Nov. 7, 2021, ET Catholic, B section

Page 1

NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE

B section

Local Knights carry on food-delivery ministry The far-reaching legacy of St. John Neumann parishioner Ted H. Denning Jr. continues

GABRIELLE NOLAN

we were doing, and we stopped,’” laughed Susan Denning, one of Ted’s daughters. Ted was a charter member of and a charter officer for Council 8781, and he was elected treasurer when the council was formed. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus for 53 years, receiving the Knight of the Year Award for the fraternal year of 1999-2000 and the Tennessee State Council Lifetime Achievement Award for the fraternal year of 2007-08. “He loved being a Knights of Columbus member,” Ms. Denning said. “Knights stuff was always in our house while I was growing up. I’d go to this meeting, go to that meeting.” “My dad, Ted, started out first picking up and delivering household items from parishioners and people who said that they were moving or whatever, by word of mouth. He would take it up to Crazy Quilt,” Ms. Denning reminisced. “He did that for years, along with other Knights from St. John Neumann.” “All my siblings thought that what he did was great,” she continued. “It kept him involved in

‘He got me involved’ David Hetrick, a charter member of Knights Council 8781 at St. John Neumann, loads his car with food from the Fresh Market in Farragut.

COURTESY OF SUSAN DENNING

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f you ever wondered if one person could make a difference in the world, the answer is yes. I would like to introduce you to a man named Ted Denning. His impact was far-reaching throughout East Tennessee, as Ted was a husband, father, employee, Knights of Columbus member, St. John Neumann parishioner, Boy Scout troop volunteer, and local food-delivery volunteer. The late Theodore “Ted” H. Denning Jr. was married for 61 years to Phyllis Ann Denning. The couple relocated to Knoxville in 1980 after moving from Fort Wayne, Ind. Phyllis worked in the parish office of St. John Neumann in Farragut as secretary for 29 years until her retirement in 2014. She passed away in February 2020 at the age of 95. Ted and Phyllis were “a dynamic team,” said Walt Hanson, the current Grand Knight of Council 8781 at St. John Neumann Parish. Together, Ted and Phyllis had eight children: Tim, Keith, Mark, Susan, Paul, Kevin (now deceased), Brian, and Amy. “[Dad] always said, ‘We had three boys and a girl, three boys and a girl, then we realized what

By Gabrielle Nolan

‘I do it for the kids’ The late Ted Denning stands beside his pickup truck loaded with food for the needy. “He was always on the go with his truck,” his daughter Susan recalls. the community, kept him in the Church, kept him out and about. He didn’t just sit there and wither away after he retired.” The ministry originally began over 20 years ago with Ted taking household items and food to Crazy Quilt Food Pantry, a program of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee that provides emergency assistance for low-income families in the surrounding Appalachian area of Newcomb, Tenn. Crazy Quilt serves close to 500 people each year. While Ted began collecting and distributing household donations during his last years at work, he fully embraced his daily ministry after a knee replacement led to his retirement. Over time, and of his own volition, he began asking local grocery stores and restaurants if they had extra food for donation. When stores eagerly said yes, Ted made arrangements to pick up the food and involved other Knights to help him. “I knew Ted for several years,” said Ed Bryant, program leader at Crazy Quilt. “I would like to say he was a good friend. He took me

down to Knoxville and took me to all the places that donated. . . . They took me around so I could meet all those people and thank them for what they [were] doing.” Donations grew, and Ted began dropping off food at several pantries and organizations, in addition to Crazy Quilt. “It slowly just kind of changed over from household items over to the food pantry,” Ms. Denning said. “It just kind of became a mission of Dad’s to make sure that there was no bread in Knoxville that was being thrown away.” Every day for the last 15 years or so of his life, Ted would have breakfast, read the paper, and then go out to pick up the food donations, Ms. Denning said. “He would be literally gone all day…. Two out of five days he would [be gone all day]. He was always on the go with his truck.” “We always said it was God, church, then family,” Ms. Denning laughed. “But [Dad] would say, ‘No, it’s God, family, then church.’ And [us kids were] like ‘no, because you’re always gone to go over to Ministry continued on page B2

Glenmary volunteers meet on ‘Toppa Joppa’

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esse Butler, a wheelchair-bound resident of Luttrell, can attest to the benefits of the Glenmary Group Volunteer Program based on Joppa Mountain in Grainger County. During the week of Oct. 17-22, a group of 12 students from the University of Notre Dame took part in the program, informally known as “Toppa Joppa,” and during the students’ time in East Tennessee they built a handicap ramp at Mr. Butler’s home. The ramp “means a whole lot to me,” Mr. Butler said. “I can get out and get to do stuff that I haven’t been able to do in a long time,” he said. How has he gotten out of his house before? “I haven’t,” he said. “I appreciate this group for coming and helping me out. They’ve been such a blessing to me.” The Glenmary Home Missioners have had a presence in the Diocese of Knoxville for some 10 years, founding the parishes of St. Teresa of Kolkata in Maynardville and St. Michael the Archangel in Erwin, as well as the mission of St. John Paul II in Rutledge. The Toppa Joppa program

started taking its first volunteers in January 2014. “The Glenmary Volunteers on Joppa Mountain is a retreat-like mission immersion program for high school, college, and adult groups,” said Joe Grosek, Glenmary Volunteers director. “The goal of the program is to connect people with God, help them find Christ in others, and teach them to serve others first and put themselves second. “Glenmary hopes that those who serve with us can experience the rich mission ministry of the Glenmary Home Missioners. While service is the foundation of the program, it also strives to develop community and to deepen faith through the context of shared experiences. Volunteers come not only to serve but also to learn about the rich culture and traditions present in the Appalachian regions where they serve. It aims to broaden volunteers’ understanding of the causes of poverty, oppression, and injustice—and how their life choices can impact these issues.” The volunteer program is for Catholic high school students, college students, and adults looking to serve in mission, Mr. Grosek said. Glenmary continued on page B6

By Dan McWilliams

DAN MCWILLIAMS

The program on Joppa Mountain in Grainger County draws teens and adults ‘to serve others first’

Smoothing out University of Notre Dame student Aidan Creeron sands down a railing on a handicap ramp at a house in Luttrell.


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Nov. 7, 2021, ET Catholic, B section by Diocese of Knoxville - Issuu