Aug. 2, 2020, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

August 2

| 2020

VOL 29 NO 6

IN THIS ISSUE FOR A4 RELAY PRIESTS

East Tennessee faithful part of world rosary

DAY IN HAND B1 ORDINATION B1 DIPLOMA Diocese's newest deacon Graduation really happens for NDHS, KCHS seniors

is ordained at St. John Neumann Church

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Parish news ....................................... B4 Diocesan calendar ............................ B5 Columns ..........................................B8-9 Catholic schools .......................... B8,10 La Cosecha ............................Section C

Diocese of Knoxville schools plan for safe, healthy return to classrooms COVID-19 protocols and procedures are greeting students, faculty at all 10 East Tennessee campuses By Bill Brewer

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ollowing a summer break of hope amid uncertainty, Diocese of Knoxville schools are welcoming students and faculty back into classrooms for the start of the 2020-21 academic year. Bishop Richard F. Stika and Dr. Sedonna Prater, superintendent of schools for the diocese, made the announcement to return to in-class learning at all 10 schools in the diocese on July 17. Classes are in session beginning Monday, Aug. 3. “We’re excited to begin our school year and open our classrooms to students and faculty,” Bishop Stika said. “Catholic schools and faith-based education offer families a unique en-

vironment to grow academically and spiritually. Our school leaders have worked hard to make sure that the learning environment is also safe for everyone who attends.”

The diocese’s schools — Notre Dame High School, St. Jude, and Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Chattanooga; St. Dominic in Kingsport and

School Calendar n Monday, Aug. 3: First day of 2020-21 academic year. n Wednesday, Aug. 19: first at-home learning day. n Wednesday, Sept. 16: second at-home learning day. n Wednesday, Oct. 14: third at-home learning day. n Wednesday, Nov. 11: fourth at-home learning day. n Nov. 25-29: Thanksgiving break. n Nov. 30-Dec. 4: week of at-home learning. n Monday, Dec. 7: Christmas break begins. n Tuesday, Jan. 5: spring semester begins.

Schools continued on page A6

Diocesan Tribunal of Knoxville becomes a reality New ministry based in Chattanooga to handle annulment requests, other canon law cases

DOROTHY CURTIS

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he Diocese of Knoxville now has a fully functioning tribunal, a canon law ministry that will decide annulment cases and other legal matters that are within the specific purview of the Catholic Church and the diocese. Bishop Richard F. Stika and Father David Carter, a canon lawyer and pastor of the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul Parish in Chattanooga, have led the effort to establish a tribunal dedicated to the Diocese of Knoxville. Bishop Stika said in 2016 that Knoxville was rare among Catholic dioceses because it did not have its own panel of judges and support staff to rule on requests for declarations of nullity of marriages and other canon law issues unique to the diocese. Tribunals handle a variety of canonical cases within the Church, but requests for declarations of nullity make up the majority of tribunal cases. The Diocese of Knoxville has paid a fee to the Diocese of Nashville for handling the East Tennessee cases since 1988. ”This is a much-needed step for our diocese. The tribunal was the last vestige that connected us to the Diocese of Nashville. I am grateful for their help over the years. That assistance was necessary at first, but we have grown enough that I am happy to say that we can now fulfill our canonical obligation to provide a tribunal on our own,” Bishop Stika said. “It has been a priority of mine for a long time to see that we can better serve the faithful in this diocese without the need to entangle ourselves in the extra logistics and expense of doing everything out of Nashville. This is a good and, quite frankly, necessary move for us.” Effective June 1, Bishop Stika appointed Father Carter judicial vicar of the Diocesan Tribunal of Knoxville. Father Carter is one of three judges on the panel that will decide tribunal cases. The other judges are Sister Catherine Ngozi Okoye, SJGS, and Tyler Ross, both of whom are canon lawyers, too. The three judges will be based in Chattanooga. Joining them on the tribunal staff are canon lawyer Janette Buchanan, who will serve the tribunal as defender of the bond and promoter of justice, and tribunal moderator Jenny Morris, who will act as a notary and will also ensure that tribunal acts are properly drawn up and issued, based on the mandate of the judges, and are preserved in the archive according to canon law. Father Carter has been preparing for a ministry

And justice for all Father David Carter, JCL, and other judges on the new Diocese of Knoxville tribunal will rely on the Code of Canon Law to base their decisions on Church legal issues. such as this since earning his canon law degree in 2010 from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. “Bishop Stika announced this in 2016, so it’s taken us four years. The bishop, by rite, can establish his tribunal. He must get official permission from the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, which functions as the justice department of the Catholic Church,” Father Carter said. “We received our competency to receive and adjudicate cases on July 1.” Father Bede Aboh, a priest in the diocese who serves as chaplain for the Catholic Center at East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, is currently studying for his canon law degree and will

By Bill Brewer

join the tribunal staff once he completes his degree requirements next year. Father Carter explained that Mr. Ross, Sister Catherine, and Ms. Morris are full-time employees of the diocese who will live and work in Chattanooga. Ms. Buchanan is working out of the Diocese of Nashville as a contract employee. The two priests will include their tribunal work as part of their current priestly responsibilities. Father Carter, in addition to Bishop Stika, is grateful to the Diocese of Nashville for handling the East Tennessee cases for the past 32 years and for assisting in the creation of the new Diocesan Tribunal of Knoxville. Father Carter has spent the past two years serving on the Diocese of Nashville’s tribunal as the adjutant judicial vicar as part of the process of transitioning to the new East Tennessee tribunal. “The Diocese of Nashville has graciously offered to let the Diocese of Knoxville continue to use the Diocese of Nashville tribunal. I was one of the judges for cases that came from the Knoxville territory,” Father Carter said. “Justice is supposed to be local as much as possible. Some dioceses don’t have the resources to make that a reality. We now have our tribunal in house.” Father Carter explained that each tribunal case will be heard by the three judges. He noted that the tribunal can hear any case the code of canon law entrusts to a tribunal, including the violation of laws of the Church involving priests. In annulment cases, each person filing for a declaration of nullity is assigned a case sponsor who will assist the parties through the process. “The case sponsor’s role is one of accompaniment to help navigate the process of making a petition. They are like paralegals that assist in handling paperwork and are trained by the tribunal to be familiar with procedures and necessary elements to make a successful petition,” Father Carter said. He further explained that depositions in cases can be taken at the tribunal offices in Chattanooga or with tribunal auditors in Knoxville and the Tri-Cities. “The parties will appear before tribunal personnel but not necessarily in Chattanooga. We are experimenting with computer meetings but that is complicated because of legal requirements,” Father Carter said, emphasizing that the tribunal wants to be as Tribunal continued on page A10


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