Oct. 7, 2018, ET Catholic, A section

Page 1

October 7

| 2018

VOL 28 NO 1

IN THIS ISSUE

CARD A14 REPORT A5 UNCOVERING THE BASILICA Diocese of Knoxville Sts. Peter and Paul getting a makeover

Schools annual report is issued

CITY B1 SECRET PARISH

St. Mary-Oak Ridge marks 75th anniversary

He dwells among us ......................... A2 Parish news ....................................... B2 Diocesan calendar ............................ B3 Columns ............................................. B8 Catholic schools ............................. B10 La Cosecha ............................Section C

50th parish established in Diocese of Knoxville St. Michael the Archangel elevated from Catholic mission status; Bishop Stika blesses new building

B

“I want to commend you for what you’ve accomplished in just seven years. Where now does St. Michael’s go? You’re no longer a mission. Just like the angel who spreads his wings, you’re spreading your wings in the community of Erwin and in the area that surrounds us.” –– Bishop Richard F. Stika

BILL BREWER

ishop Richard F. Stika created the Diocese of Knoxville’s 50th parish on Sept. 29 as St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Mission in Erwin became a canonically established church. The feast of St. Michael the Archangel from now on will have deeper historic meaning for the diocese and its newest parish. Bishop Stika presented the canonical documents to Glenmary Father Tom Charters, officially elevating St. Michael to parish status as the bishop blessed its new parish life center, which will double as a church until a permanent church is built sometime in the future. Nearly 200 St. Michael members were in attendance as Bishop Stika celebrated Mass. Concelebrating the Mass were Father Charters, who has led St. Michael since the mission was founded on Oct. 23, 2011; Father Chet Artysiewicz, president of the Glenmary Home Missioners; Father Peter Iorio, pastor of St. Mary Parish in Johnson City; and Father Michael Cummins, pastor of St. Dominic Parish in Kingsport. Deacon Jim Fage of St. Patrick Church in Morristown served as deacon of the Gospel. “I want to commend you for what you’ve accomplished in just seven years. Where now does St. Michael’s go? You’re no longer a mission. Just like the angel who spreads his wings, you’re spreading your wings in the community of Erwin and in the area that surrounds us,” Bishop Stika said. He encouraged them to continue being confident when they say, “I am a Christian, I am a Catholic, I believe in the Word of God, I believe the Gospels and the Scriptures. The

By Bill Brewer

With a little help from his friends Bishop Richard F. Stika begins the blessing for St. Michael the Archangel Parish’s new parish life center in Erwin on Sept. 29. Assisting Bishop Stika is seminarian Wojciech Sobczuk, Father Tom Charters, GHM, and young St. Michael parishioner Alonzo Murillo, who is 5. St. Michael the Archangel, which was elevated to a parish on Sept. 29, completed its new building over the summer after breaking ground on Dec. 15, 2017. letters of Paul and the Old Testament feed us and nourish us.” He also urged them to “believe in the Eucharist, the great miracle of that first Passover, and when Jesus gave

His Body and Blood, when he said take and eat, take and drink, this is my Body and this is my Blood given for you.” “The beautiful thing is now that

after our celebrations are ended, that red candle reminds us that Jesus still is here in the most holy Eucharist,” Bishop Stika added. In his homily, Bishop Stika said the new parish’s beginnings are reminiscent of the early Church, when the disciples met in informal locations as Jesus’ seeds of Christianity were sown. He began by telling the congregation he missed the “basement,” referring to a basement ranch house at 1700 Jackson-Love Highway in Erwin that was home to the mission for five years. The upstairs of the home housed Father Charters’ residence, a chapel, and meeting space for the mission. Downstairs in the basement is where Mass was celebrated. Bishop Stika continued the lighthearted references to the mission’s humble beginnings when he said he looked for the elk’s head to be hanging on the wall in the new parish life center. That was a nod to St. Michael’s first location – the Erwin Elk’s Club, which provided the mission meeting space. That temporary space included the elk’s head. Then there was the National Guard Armory and the YMCA, which also provided meeting space. Parish continued on page A11

V Encuentro attendees return to dioceses eager to share their gifts Delegates complete years-long national encounter stoked with a missionary flame

By Norma Montenegro Flynn/Catholic News Service

V

Diocese delegates to V Encuentro share experience By Brittany García

PEDRO GARCIA

Encuentro participants returned to their dioceses and parishes with many challenges and hopes. Among them, they were called to share their gifts and reach out across race and language barriers in their own parish and diocesan communities; at the same time, they also urged the rest of non-Hispanic Catholics to recognize their presence and open doors to their gifts and contributions. Carl Anderson, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, stressed that call to Catholic organizations and institutions. He told participants, “One of the missions of Encuentro is to tell the other Catholics in this country: Hispanics have many gifts to give you, open the doors, and let them give these gifts and do not be ashamed of their traditions.” Hispanics represent about 40 percent of U.S. Catholics and nearly 60 percent of millennial Catholics, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. Over 3,200 diocesan delegates or representatives, bishops, and other Catholic leaders participated in the national gathering in Grapevine, Texas, in the Diocese of

Roundtable discussion Delegates take part in a discussion during the V National Encuentro held in Dallas suburb Grapevine, Texas, Sept. 20-23. Among the delegates at this table was Blanca Primm, director of Hispanic Ministry for the Diocese of Knoxville (left center). Six delegates from the Diocese of Knoxville were among the more than 3,000 people in attendance. Fort Worth. While there is a more vivid awareness in recognizing the opportunities

in the gifts that Hispanics can bring to the table, part of the reality is that cirEncuentro continued on page A6

GRAPEVINE, Texas –– Well, we finally arrived at the culmination of the V Encuentro process: the national gathering of all the U.S. diocesan delegates of the V Encuentro. And what joy it was to take part in this momentous event in the life of the U.S. Catholic Church. What hope sprung up for the future of our Church. What consolation was given by knowing that our voices from the tiniest of parishes to the biggest of archdioceses were all heard and valued. V continued on page A6


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