Feb. 4, 2018, ET Catholic, B section

Page 1

NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE

B section

St. Michael Mission celebrates groundbreaking

T

he newest building project in the Diocese of Knoxville demonstrates the joy and growth of the Catholic Church in East Tennessee, even in rural, mountainous parts of the region. St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Mission broke ground for its multipurpose building in Erwin on Dec. 15. Glenmary Father Tom Charters, pastor of St. Michael the Archangel, along with members of the building committee and other parishioners attended the groundbreaking. The parish was formed in Unicoi County in 2011 by the Glenmary Home Missioners. Since then, it has outgrown several spaces. “We started with 37 [members], and we now have 300. We’ve been working to get to this point for just

over six years,” Father Charters said. “We outgrew the Elks Club in about a year. Then we found where we are on Jackson Love, and we moved there about six months after we found it and have outgrown that.” The mission’s current location is a ranch house on Jackson Love Highway. When the parish began looking for property on which to build, it found a lot of support from the surrounding community. “We were very fortunate to get this spot,” Father Charters said. “The people from day one when I arrived have—the ministers, the people in the community—have been extremely helpful….People have been telling us, ‘Look over here. Look over here.’ And we go St. Michael continued on page B2

By Emily Booker

EMILY BOOKER

The six-year-old growing community in Erwin hopes to be in its new multipurpose building by Easter Sunday

Shovels in Father Tom Charters, GHM, and members of the building committee turn the earth at the St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Mission groundbreaking ceremony.

Parishioner gives used church candles new life Jean Sohnly of St. Francis - Fairfield Glade re-melts the candles and forms them into decorative ornaments

DAN MCWILLIAMS (2)

J

ean Sohnly hates to see a good church candle go to waste. The parishioner of St. Francis of Assisi in Fairfield Glade has for years taken used candles and re-melted them into crosses, angels, and other designs to hang on Christmas trees. She uses the purple outer wax of Advent candles to make purple crosses as a remembrance for a loved one who has died. Mrs. Sohnly said she is sad to see candles tossed out. “I am, because they usually go in the wastebasket, and I don’t think people know that,” she said. “But when you’re in charge of the candles, which I have done at St. Francis, then I know the loss, so now I start collecting them.” Her general intention is “to make parishes aware of the waste of the loss of the blessed candles, even if it’s only 1 inch or it’s 1 foot, all the Advent candles and the Paschal candle. All those are redone and remelted. Maybe the other parishes would like to do that, and I’ll be glad to help with directions.” She said she is “absolutely” willing to help any parishioner around the diocese who wants to salvage his or her parish’s candles for a similar use. Mrs. Sohnly and her husband of 63 years, John, have lived around the country over the years before coming to the Glade 11 years ago. Mr. Sohnly retired from Champion Spark Plug in Toledo, Ohio, while Mrs. Sohnly worked as a nurse. Her candle project began at a parish in the Sunshine State. “I started it in Florida with just the white candles,” she said. “We had a lot of children. I’d give them

By Dan McWilliams

Praying hands ornament Jean Sohnly, in her basement workshop, displays an ornament she made by melting the purple outer wax of an Advent candle. for baptism and first Communions, and when young people would get married I’d give them some. I started doing them, and one thing led to another.” From Nov. 6 to the end of November last fall, Mrs. Sohnly made 400 ornaments from the candles. “Over the years I’ve really improved my processes. I’ve cut down the time frame,” she said. “It’s like a four- or five-step process. But after you do a few hundred thousand of them, you get faster. If someone

New batch Mrs. Sohnly pours melted wax into a mold to make more ornaments.

wants to know my process, I’d be more than happy to show them. It’s an undertaking, but it’s one of love.” The process has been honed over time. “I collect all the old candles,” Mrs. Sohnly said. “I cut out the wicks. I re-melt them down in pans. When they’re liquid, I put them into a container. I have to pour one mold first, a half a mold. As soon as they’re set, then I have to put in a hanger. That takes time — you have to watch them to do that. “Once the hangers are in, then I pour a second set. And then when that’s set I put them in my refrigerator. And then when they’re done I take them into my back room. I have a glue gun. I take out the glue stick and use the heat end, and then I dress every one of them off so they’re smooth. Usually when you pour there’s overrun, so you don’t want that.” One pot of melted wax will make 40 pieces. Mrs. Sohnly has made more than 900 ribbon hangers in the past year for the ornaments. “They’re time-consuming because you have to do them just right. After you get them twisted, then you have to dip them in liquid wax and dip them in water so they stay.

“I’ve been so blessed — people have been donating this particular type of ribbon for me.” The funeral ornaments are given “to people to put in their home. They can put them anywhere as long as they know they’re blessed and to treat them with reverence,” Mrs. Sohnly said. Until now, her production of funeral ornaments has largely been a parish secret. “People over the years have been donating a few of their old Advent candles and stuff, so I’m blessed that they know I’m doing this,” she said. “But most people don’t know that I’m doing this, the purple ones — I try to keep that quiet.” Mrs. Sohnly takes the ornaments to residents of nursing homes and shut-ins—“any Christian people — it doesn’t have to be a Catholic. The children love them. I know people collect them now. I’ll go to them and they’ll have half a dozen of these.” The death of the Sohnlys’ daughter, Suzanne, an aerospace engineer who was a failure analysis specialist for the International Space Station, led Mrs. Sohnly to make the funeral ornaments. “She inspired me to do the funeral ones because it meant so much to have something special, and knowCandles continued on page B2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.