Longtime priest Father Hostettler dies at 100 He led parishes statewide for 73 years, including his beloved St. Catherine Labouré in Copperhill
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KATIE PETERSON/TENNESSEE REGISTER
ather Paul Hostettler, a priest for 73 years who celebrated his 100th birthday in May and dearly loved his time at St. Catherine Labouré Parish in Copperhill in East Tennessee, passed away peacefully on Oct. 18 at The Waters of Cheatham Nursing Home in Ashland City, Tenn. A Nashville native, Father Hostettler served throughout East, Middle, and West Tennessee, overseeing church building projects at St. Thérèse of Lisieux in Cleveland and St. Mary in Athens, both in the 1960s. Ordained for service in the Diocese of Nashville at a time when it covered the entire state, he became incardinated in the Diocese of Knoxville upon its creation in 1988. Father Hostettler was a Golden Gloves high school champion as well as boxing champion of Kenrick Seminary, and he was an avid horseman and trainer. He relished hiking in his muchloved East Tennessee mountains and enjoyed many rounds of golf in his life, even earning a hole-in-one. He was a talented artist, portrait painter, and cartoonist. On May 12, Bishop J. Mark Spalding of Nashville, along with family and friends, helped Father Hostettler celebrate his 100th birthday that day. In 2021, Father Hostettler told The East Tennessee Catholic that it never occurred to him that he would still be fulfilling his priestly vows at age 98. “I don’t think I ever thought about how long I was going to be a priest. I just took it as it came,” he said. “I don’t think about what it’s like (being a priest). I just live it. I don’t know
Deacon of the Word Diocese of Knoxville chancellor Deacon Sean Smith proclaims the Gospel at Father Hostettler’s funeral Mass on Oct. 24 at the Cathedral of the Incarnation in Nashville.
Father Paul Hostettler why God chose me to be a priest, but I’m happy that He did. I’ve really been happy being a priest. I had two brothers, both of them married with children. It never occurred to me that I should give up studying to be a priest and get married like they did. I just had the call to be a priest and I lived it. “Until I was actually ordained a priest, I didn’t know whether I was going to make it or not. But when they called out the names of those who were going to be ordained, mine was in there,” he said with a gleam in his eye. Paul Altman Hostettler was born May 12, 1923, in Nashville, a son of George Frederick and Mary Griffith Hostettler. He attended Cathedral Elementary School and Father Ryan High School. He studied for the priesthood at St. Ambrose College in Davenport, Iowa, and Kenrick Seminary in St. Louis. While Father Hostettler attended college at St. Ambrose, he had to transfer after one year to Kenrick when the U.S. Navy took over the dormitories at St. Ambrose during World War II. He was ordained to the transitional diaconate by St. Louis Archbishop (and future cardinal) Joseph E. Ritter on Sept. 24, 1949, at Kenrick.
By Dan McWilliams
Bishop William L. Adrian of Nashville ordained him a priest with six others on June 3, 1950, at the Cathedral of the Incarnation. As he was kneeling before the altar, Bishop Adrian laid his hands on Father Hostettler’s head. “When he did that, I thought he was going to push me through the step I was kneeling on,” the priest recalled for the Tennessee Register in 2015. “And when he let go, I thought I was going to fly through the ceiling. I may have been in ecstasy for about a half-hour.” Father Hostettler’s first assignment was as an assistant at Sacred Heart Parish in Memphis. He became pastor of St. Joseph in Jackson in 1956 and chaplain of the Knights of Columbus in Jackson in 1958. That same year, he received a new assignment to be pastor of the Church of the Resurrection in Cleveland, which was looking to build a new worship space. Under Father Hostettler’s leadership, land was purchased on Clingan Ridge Road in 1960, and the newly built church—now named for St. Thérèse of Lisieux—was dedicated in April 1962. The Cleveland priest was the founding pastor of St. Mary Parish in Athens. In 1965, Bishop Adrian received a request about the possibility of establishing a parish in Athens. He suggested that those interested should contact Father Hostettler to help determine the number of Catholics in the area and the prospects for erecting a chapel or renting a building. In 1967, Bishop Joseph A. Durick, coadjutor bishop of Nashville, asked Father Hostettler and Monsignor Francis Pack of Chattanooga to come to Athens and explore locations for the celebration of Mass. They recommended to the bishop the use of the Quisenberry-Laycock funeral parlor, where the first-ever Mass in Athens took place on June 11, 1967, celebrated by Father Hostettler. Monsignor Pack and Father Hostettler continued to scout locations and found an abandoned restaurant on four and a half acres of tall weeds on a road that eventually became Congress Parkway. The Diocese of Nashville purchased the property, and the restaurant was converted into a church by spring 1968. The Athens parish was a mission of St. Thérèse of Lisieux and was called the Athens Catholic Mission at first. On May 12, 1968, Bishop Durick celebrated the dedFather Hostettler continued on page B2
A celebration of history at St. Mary-Athens A potluck dinner marks the 50th anniversary of the dedication of the parish’s first church
By Dan McWilliams
COURTESY OF SISSY APARICIO-RASCON
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t. Mary Parish in Athens used a significant anniversary to celebrate its history at a potluck dinner Oct. 15 in the family life center. “The recent party was to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the dedication of the old church building on Congress Parkway,” said St. Mary pastor Father John Orr. “The money from the sale of the old property enabled the purchase and build at the present site. In 2024, we will have the 20th anniversary in the current church.” Three days after the dinner, St. Mary founding pastor Father Paul Hostettler passed away. Father Hostettler served as St. Mary’s shepherd from 1967 to 1969 and again from 1987 to 1993. “We prayed for Father Paul’s eternal repose at all the Masses last weekend,” Father Orr said Oct. 24. “He served as pastor twice in Athens, first as founder and then for a return visit.” St. Mary has had 17 different pastors over the years. Joining Father Orr at the anniversary dinner were Father Jim Vick, who led St. Mary from 2007 to 2009, and Father Jim Haley, CSP, who was parish administrator in 2018. Also present was Father Andrew Crabtree, ordained a priest this past June. St. Mary
Much to celebrate Those gathering for a celebration of the history of St. Mary Parish in Athens include (from left, seated) Melanie Fortuna, Paul Kessler, Bob Coke, Father Jim Haley, CSP, and Bonnie and Joe Kross and (standing) Connie Reed, John Fortuna, Sally Kessler, Chuck O’Connor, Clara Coke, Helen Dionne, Priscille Stuckey, Lou Dionne, Linda Nadeau, and Marcia Alexander. is his home parish and the place where he celebrated his first Mass after his ordination. “It was so nice to have Father Vick and Father Haley come back to celebrate with us,” Father Orr said. “And for Father Crabtree to return to the place not only of his
first Mass but also where he was received into the Church some years earlier.” On April 27, 1965, Bishop William L. Adrian of Nashville wrote a letter in answer to a request he had received concerning the possibility of a Catholic church in Athens. His
letter stated that he didn’t have a priest available at that time, but he would try to find one in a year or two. Father Hostettler, pastor of St. Thérèse of Lisieux in Cleveland, was contacted and a survey done through a local newspaper. The St. Mary-Athens continued on page B3