God. Continue to be of service to your neighbor, because that’s how we build the Church,” he said. “The way we build the Church or rebuild the Church is one person at a time: a person who believes and then who lives that belief, and then another person sees that, and they might say to themselves. . . what brings them closer to God? It’s the Eucharist.” Father Orr was assigned as St. Mary pastor last July 1. “Father Orr is here to lead you in prayer and the sacraments and to be one who walks with you,” Bishop Stika said. “He’s a little eccentric at times, but that’s all right. All priests come in all shapes and sizes. Some are tall and some are not so tall. Some are skinny, like me, and others— what are you laughing at?”
Olé! Olé! Bishop Richard F. Stika and Father John Orr join dancers from St. Thomas the Apostle Parish in Lenoir City for a photo at the St. MaryAthens 50th-anniversary luncheon. In the installation rite, the bishop said “as he formally begins this service, it is right to remind both pastor and people of the mutual commitment that you make to one another in this new relationship.” He then asked Father Orr a series of questions, beginning with: “Are you willing to proclaim the Word of God in the tradition of the apostles, with compassion and faithfulness to the people now entrusted to your care?” “I am,” Father Orr replied. Bishop Stika closed the Mass with a “congratulations to you on 50 years. I know how active this parish is. Work with Father Orr, and continue to build the kingdom of God.” Father Orr enjoyed the celebration
of the 50th-anniversary Mass, he said afterward. “It’s great, the first 50 years: 20 with Nashville and 30 with Knoxville, so we’re growing together,” he said. “Father [Josef] Fiedorowicz had the parish over on Congress Parkway, and he was able to get this new property, so the church is paid for, the rectory is paid for, we’re paying for the hall, so little by little we’re growing the kingdom. People are praying and receiving the sacraments.” St. Mary has about 200 families and is growing “slow and steady,” Father Orr said. “They first started prayers in the local funeral-home chapel, and then they got their church on Congress
By Dan McWilliams Parkway, and then they got this property some years ago,” he said. “We’ve had 15 priests in 50 years.” The official anniversary of the parish was May 12, 2018, marking five decades since the day Bishop Joseph A. Durick dedicated the original parish building and gave the Athens Catholic Mission its formal name of St. Mary. “Over in the church there are two cornerstones, from the first building on Congress Parkway and from the current building,” Father Orr said. The history of St. Mary Parish dates to April 27, 1965, when Nashville Bishop William L. Adrian wrote a letter in answer to a request he had received concerning the possibility of a Catholic church in Athens, according to a 1993 parish history. His letter indicated that he didn’t have a priest available at that time but perhaps would in a year or two. He suggested those interested should contact Father Paul Hostettler, pastor of St. Thérèse of Lisieux Parish in Cleveland and St. Catherine Labouré Parish in Copperhill. A survey was conducted through the local newspaper, and the results were disturbing to the bishop and Father Hostettler. Several families were driving many miles on two-lane roads to attend Mass in Cleveland, but many more families were not practicing their faith at all. In February 1967, Bishop Durick of Nashville asked Father Hostettler and Monsignor Francis Pack of Chattanooga to come to Athens and explore possible St. Mary continued on page B5