April 4, 2021, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

April 4

| 2021

VOL 30 NO 4

IN THIS ISSUE LEARN, A4 LEAD, PROCLAIM

St. Mary School-Oak Ridge priest honored

AUDITORIUM IN BUSINESS B1 NEW A12 BACK Knoxville Catholic UT volunteer spirit uplifting as Ladies of Charity best COVID

High School breaks ground on project

He dwells among us ......................... A3 Columns ............................................. B2 Parish news ....................................... B4 Diocesan calendar ............................ B5 Catholic schools ......................... B7, 10 La Cosecha ............................Section C

‘He is risen’

Saving us through the bath of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit By Bill Brewer

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aster Masses were again teeming with people two years after pews were last full for the holiest of liturgical celebrations. And the Catholic Church in East Tennessee welcomed nearly 200 new members who joined in Communion with the risen Lord at Easter Vigil despite going through RCIA during a year of pandemic. Bishop Richard F. Stika welcomed 39 of the Church’s newest members as he celebrated Easter Vigil at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, where parishioners turned out in strong number to attend Mass in person April 3. Bishop Stika acknowledged the challenges catechumens and candidates faced as they went through the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults during a socially distanced year. He informed the congregation that pastors throughout the Diocese of Knoxville would be inviting some 186 adults into the Church during Easter Vigil despite the pandemic, a remarkable number given the self-imposed isolation and quarantining that drastically altered the way homes, churches, businesses, schools, and most any organization operated. “Despite the frailty of the human condition, we invite these, our sisters and brothers, to share in the eucharistic sacrifice. Please pray for them. My sisters and brothers who are received this night, pray. It is the most powerful gift that God has given to us. Don’t ever forget that God is love, and the very name of Jesus is to love others as He has loved us,” Bishop Stika told the new cathedral members. Sister Maria Juan Anderson, RSM, director of Christian Formation for the diocese, was encouraged by the continued strong numbers of people joining the Catholic faith, especially amid COVID-19. “I think its verification to all of us that the Holy Spirit works no matter what is going on in the world, and that our faith can be put in God no matter what is going on. It’s a great sign of hope for us, it’s a beautiful gift, and I

Lord, deliver us, we pray Bishop Richard F. Stika baptizes catechumen Ben Miller during the Easter Vigil Mass on April 3 at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, where 39 adults entered the Church. Below: Cathedral rector Father David Boettner gives Communion to a parishioner during the first cathedral Easter Mass in two years. DR. KELLY KEARSE (2)

think it makes us all grateful for the gift of faith,” Sister Maria Juan said. When asked if she thought the number of RCIA catechumens and candidates would be strong in a year in which everything in society is different and distanced, Sister Maria Juan believes it to be a godsend. “I don’t know if anyone knew what was going to come. But I think we’re all pleasantly surprised by what the Lord has done. And I think this year more than ever we see the strength and the power of God because everything was against these people,” she said. “They had to be on Zoom or maybe not at all. They couldn’t see the faces of the people who were teaching them. And I think with everything going on Easter continued on page A8

Church building on horizon at St. Alphonsus Crossville parish gets go-ahead to proceed with plans

New church continued on page A13

DEACON SEAN SMITH

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arishioners of St. Alphonsus have been gathering for Mass for nearly 18 years in a building dedicated as a parish life center in 2003, but after a February meeting with Bishop Richard F. Stika, representatives of the Crossville Catholic community received impetus to continue the final phase of fundraising for a new church building. Attending the Feb. 23 meeting at the Chancery with the bishop and diocesan chancellor Deacon Sean Smith were Father Jim Harvey, pastor of St. Alphonsus; Angelo Farrugia, co-chair of the parish

By Dan McWilliams

Moving forward Bishop Richard F. Stika is shown with, from left, Charleen McMahan, Karen Otuonye, Father Jim Harvey, and Angelo Farrugia of St. Alphonsus Parish in Crossville.

Cardinal Rigali marks six decades of service to the Church Cardinal Justin Rigali will reach a milestone on April 25 when he celebrates the 60th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. The 1961 date began a sacred journey that led Cardinal Rigali from his native Los Angeles to the dicasteries of the Vatican and a cardinal’s-eye view of Church history. Along the way he has witnessed Vatican II and Church figures like St. John XXIII, St. Paul VI, Venerable John Paul I, and St. John Paul II who ushered in that historic reform and other remarkable events. Cardinal Rigali will discuss his storied priesthood and his front seat to Church history in the May issue of The East Tennessee Catholic Magazine. Cardinal continued on page A13


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