Feb. 5, 2017, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

FEBRUARY 5 | 2017 VOL 26 NO 3

IN THIS ISSUE

LAWMAKER A4 TOP New Lt. Gov. Randy

A5

McNally hails from St. Mary-Oak Ridge

HISPANIC MINISTRY

Blanca Primm is new diocesan director

A11 FINANCIALS Diocese of

Knoxville financial report

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Deanery news .................................... B2 Diocesan calendar ............................ B3 Catholic youth and schools ............. B5 Columns ............................................. B7 La Cosecha ............................Section C

Hundreds take part in Knoxville March for Life Pro-life community joins together in support of women and their unborn children

By Bill Brewer

BILL BREWER

W

In step with life Diocese of Knoxville teens take part in the annual March for Life on Jan. 22 at World’s Fair Park near downtown Knoxville. More than 500 people participated in the march through the Fort Sanders community. brief update on Amendment 1, an amendment to the Tennessee Constitution approved by a majority of voters in November 2014 that allows the state to regulate clinics in Tennessee that provide abortions. Even though the amendment passed with 53 percent of the vote, Planned Parenthood challenged the results in federal court. A federal judge sided with Planned Parenthood and ordered a recount of the ballots. But she said that ruling has been challenged, and the matter is now before the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. She told the marchers that recently released statistics show abortion numbers are declining in the United States. Citing statistics from the Guttmacher Institute, a research arm of Planned Parenthood, Mrs. Dunn said the number of U.S. abortions has fallen to

BILL BREWER

omen, men, and children of all walks of faith joined together Jan. 22 to pray for an end to abortion and show solidarity to mark the 44th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion across the country. Knoxville’s annual March for Life, coordinated by the Knox County chapter of Tennessee Right to Life, attracted 542 prolife enthusiasts who held babies, banners, signs, and rosaries as they voiced their support. It was a precursor to the national March for Life that was held in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 27. Vice President Mike Pence addressed the national march and was joined by people of all faiths from around the country, including a contingent from the Diocese of Knoxville. The Knoxville march began at the Tennessee Amphitheater in World’s Fair Park with prayer, music, and remarks before participants walked six blocks from the amphitheater to the front of Knoxville Center for Reproductive Health at Clinch Avenue and 16th Street near the University of Tennessee campus. The center offers medical and surgical abortions for Knox and surrounding counties. Among Diocese of Knoxville participants in the march were Father John Dowling, pastor of Holy Ghost Church; Father Tim Sullivan, CSP, associate pastor of Immaculate Conception Church; Deacons Scott Maentz, Mike Gouge, and Gordy Lowery; and members of the Religious Sisters of Mercy of Alma, Mich., the Evangelizing Sisters of Mary, the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George, the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, and the Irish Fighting for Life student group from Knoxville Catholic High School. Stacy Dunn, director of TRL’s Knox County chapter, gave a

A rosary for the unborn Members of the Diocese of Knoxville urge others of faith to join in praying the rosary for America. 926,190 based on 2014 data, down from as high as 1.6 million a year. The Guttmacher report showed that in 2013 and 2014 the abortion

numbers were below 1 million for the first time since 1975. “Even though the study was March continued on page A9

Funeral Mass held at basilica for Monsignor George Schmidt

T

here was no better place for the funeral Mass for Monsignor George Schmidt than the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Chattanooga, “this place that he loved so much,” as Bishop Richard F. Stika called it. Monsignor Schmidt, a child of Sts. Peter and Paul Parish and a pastor and later rector of the basilica from 1986 to 2013, died peacefully Thursday evening, Dec. 29, after battling illness in his retirement years. He was 72. Bishop Stika presided at the funeral Mass on Jan. 4 and directed his first homily remarks to Monsignor Schmidt’s family, asking them to look at the assembly that filled nearly every pew in the basilica. “All you have to do is see behind you, to see how much he was loved

and will continue to be loved, for he touched the lives of many,” the bishop said. Concelebrating the funeral Mass were Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz of Louisville, formerly bishop of Knoxville; Bishop David R. Choby of Nashville; Abbot Cletus Meagher, OSB, of St. Bernard Abbey in Cullman, Ala., a longtime friend of Monsignor Schmidt; Monsignor Owen Campion, retired associate editor of national Catholic publications Our Sunday Visitor and The Priest; Monsignor Xavier Mankel, a vicar general for the Diocese of Knoxville; basilica rector Father David Carter; Father Bertin Glennon, ST, former longtime priest in residence at Sts. Peter and Paul; and Father Charlie Burton, dean of the Chattanooga Deanery Funeral continued on page A2

By Dan McWilliams

DAN MCWILLIAMS

Priests join Bishop Stika in celebrating longtime Chattanooga pastor

Farewell to a good and faithful servant Bishop Stika leads Diocese of Knoxville priests in prayer during the funeral Mass for Monsignor George Schmidt at the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Chattanooga. Monsignor Schmidt was a longtime pastor and rector at Sts. Peter and Paul.


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