June 2, 2019, ET Catholic, A section

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June 2

| 2019

VOL 28 NO 5

IN THIS ISSUE JOYFUL NOISE LOVE STORY HEART B1 ABagpiper A8 AMission A5 SACRED makes music leader follows St. Jean Vianney relic makes pilgrimage to the diocese

desire to join Religious Sisters of Mercy

for Diocese of Knoxville events as her lay ministry

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Parish news ....................................... B3 Diocesan calendar ............................ B4 Columns ............................................. B8 Catholic youth ................................. B11 La Cosecha ............................Section C

St. Patrick Parish celebrates 60th anniversary

Morristown parishioners turn out in full to fete church’s history, pastor’s silver jubilee

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Do this in memory of Me Father Patrick Brownell celebrates Mass May 19 at St. Patrick Church in Morristown. Concelebrating were Father Alex Waraksa, Monsignor Patrick Garrity, and Father Stephen Krugel. Deacon Jim Fage assisted. Below: Monsignor Garrity presents Father Brownell with a Celtic ring to mark Father Brownell’s 25th anniversary of priestly ordination. ever met when I visited this diocese. I’m not from here—so when I came to kick the tires, as it were, to see whether I really wanted to make this my home, the very first priest I met was Monsignor Garrity, and I still came!” Father Brownell said. “He was principal of Knoxville Catholic High School, and that’s been now 29 years. Probably within months after I was ordained, another friend entered my life, and that is Father Stephen Krugel. Father Krugel is a retired priest of the Archdiocese of Hartford, Conn. We’ve been in contact now for 25 years. And of more recent note, my good

Love is a main ingredient

Those friends included one of his predecessors as pastor of St. Patrick. “Monsignor Garrity, who I met 29 years ago, the very first priest I

St. Patrick continued on page A14

DAN MCWILLIAMS

BILL BREWER

double celebration took place at St. Patrick Church in Morristown on May 19. The parish turned 60 years old in May, and its pastor of six years, Father Patrick Brownell, marked the 25th anniversary of his priestly ordination in the same month. Father Brownell celebrated the anniversary Mass with three priests concelebrating: Monsignor Patrick Garrity, former pastor of St. Patrick for 13 years and the priest in charge when the parish built its current spacious church in 2002; Father Alex Waraksa, assisting priest for Hispanic Ministry at several Five Rivers Deanery parishes; and Father Stephen Krugel, a friend of Father Brownell. Deacon Jim Fage assisted, and Rita Nagy proclaimed the readings. Father Brownell preached the homily, while longtime parishioner Richard Hidalgo and Monsignor Garrity spoke at the end of Mass on the history of the parish. When Father Brownell looked into the assembly at Mass, he saw his father, Paul, many friends, and hundreds of parishioners. “One of the things that has been important to me is friends and family,” he said. “I think with the exception of Father David Boettner, who is pastor of the cathedral in Knoxville—you can understand why he’s not able to be here this morning; he’s got lots of Masses at the Cathedral of Sacred Heart in Knoxville— all my friends are here today.”

By Dan McWilliams

Brother priests who became military chaplains reunited in burial ceremony Fathers Robert and Frank Brett now laid to rest together in Arlington National Cemetery

By Dennis Sadowski/Catholic News Service

CNS PHOTO/TYLER ORSBURN

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mid the pomp and ceremony that marks a military burial, Father Francis Brett was reunited after more than 50 years with his younger priest brother at Arlington National Cemetery. The former Vietnam War-era Army chaplain and priest of the Diocese of Knoxville was laid to rest April 24 in the same grave as his brother, Father Robert Brett, who died in a bunker in Vietnam in 1968 while serving as a Navy chaplain. About 100 family members and friends witnessed the ceremony that reunited the brothers from a large Irish Catholic family from the Philadelphia neighborhood of Grays Ferry. Bishop Richard F. Stika of Knoxville attended as well, offering a few words of remembrance for the priest, who was known as Father Frank. Timothy Lawson, a cemetery spokesman, told Catholic News Service that staff historians could not confirm whether the Brett siblings are the only decorated Catholic military chaplains buried together in the sprawling burial ground outside

On behalf of a grateful nation Bishop Richard F. Stika shares a reflection during a graveside service for Father Francis “Frank” Brett on April 24 on Chaplains Hill at Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington, D.C. The cremated remains of Father Brett, a priest of the Diocese of Knoxville and longtime Army chaplain, were buried in the same gravesite of his brother, Father Robert Brett, a Navy chaplain who was killed while serving in Vietnam in 1968. of Washington, D.C., but said such an arrangement was “unique” and “highly unusual.” Edward Rouse, the priests’ oldest

nephew and a Marine Corps veteran, called the ceremony that included a 21-gun salute “the appropriate rendition of honors for two men who

served God and country.” “We expect our clergy to be heroic,” Mr. Rouse said, “and a lot of the time they can’t live up to it. These men lived up to it.” Mr. Rouse told CNS that he applied for the burial of “Uncle Frank,” his godfather, in January 2018 after his death a month earlier at age 86 of soft-tissue sarcoma. Cemetery officials approved the request in August and scheduled the ceremony for April 24. The solemn ceremony began under a blue sky decorated by a few wispy clouds as the United States Army Band marched toward the cemetery’s shaded Chaplains Hill, where dozens of military chaplains of different faiths who served in World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War are buried. The sound of a single drummer set a somber tone for the procession, which included a horse-drawn caisson carrying the cremated remains of Father Frank Brett. The band assembled in formation in an open area nearby as the caisson Chaplains continued on page A11


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