NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE
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St. Mary-Johnson City has triple celebration The parish burns its church mortgage, honors Monsignor Bill Gahagan, and receives a Leadership Roundtable award
DAN MCWILLIAMS (2)
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t. Mary Parish in Johnson City held a triple celebration Aug. 22. The parish burned the mortgage on its church building, honored former pastor and now-Monsignor Bill Gahagan, and announced that it had received a Leadership Roundtable award. And all of that took place on the memorial of the Queenship of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the parish’s patron. Bishop Richard F. Stika, St. Mary pastor Father Peter Iorio, parochial vicar Father Jésus Guerrero-Rodriguez, seven other priests, and St. Mary deacons John Hackett, Mike Jacobs, and George Fredericks all took part in the mortgage-burning ceremony and the Mass that followed. The front of the Mass program billed the evening events, which also included a dinner, as a thanksgiving for the past, present, and future of the parish. Father Iorio began the ceremonies with the mortgage burning outside the front doors of the church. “I just want to show you something that was given to me on July 26, 2016,” he said. “George Imes was chair of the finance board, and he presented me this little Roadrunner Markets lighter, and he said, ‘We will be burning our mortgage
Up in smoke Father Peter Iorio, pastor of St. Mary in Johnson City, places a copy of the church mortgage in the brazier as the parish celebrated the end of its debt on the building. soon.’ So in less than a year, we paid off our debt, and tonight we are celebrating that. It took all of us together, so now he presents to me a representation of the mortgage, and I’m going to burn it.” Cheers and applause followed as the piece of paper in the brazier caught fire and turned to ashes. Father Iorio then led a prayer of thanksgiving before the congregation processed in for Mass. St. Mary’s church construction debt story began in 1980, when un-
der the leadership of Father Richard Archer, OP, 125 families contributed $500,000 to purchase nearly 18 acres of land on Lakeview Drive, site of the current church. In 1991, Father J.D. Tamburello, OP, moved St. Mary Church and School to a parish center on Lakeview Drive at a cost of $1,850,000. The parish center was quickly paid off with revenue from the sale of the church’s old property on Market Street and with the generosity of many parishioners. It quickly became evident that the capacity of the worship area was being pushed to the max, and in 1995 new pastor Father Gahagan created a building committee for a new church. During the planning and construction, St. Mary purchased two additional parcels of land to enlarge the church property to 40 acres. In 1999, St. Mary requested a loan from the diocese to build its current church. The church itself cost $3,250,000 and the additional land $350,000. St. Mary had $850,000 on hand to reduce the loan amount to $2,750,000. From 1999 to 2017, many contributions were made, starting with a 2001 “A Step in Faith” three-year
In song A youth choir from St. Mary School sings at the parish’s Mass that followed the mortgage burning.
By Dan McWilliams
campaign. At another point in time a second collection was initiated to reduce debt. Over the last 17-plus years, St. Mary parishioners maintained the necessary funding for the parish’s many ministries while paying off more than $2 million in debt and $1.7 million in interest. As of June 2016, the parish owed the diocese $700,000. 2017 has seen great financial blessings for St. Mary Parish. A number of things came together that allowed the parish to pay off the $700,000, including Home Campaign funds of $210,000. The parish paid off the loan in June and now has more than $500,000 available for operations and future capital projects. Monsignor Gahagan was pastor of St. Mary for nine years, from 1995 to 2004. The Dominican Fathers had staffed the parish for the previous 79 years. “Nine years now looks like it’s about 90 days, but it’s not,” Monsignor Gahagan said. “[The evening] brings back so many good, loving relationships, challenges of what it is to be a parish family today, challenges of allowing us all to grow spiritually, to find the love of Jesus in ourselves and one another. We’re against a lot of the secular world that makes that challenging, when most of our people live Monday through Saturday in the real world, and as always we try to help people to realize that that’s where the Lord is at. “Today’s readings were interesting. I was reading one of the sayings of the Amish community: you put your hand in God and you’ll find God’s hand in you in all things. It sounds good, but the more you think about it, it’s true.” Monsignor Gahagan said he was “just overwhelmed” at being back at St. Mary. “I’m seeing people here I haven’t seen obviously in a few years,” he said. “It’s just wonderful to see them, bringing back what it took all St. Mary continued on page B2
In a texting world, youth urged to have ‘subtext of love’
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iocese of Knoxville youth are getting schooled on how to get engaged. OK, not that kind of engaged. We’re talking about more one-onone engagement with others and less reliance on cell phones and social media to interact with people. Call it a ministry of texting and messaging. The diocesan Office of Youth and Young Adult Ministry is featuring on its website a humorous video by Internet comedy duo Rhett and Link that challenges youth to “Get Off the Phone.” While funny in its presentation as a spoof on phone habits, the diocesan message is unmistakable: the Catholic Church wants young adults, teens, and pre-teens to be more engaged in their personal relationships and act Christ-like when communicating via phone or social media. “These young people are bombarded with messages all day long. We are helping our youth realize they live in two worlds: their real, everyday, faith-based world and the digital world,” said Deacon Al Forsythe, director of the diocese’s Office of Youth Ministry. As part of youths’ digital lives, Deacon Forsythe said it is critical to show them how they can lose inter-
personal connectedness even when they “friend” someone. “The emotion is gone. It becomes an anonymous friendship,” he pointed out. “Jesus commands us to go out and make disciples of all nations. If we do this in the digital world, we must do it with love.” Technology has evolved to the point where you can communicate with others anonymously, giving people license to often comment in extremely negative ways without ever being identified. Father Joe Reed, associate pastor of the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus and director of vocations for the diocese, delivered the homily at the annual Youth Mass on Sept. 9. His message: love is the subtext by which you should be communicating everything. Father Reed said this subtext that Jesus wants us to glean from all the Gospels, and that St. Paul wants us to know, is that “love desires no evil.” Nearly 200 high-school students and adults from around the diocese took part in the Youth Mass, held at The Barn at Cedar Ridge in Loudon County. In attending the Mass and outdoor activities, the students carried with them their faith, a determination to have fun, and their
By Bill Brewer
BILL BREWER
Nearly 200 high school students and adults attend the annual Youth Mass, where many receive honors for their service
‘Love desires no evil’ Father Joe Reed delivers the homily at the annual Youth Mass. mobile phones. Father Reed began Mass by asking the youth how many of them text on their phones. “OK, don’t be afraid to raise your hands. How many of you text? C’mon, raise your hands if you text, or if you instant message, or Snapchat, or if you’re on Facebook,” he asked. The response was virtually unanimous, and it wasn’t limited to young people. Adults were just as active on mobile phones.
Even Father Reed acknowledged that Bishop Richard F. Stika must prod diocesan priests off their phones during meetings with all the priests. “Many of us text. We text in all different ways; on our phones; we have social media of all types,” he said. “In a way, that is what St. Peter is dealing with; Jesus is dealing with; St. Paul is dealing with. They used the media of their day. They wrote letters and they told stories. Youth Mass continued on page B2