Dec. 3, 2023, ET Catholic, A section

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December 3 | 2023 VOL 33 NO 4

IN THIS ISSUE DECADE OF A7 AHEALTH CARE

Legacy Clinic marks anniversary

LEADER IN A14 AHER ORDER Sr. Elizabeth is called to serve

YEARS A PRIEST B1 40Father Dan Whitman's

dedicated ministry covers four decades

Catholic commentary ....................... A3 Parish news ....................................... B4 Diocesan calendar ............................ B5 Columns ..........................................B6-7 Catholic schools ..........................B9-10 La Cosecha ............................Section C

’Tis the season of Advent Services abound as parishes prepare to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ By Dan McWilliams

DAN MCWILLIAMS

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oly Ghost Parish in North Knoxville marked two feast days in late October with a eucharistic procession and a healing Mass to help its community mark the coming of Christ that will be celebrated diocesan-wide through the Advent and Christmas seasons. Parishioners marked the feast of Christ the King on the Traditional Latin Mass calendar on Oct. 29, one day after observing the feast of Sts. Simon and Jude, which falls on Oct. 28 in the traditional and Novus Ordo calendars. With St. Jude being the patron saint of hopeless causes, Holy Ghost held a healing Mass on Oct. 28 that gave parishioners and visitors an opportunity to take part in the water gesture of Our Lady of Lourdes, washing their faces with and drinking the water from the shrine in France. “We begin the entrance into November, which is the month of the dead. Christ coming in kingship then will remind us of our own death, in November, and the beginning of Advent,” said Holy Ghost associate pastor Father Michael Hendershott, who led the eucharistic procession Oct. 27 and presided at the healing Mass. The procession went from the church north down Central Street as some 100 parishioners took part. A procession was called for by Pope

Venerating the relics A parishioner kneels before the relics of Sts. Bernadette and Jude and the Veil of Our Lady at Holy Ghost Church on Oct. 28. Pius XI when he instituted the feast of Christ the King in 1925. The Holy Ghost procession went through its “Happy Holler” neighborhood and

passed a North Knox landmark: the Freezo’s ice cream and burger restaurant. “Freezo’s was closed, so nobody was able to get any ice cream,” Father Hendershott said. The procession was followed by a Latin rosary and a solemn Mass. A bilingual healing Mass took place the next day. Before and during the early part of the Mass, parishioners and visitors venerated relics of St. Bernadette and St. Jude and a relic of the Veil of Our Lady as they knelt and prayed before a statue of Christ. Father Hendershott at the beginning of Mass said that “there are many cures and healing due to this holy water of Lourdes,” citing a Holy Ghost parishioner who had stage-four melanoma that had metastasized and who was given three to six months to live. He went to Lourdes and washed in the water there, then returned home and was soon found to have no cancer in his body. “The same thing can happen for you and for me,” Father Hendershott said. Outside after Mass, those who took part in the liturgy stood before a statue of Our Lady of Lourdes and imitated the water gesture as instructed by her. “You’ll stand before Our Lady of Lourdes and ask her what you want,” Father Hendershott said. “Then you’ll wash with the Lourdes water Season continued on page A15

St. Mary’s Legacy Clinic’s village

Diocesan ministry bringing aboard partners to offer a full complement of health services for East Tennesseans

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t’s often said, “It takes a village to raise a child.” But the need for a village doesn’t stop after childhood. Most everyone needs a village. And St. Mary’s Legacy Clinic is applying that belief to its approach in providing health care to its patients. SMLC’s mission is to improve the lives of the medically underserved in the rural areas of East Tennessee. The mobile clinic travels out to rural areas of the region to provide health services to those who need them. Over time, getting to know their patients and learning their needs, the staff and volunteers understood the gaps that still existed, and started seeking partner organizations that could also come to the clinic sites and provide further services that the clinic could not. “We want to offer a village of health care,” Martin Vargas, the clinic’s executive director, said. Mr. Vargas said the clinic was working with health-care and service organizations to coordinate on-site services to patients at their clinic sites. “With these partners, we’re offering not just broader but deeper care,” he said. The partners may vary depending on the specific needs of the patients at the different clinic sites and the time of the year. The goal is to increase access to the level and Village continued on page A7

EMILY BOOKER (2)

By Emily Booker

Partners in care Top: Lindsay Cannon, a University of Tennessee nursing student, takes vitals of a St. Mary's Legacy Clinic patient at the Decatur clinic site in November. Bottom: SMLC executive director Martin Vargas, left, is with Mary Green, Dave Sias, and Fred Mundt, who are members of the Fairfield Glade Lions Club, at the Decatur clinic site. The Lions Club is partnering with the Legacy Clinic to provide vision and hearing screenings for Legacy Clinic patients.


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