NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE
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Father Peter Iorio marks 25 years as a priest ‘I give thanks and praise to God for the many people he has graced my life and my ministry with,’ the jubilarian says
DAN MCWILLIAMS
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ather Peter Iorio is known as one of the more joyful priests in the Diocese of Knoxville, and on Aug. 3 that joy came back to him in the form of hundreds of wellwishers who gathered for the celebration of his 25th anniversary as a priest. The air conditioning at St. Mary Church in Johnson City, where Fa ther Iorio has served as pastor for the last seven years, did not make an appearance at the anniversary Mass, prompting several “warm” puns from the speakers. “Welcome to St. Mary. It is a very ‘warm’ and welcoming communi ty,” Father Iorio said in his greeting. “We’re glad that you are here. As Murphy’s Law goes, just when you think everything is in place, some thing breaks down. Today it hap pens to be the air conditioning in the church. So we bear with it. We offer our sacrifice to the Lord and give thanks and praise to God for the many ways in which he mani fests Himself to us. “As a priest now for 25 years come Monday, Aug. 6, I give thanks and praise to God for the many peo ple he has graced my life and my ministry with, including all of you. Thank you for your presence and prayers today that have sustained me and continue to sustain me and build up God’s holy people.” Father Iorio was the principal celebrant of his anniversary Mass. Bishop Richard F. Stika attended in choir. Monsignor Al Humbrecht, a longtime friend of the silver jubilari
Silver anniversary Father Peter Iorio stands front and center with Bishop Richard F. Stika after his anniversary Mass, surrounded by priests, deacons, and deacons’ wives. an, gave the homily. Deacons George Fredericks, John Hackett, Don Griffith, and Mike Jacobs assisted. More than two dozen priests and many members of Father Iorio’s family filled the front pews. Friends from his former assignments, in cluding his home parish of St. Au gustine in Signal Mountain, also attended. “He’s friendly and joyful and re ally dedicated to whatever ministry he’s called to do,” Bishop Stika said of Father Iorio, “whether he worked in the seminary, in vocation work, high school work, or parish work. Everywhere he’s been he’s excelled because he believes in the power of God.” Monsignor Humbrecht began his homily by saying he was told that
Father Iorio shut off the air condi tioning “in hopes that I would be quicker with my homily. It didn’t work.” The homilist said he has “known Father Pete for a long time,” dating back to the 1980s when Monsignor Humbrecht taught the future priest in religion at Notre Dame High School in Chattanooga. Monsignor Humbrecht produced a valuable document containing the testimony he gave to Bishop Antho ny J. O’Connell as to thenDeacon Iorio’s suitability to be a priest, in the ordination Mass on Aug. 6, 1993, at St. Augustine. ThenFather Humbrecht said “it is with a great sense of joy” that he testifies “to Peter’s readiness for or dained ministry. I have known Peter
By Dan McWilliams
from his youth and been privileged to be a part of his life and the life of his family.” An anniversary Mass reading from Colossians called upon Chris tians to “bear with one another and forgive one another.” “Those of us who know Father Peter know that one hallmark of his ministry has been that of striving to be a peacemaker, a reconciler,” Monsignor Humbrecht said. “And so to bear with one another and forgive one another. That has been kind of his mantra and the witness he gives, and it’s a challenge to all of us to continue that. “When the author of Colossians says to let the Word of God dwell richly in your home, that is so much a part of Father Peter’s Focolare commitment and community, the Word of Life, to take that Word of Life each month, a short part of Scripture, but to pray it every day for the month so that it can take root deeply in our lives and begin to affect how we live that Word of Life in our interactions with one another.” Commenting on the trend his homily was taking, Monsignor Humbrecht joked, “Lest anybody think that I’m ready to canonize Father Peter, I do know too much to do that.” One tale from the homilist about Father Iorio came from his high school days. “As a high school senior, the par ish pastoral council at St. Augustine Father Iorio continued on page B7
Hundreds of teens meet in Knox for Alive in You camp The Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus hosts 350 young people and their chaperones for a week of work and worship By Emily Booker
EMILY BOOKER
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n June, hundreds of teenagers from across the country packed their bags, loaded buses and vans, and left home for a weeklong mission trip. Their destination? The Alive in You camp in Knoxville. The Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus hosted 350 teenagers and their chaperones June 1924 for a week of work and worship. Notre Dame High School in Chattanooga hosted Alive in You camps for sev eral years in the past, but this was the first year Alive in You has been in Knoxville. Alive in You is a retreat and mis sion trip rolled into one. Youth groups spend their day volunteer ing with different organizations throughout the city. In the evenings, they come together for a program of games, talks, and music. There is also daily Mass and time for adora tion and confession. Jim Weir, founder of Alive in You along with his wife, Heather, said that the program was created to bridge the gap between spiritually focused retreats and workfocused mission trips. “We combine the elements of a work camp with that of a Catholic conference, kind of having those two experiences for our participants in one week. The goal is to instill in the teens a heart for service, to edu cate them more about our Catholic faith, and to send them home with some fire to do some good in their own community,” he said. The theme of the week was “Ever lasting” and focused on the paschal mystery. “In our evening sessions, you can really get a vibe for the whole camp. The vibe at this one has just been en ergy, excitement, but also, I would say with this group, reverence, too.
Retreat and mission trip rolled into one Youth members from St. John the Evangelist Parish in Streamwood, Ill., landscape at Restoration House as part of the Alive in You camp. “And then each parish has an op portunity to come together every night after our big session is over to kind of break out as a parish and meet and talk about the day, so it makes it like a more miniretreat within that,” Mr. Weir explained. “It’s a pretty cool opportunity for them to come together in par ish time every night and process everything.” The youth from St. John the Evan gelist Parish in Streamwood, Ill., have taken the mission of Alive in You to heart, devoting their week to hard work, deep prayer, and con
necting with one another. St. John the Evangelist was one of 15 parishes participating in Alive in You that week. The youth from the parish had groups working with Knoxville Area Rescue Ministries’ distribution center, Special Spaces, and Restoration House. Chaperones overseeing the group at Restoration House had to urge the teenagers inside for lunch. De spite the midday summer heat, the teens wanted to keep working, land scaping the property for the single parents and children who live there. Restoration House provides tran
sitional housing, financial literacy training, an ally team, and other re sources to help lowincome, single parent families get on their feet. Melissa Warder, a chaperone and adult leader for the St. John the Evangelist youth, said that repre sentatives of Restoration House ex plained the program to the teens so they would understand who would be benefiting from their hard work. “We tell these teens all week that it might just seem like landscaping, but it’s going to make a whole lot of difference when these families Alive in You continued on page B7