CNS PHOTO/MIKE SEGAR, REUTERS
Rest in peace, Christina A woman holds a program from the funeral Mass for 9-year-old Christina Taylor Green outside St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church in Tucson, Ariz., Jan. 13. Christina was killed in the Jan. 8 shootings that left six dead and 14 wounded, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. page 8
THE EAST TENNESSEE
Volume 20 • Number 10 • January 23, 2011
The
newspaper
of the D iocese of K noxville www.dioknox.org
Task force looks at making St. Joseph a regional school B Y D A N M C W I LLIAMS
Ministries Day snowy but successful Inclement weather aside, 160 take part in a day of workshops at Sacred Heart Cathedral School. By Dan McWilliams
B
St. Joseph continued on page 2
everal inches of snow fell in Knoxville on the morning of Jan. 8, but that didn’t stop some 160 people, not counting presenters, from participating in the annual Ministries Day at Sacred Heart Cathedral School. Bishop Richard F. Stika delivered an opening talk in the school gym before participants broke up to attend one or more of the 30-plus workshops held in four sessions during the morning and afternoon. Forty people were unable to make it to Sacred Heart, but Ministries Day drew 47 walk-in registrants. “I thought it was very successful despite the inclement weather,” said Father Richard Armstrong, assistant director of the Office of Christian Formation, who coordinated the event along with Susan Collins of Notre Dame Parish in Greene ville, Kathy DeAngelis of St. Patrick in Morristown, and Brigid Johnson of Sacred Heart. Father Armstrong was also a workshop presenter, on the topic “Eastern Catholic Prayer.” This year’s event incorporated several suggestions made on last year’s Ministries Day evaluation forms. “Some of the new additions we had this year were tracks for Hispanics and sessions on music and on Mary. These were specific recommendations from last year that we incorporated this year,” said Father Arm-
DAN MCWILLIAMS
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Juan Hernandez, Hispanic ministry coordinator at Our Lady of Fatima Parish in Alcoa, teaches the class “Estudio Bíblico” (Bible study) during Ministries Day on Jan. 8 at Sacred Heart Cathedral School. The class was among eight offered in Spanish at the annual event. EN ESPAÑOL
strong. “The presence of the bishop was a new addition this year. One of the highlights was a focus on the new translation of the Roman Missal and music to accompany the new Missal.” Snowy weather also greeted last year’s Ministries Day participants. After he was named Knoxville’s bishop in January 2009, Bishop Stika was assured by chancellor Deacon Sean Smith that he’d be leaving such weather behind him in Missouri. “When I came to Knoxville, Deacon Sean said, ‘You’re going to love East
Tennessee. It doesn’t have the snow and the unpredictable weather like St. Louis,’” he said. The next Ministries Day likely will be held in October, said Father Armstrong. Father Randy Stice, diocesan director of Worship and Liturgy, led the workshop “An Introduction to the New Missal” in two different sessions. Additional topics included apologetics, young adult ministry, Scripture, Catholic social teaching, liturgy, Gregorian chant, musical settings of the newly translated Mass
parts, lectio divina, and mission trips. Two double-length workshops were held, led by Dominican Sister Mary Michael Fox of Aquinas College in Nashville and Father Armstrong (“Catechist Orientation”), and Amy Roberts of Knoxville Catholic High School (“Sacraments”). Two workshops in Spanish were held in each of the four sessions. The bishop began his talk by leading the group in a prayer for vocations and recalling his year at St. AuMinistries Day continued on page 6
No ‘right or wrong’? A Knoxville family stands up to Planned Parenthood. BY MARY C. WEAVER
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ISTOCKPHOTO.COM
ishop Richard F. Stika has authorized a task force to look into making St. Joseph School in Knoxville the diocese’s first regional elementary school. Currently all major decisions concerning the school are made by Holy Ghost Parish. A regional-school organization would allow the other parishes that send students to the school to play a greater role in its operation. The greatest number of Catholic students at the school are from families at Holy Ghost, which founded St. Joseph. St. Albert the Great Parish in Knoxville, for the first time since its establishment in 2007, now has the second-highest number of students at the school. Immaculate Conception Parish in downtown Knoxville, for the first time since its parish school of St. Mary closed in 1970, now has the thirdhighest number of students. Additional pupils come from St. Joseph in Norris, St. Therese in Clinton, and Holy Trinity in Jefferson City. Holy Ghost operated its own parish school from 1908 to 1963, when longtime pastor Father Albert Henkel opened St. Joseph School on a campus about five miles north of the church. In 1970 the school received an influx of students when St. Mary School closed. St. Joseph, which has about 190 students, was named a National Blue Ribbon School in the fall. The bishop announced the task force in memos to priests, deacons, and diocesan staff Dec. 3 and Jan. 7. “As is most common in our diocese, our schools have ties to and are supported by a single parish,” said the bishop in the second memo. “However, St. Joseph School has been in a sense a regional school since [1970] in that it was supported by Holy Ghost and Immaculate Conception. “The broader concept of a regional school would hold a
Do you know what Planned Parenthood is teaching young people on its websites and via in-school presentations? Learn more at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 27, at the Chancery office. HIDDEN AGENDA
ast October, Kym McCormick’s 16-yearold daughter Alaynna came home “crying and angry” about the mandatory presentation Planned Parenthood had given at her high school, Hardin Valley Academy in Knoxville. “She said, ‘They were going to tell us about abstinence, and I listened, and not one time did they say anything about abstinence,’” Mrs. McCormick recalled in a Jan. 17 interview. Alaynna told her mother, “I’m tired of everyone treating us like animals who can’t control themselves.” One of the elements of the organization’s “abstinence program” is the concept of “outercourse”—which encompasses virtually all forms of sexual contact short of intercourse. Mrs. McCormick was aware of the history of Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, and its founder, Margaret Sanger, a proponent of eugenics. But what she and Alaynna learned through extensive research provided additional shocks. The organization’s websites for children and teenagers include not only details on contraception and abortion but also how-to information on an extensive list of perversions that Hardin Valley continued on page 3