June 7, 2020, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

June 7

| 2020

VOL 29 NO 5

IN THIS ISSUE REFLECT REPORT TO SCHOOL B1 SENIORS A18 FINANCE A4 BACK Students talk about the Diocese shares Diocese of Knoxville students will return to classrooms on Aug. 3

independent auditor's report for FY 2019-18

year that was, and the one that might have been

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Parish news ....................................... B4 Diocesan calendar ............................ B5 Catholic schools ............................... B7 Columns ............................................. B8 La Cosecha ............................Section C

Churches reopen after 2-month virus hiatus Parishioners across East Tennessee return to first public Masses since March; COVID rules still being observed By Bill Brewer

Masses continued on page A12

BILL BREWER

T

STEPHANIE RICHER

Marked with the sign of faith Bishop Richard F. Stika baptizes Addie Gaut during the first public Mass at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus at the Pentecost vigil on May 30. Addie’s sister, Ashney Patoka, towels her head as the rest of Addie’s family gathers around her.

Hello amid the new normal Father Michael Woods greets a St. Francis of Assisi parishioner in an appropriately socially distant way at Mass on Pentecost Sunday in Fairfield Glade. St. Francis members were glad to return to Mass after a two-month absence.

DAN MCWILLIAMS

he feast of Pentecost saw a return to normal … well, a “new normal” for the Diocese of Knoxville as Masses were open to the public for the first time in more than two months and parishioners across the diocese began returning to churches to worship. Parishes welcomed their members beginning with Pentecost vigil Masses on May 30 and continuing with services on Pentecost Sunday, May 31. However, churches were still bound by a COVID-19 protocol, including social distancing, wearing of protective masks, reduced capacity at Masses, the liberal use of hand sanitizer, maintaining social distancing at the sign of peace, receiving the Eucharist in the hand only, and orderly dismissal from Mass, with no gathering by individuals after Mass. “It’s so good to be able Parishioners took to see people in church. the restrictions in I’ve been praying a lot stride, understandabout what has haping that the coronapened over the last virus outbreak still couple of months. ... is a public health So many people have concern, with new longed to gather tocases continuing gether with other to be reported in people just to have East Tennessee the ability to pray in communities. a community, not at Those in attendhome sitting on their ance said they were couches. ... It’s so nice glad to be back in to see you.” the presence of Je— Bishop Richard F. sus. Since public Stika at Pentecost Masses were suspended March 20, thousands of Catholics throughout the diocese have been watching Masses via livestreaming on Internet channels, with only priests, deacons, and altar servers present. Spiritual Communion has been their source and summit of Christian life in the absence of the holy Eucharist. In one of the first acts of public worship since March 20, Bishop Richard F. Stika celebrated the vigil Mass for Pentecost at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, where he welcomed new Catholics entering the Church through baptism and confirmation. Most all of those new Catholics, who are members of Sacred Heart Parish, entered the Church through the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. The bishop began Mass with a lighthearted comment, saying he intended to use the Pentecost Mass to catch up on more than two months of homilies. “I’m going to start with Lent, and we’re going to go through Easter and the weeks of Easter, and we might throw an Ascension in there somewhere. What do you think? Wouldn’t that be fun?” he joked, drawing laughs from Catholics who were looking forward to receiving Communion for the first time since winter. Bishop Stika then turned serious in welcoming back Sacred Heart’s parishioners after such a long, historic shutdown of the nation’s small businesses, large companies, government offices, organizations, social outlets, schools, and churches to slow the spread of the dangerous virus. “It’s so good to be able to see people in church,” he said. “I’ve been praying a lot about what has happened over the last couple of months. Do you remember what February was like, looking forward to cele-

Praying it safe Father Mike Nolan, pastor of St. Thérèse of Lisieux Parish in Cleveland, processes into Mass singing the entrance hymn behind a COVID-19-preventing mask. St. Thérèse and the Diocese of Knoxville’s 50 other parishes and mission resumed public Mass on Pentecost weekend.


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