April 7, 2019, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

April 7

| 2019

VOL 28 NO 4

IN THIS ISSUE OF HOPE OF A PRIEST HOME B1 VIOLINS A4 HEART A4 WELCOME Instruments that survived Incorrupt heart of St. Bishop Stika greets faithful who are joining the Church at Easter

John Vianney will be in Diocese of Knoxville

Holocaust are valuable lesson to students

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Parish news ....................................... B3 Diocesan calendar ............................ B4 Columns ............................................. B8 Catholic schools ............................. B10 La Cosecha ............................Section C

A gift of the fullness of the priesthood

Bishop Richard F. Stika marks a decade of his episcopate as he becomes the diocese’s longest-serving bishop By Bill Brewer

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Third bishop of Knoxville Bishop Stika waves to those attending his ordination-installation March 19, 2009.

STEPHANIE RICHER

n celebrating the 10th anniversary of his ordination and installation as the third bishop of Knoxville, Bishop Richard F. Stika recalled one of the first questions he was asked by the media when he was introduced in Knoxville in March 2009: what major initiative was he going to undertake as the new bishop of Knoxville? His reply was brief and to the point: to teach about Jesus. Ten years later, his mission hasn’t changed. On July 1, Bishop Stika will become the longest-serving of the Diocese of Knoxville’s bishops. After a decade of leading the Church in East Tennessee, he is reflective of his ministry and is looking ahead to a diocese that is 30 years old. On the day of his 10th episcopal anniversary, Bishop Stika, who is no stranger to social media, offered this observation on Facebook: “On this day, March 19, 2009, I was given the gift of the fullness of the priesthood by Cardinal (Justin) Rigali and ordained the bishop of Knoxville. The Mass was celebrated with 5,500 people in attendance, along with over 100 priests and numerous deacons and 35 bishops. My co-consecrators were Archbishop Kurtz and my great mentor, the late Bishop Robert Shaheen. God has blessed me these 10 years and I look to many more!” As the 61-year-old shepherd of the Diocese of Knoxville begins his second decade of ministry and service, he thanks all members of the diocese for their support of the Church and his request of them is simple. “Please pray for me and the diocesan leadership. And if I have offended anyone, if I have disappointed anyone, if anyone has ever thought I have not listened to them, I apologize. It’s important to continue praying for me. One of my policies when I receive letters from people is I call them up. They’re always surprised. My goal is to always try to be approachable and be the face of Jesus. If I have failed anyone, I apologize for that,” he said. Bishop Stika also shared his

Jesus, I Trust In You Bishop Richard F. Stika celebrates the first Mass in the new Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus on March 3, 2018. thoughts on the first 10 years of his episcopate and what he sees lying ahead as the Diocese of Knoxville approaches its 31st anniversary.

Q. When you were a young priest, did you ever see yourself as a bishop? A. No. I can remember that leading up to my ordination, some people said that since I have a degree in business and marketing maybe some day I would be working in Church administration. It was unusual at that time to have a college degree in business administration. My usual response was ‘no, I want to be a parish priest like the priests I grew up with.’ I was blessed because the first five years I was a parish

priest I was fulltime at Mary Queen of Peace Parish. It had a busy school, a large school, about 700 students. It was a very active and social parish. I had good priests to live with. I was happy. But as I closed in on five years, I knew I would be up for a transfer because that was the norm in St. Louis. Archbishop (John L.) May called me and assigned me to work in the youth office as the spiritual director. I think at the time in St. Louis, we had about 47,000 kids. I wasn’t part of the normal operations; I was the spiritual director — the contact between the youth office and the archbishop’s office. From then on, I was always involved in specialized ministry. I think I’ve had great training to be Bishop continued on page A8

High fives Bishop Stika interacts with Sacred Heart Cathedral students following Mass.

Go Vols Bishop Stika dons a Vols cap as he holds his first press conference in January 2009 at the Chancery.

Diocese receives Vatican OK to exhume Fr. Ryan’s remains Servant of God’s body will be relocated to Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul as part of sainthood process

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he cause for sainthood for Father Patrick Ryan continues to move forward, with the Vatican giving its approval last month for the exhumation of Father Ryan’s remains and relocation to the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Chattanooga. Bishop Richard F. Stika announced the approval by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints on March 22. The permission allows Father David Carter, rector of the basilica, and Deacon Gaspar DeGaetano, who

serves at the basilica and is the vice postulator for the cause for Father Ryan, to move ahead with plans to exhume Father Ryan’s body, which is interred in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Chattanooga. “Our diocese, for our short history and small size, we’ve had Sts. Peter and Paul recognized by the Vatican as a basilica. This is very special. Father Ryan’s cause for sainthood is another example of the holiness that can be found here. Why do we canonize somebody? Because this per-

son is now offered by the Church as a role model. We don’t make them a deity. We say this is a guy who took care of Catholics and non-Catholics in an area that wasn’t very Catholic at the time. And he risked his life to pray with people and to give people comfort by extending any kind of health care that he was able to provide, knowing that he would likely catch yellow fever himself,” Bishop Stika said. “He didn’t bail on people. He stuck around to provide comfort

By Bill Brewer

and care. His actions were similar to those first responders and firefighters who risked, and in many cases, lost their lives on 9/11. When people were understandably afraid and running out of the World Trade Center, firefighters were running up into those buildings knowing that they might not come back down. Father Ryan’s actions were heroic in a similar way. He could have left Chattanooga when he was surrounded by illness, but he chose to stay to help Fr. Ryan continued on page A13


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