Oct. 6, 2019, ET Catholic, B section

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NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE

B section

St. Henry Parish celebrates two milestones

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t. Henry Parish found itself with two things to celebrate July 28. The Rogersville Catholic community marked its 55th anniversary during the Sunday morning Mass, and it concluded the liturgy with a burning of the mortgage on its 2013 church addition. Bishop Richard F. Stika, getting through Mass with a cane following a recent ankle injury, presided at the celebration. With him were St. Henry pastor Father Bart Okere and Monsignor Theophilus Okere, a mentor to Father Okere (no relation) from his native Nigeria. Deacon Don Griffith assisted. “It’s a great joy for me to be with all of you here at St. Henry,” Bishop Stika said in his greeting. “This might be my third visit in the last year, and it’s a joy. It’s a beautiful drive from Knoxville, and it’s also a beautiful thing to see all of you, especially as we celebrate the 55th anniversary of this parish and the burning of the mortgage. It doesn’t seem Catholic not to have a debt.” In his homily, the bishop asked “what is a parish?” “Here at St. Henry’s in this beautiful area of East Tennessee, so many have done so much, to build a church building that speaks proudly in a Christian sense and loudly of what it means to be Catholic in an area in which we all know we’re not

the largest faith community in Tennessee. It’s a physical thing to see,” he said. “It’s like when you come into a Catholic church, for the most part if you see that red candle burning; it’s a physical remembrance that the Lord himself is contained in the building in the Blessed Sacrament. “But also a church, a community of faith, is the way the people come together to worship God. That’s the whole purpose of the Eucharist of the Mass. As Vatican II tells us, it’s the greatest way that we can pray, to hear the words, ‘Take this all of you and eat of it. Take this all of you and drink of it, for this is my body. This is my blood.’ That’s the core of who we are as a sacramental entity in the world in which we live.” Bishop Stika added that there’s much more that goes on in a parish. “If you look at the environment of a parish, there’s so much that goes on from Sunday to Sunday. The building of community, of praying together, of celebrating together, of mourning together, of praying together and praying for each other. The strength of a community of faith, and that’s what we celebrate, in this historic place called Rogersville, Tenn.” The bishop said his GPS could not locate St. Henry Church. “But by your effort, by your witness, by your desire to be Catholic,

By Dan McWilliams

DAN MCWILLIAMS

The Rogersville community marks its 55th anniversary and burns a mortgage at the same Mass

No more debt Bishop Richard F. Stika assists St. Henry pastor Father Bart Okere in the burning of the mortgage on the church’s 2013 addition. you don’t need a GPS to know about St. Henry’s,” he said. “I want to commend all of you here in the parish. You who are here today represent 55 years of tradition, that those who founded this community gave you a gift. They struggled, as we struggle, but thank God that he is merciful.” Hawkins County was among the mission field of circuit-riding Father Emmanuel F. Callahan at the turn of the 20th century. Father Callahan served 34 counties from his home base in Johnson City. A boon to Rogersville-area Catholics came in

1910 when the International Printing and Pressmen and Assistants’ Union of North America established Pressmen’s Home in Rogersville, a headquarters that included a sanatorium, hotel, and trade school. Mrs. George L. Berry, wife of the union’s president, was a devout Catholic and arranged to have a priest celebrate Mass at Pressmen’s Home as often as possible. An ecumenical chapel was erected at Pressmen’s Home in 1926 and was used for monthly liturgies in 1935 and weekly Masses in later years. St. Henry continued on page B3

A family’s ‘beautifully tragic story’

Peppermans rely on faith as they remember the husband and father who died saving their lives

COURTESY OF JULIE PEPPERMAN

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he love of a close-knit family is among the strongest bonds—strong enough to withstand even the grip of a hurricane-strength rip current. Julie Pepperman is thankful for family. She wouldn’t be here today without them. Her four daughters wouldn’t either. And sadly, their husband and father isn’t here despite their family’s rescue feats. Mrs. Pepperman and her daughters have been in the prayers of family, friends, and strangers from around the world who are seeking comfort for the Blount County family following the nightmare that occurred on July 14 in Seacrest, Fla., in seemingly calm Gulf of Mexico waters. The prayers also are for Fred Pepperman, who died saving the lives of his wife and daughters in a selfless act of love and heroism. Mrs. Pepperman said she and her girls are leaning on their Catholic faith to help them through this time of almost unbearable grief. “It’s hard. The grief, and the trauma, and the what-if discussions. Our two youngest girls, Olivia and Grace, are having the hardest time. Grace is the youngest and is so sad that her father won’t be here to celebrate her special days,” Mrs. Pepperman said. The older daughters are Kathryn and Mallory. July 26 was an especially difficult day for the Peppermans. It would have been Julie and Fred’s 28th wedding anniversary, a date she was looking forward to sharing with the guy she first met as a 16-year-old student at the all-girls St. Mary’s Dominican High School in New Orleans while on a camping trip and he was a 21-year-old on spring break. They both were from New Orleans. When Mrs. Pepperman was going through personal effects in their

By Bill Brewer

Family portrait Fred and Julie Pepperman (center) gather with family on an outing in the mountains. Oct. 14 will mark the third month since Mr. Pepperman tragically died saving his wife and daughters. home, she happened on a memento that has now become priceless to her. It’s the halves of a parking permit with Fred’s and Julie’s names and phone numbers on them that they exchanged when they met, the only way they would have of cultivating a budding relationship. She recalls that Mr. Pepperman was smitten and worked hard at getting to know her, even overcoming her parents’ misgivings. Her father refused to let her date at that young age, but Fred – in his red Toyota truck – persisted and eventually won her parents over. They dated for five years, and when they married in 1991 they honeymooned about a mile from where the family vacationed this summer in the Florida panhandle. It was their favorite getaway spot. And it will always trigger memories of the longtime love they

shared, like so many other places, things, and dates. Oct. 14 will mark the third month since the tragedy occurred. All the Peppermans, Mrs. Pepperman’s parents, sisters, brothers-inlaw, and nieces had gathered for the summer vacation. On July 14, they had congregated on the beach for some fun in the sun and water. Mrs. Pepperman remembers how her girls had waded out knee-deep in the Gulf of Mexico under good weather conditions. There seemed to be little reason to pay attention to Barry, a tropical storm far out in the Gulf that was threatening Louisiana. But as Barry intensified into a Category 1 hurricane on July 13 as it made landfall over Louisiana, it was kicking up rip currents back toward Alabama and Florida. Unbeknownst to the Peppermans, those dangerous currents were

roiling toward shore. And with no lifeguards or beach flags to warn of unseen dangers, the tide swelled rapidly and the rip current strengthened. Knee-deep rapidly became chest-deep. The current first began carrying Grace and Olivia away from shore. Kathryn, the oldest daughter, found herself in trouble, too. “Our love was used against us. We all went in together,” Mrs. Pepperman recalled, noting that if a family member wasn’t in the water, they were on shore feverishly trying to help those in distress back to shore. “Everyone was involved. It’s rare that every single member of your family is a firsthand participant in the tragedy,” she said. In describing the tragic circumstances, Mrs. Pepperman said she, Pepperman continued on page B6


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Oct. 6, 2019, ET Catholic, B section by Diocese of Knoxville - Issuu