July 11, 2010, ET Catholic

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CNS PHOTO/ERIC VIDAL, REUTERS

Belgian raid on the Church Policemen stand outside the home of the archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels in Belgium on June 24. Investigators searched the Belgian Church’s headquarters and the homes of the archbishop and a cardinal as part of an investigation into alleged priestly sexual abuse. page 10

THE EAST TENNESSEE

Volume 19 • Number 21 • July 11, 2010

The

N E W S PA P E R

of the D I O C E S E of K N O X V I L L E w w w. d i o k n o x . o r g

‘Roundtable’ will help streamline ‘business’ of DOK he Diocese of Knoxville recently joined the National Leadership Roundtable on Church Management, which assists parishes and dioceses on best practices in finances, human resources, and more. The roundtable was founded in 2005 as “an organization of laity, religious, and clergy working together to promote excellence and best practices in the management, finances, and human-resource development of the Catholic Church in the United States through the greater incorporation of the expertise of the laity.” The diocese can be a member of the group as long as it chooses, and membership is free. Leaders of Fortune 500 companies “who happen to be Catholic and who believe they can offer best practices and professional services in these areas to the Catholic Church” helped form the roundtable, said Marcy Meldahl, diocesan director of Employment Services & Benefits. Ms. Meldahl is a member of the National Association of Church Personnel Administrators, which is part of the roundtable. “A group of Catholic CEOs came together with bishops, Catholic college presidents, and other high-level officials to talk about offering services that meet the temporal needs of the Church,” she said. “Specifically, they focus on church management, finance, and human resources, and they don’t in any way get involved in doctrinal matters. They exist to disseminate best practices in parishes and dioceses and Catholic nonprofits.” Roundtable partners take a self-assessment to see where they stand, said Ms. Meldahl. “You see the areas you need to work on. The roundtable also has a members-only section where you can get best examples of things such as bylaws, accounting practices, performance-appraisal forms for human re-

‘A grand occasion for giving thanks’ Many friends join the St. Cecilia Dominicans for their 150th-anniversary celebration. By Dan McWilliams

T

Roundtable continued on page 2

Harper, Columba Dittoe, Philomena McDonough, and Frances Walsh arrived in Nashville in 1860 to establish a girls school, they surely had no vision of the scene that would take place 150 years later. The St. Cecilia Congregation of the Dominicans capped its sesquicentennial celebration June 25 with a Mass and dinner that drew clergy from across the Atlantic and Pacific as well as bishops, priests, men and women religious, and laity from all walks of life. More than 1,300 attended the Mass, held in a large air-conditioned tent. Some 1,200 filled three rooms later that evening for the anniversary dinner at the Sheraton Music City hotel. “A jubilee is a grand occasion for giving thanks, and that’s what this is all about: thanking God for his goodness to us, and you are part

DAN MCWILLIAMS

Dominican W hen Sisters Lucia

The St. Cecilia Schola sings during the prelude at the congregation’s 150thanniversary Mass in Nashville. The Dominicans moved the liturgy from the motherhouse chapel to a large tent on the grounds to accommodate the large numbers attending. A handbell choir also performed in the prelude. MILESTONE FOR THE DOMINICANS

of that goodness,” said Mother Ann Marie Karlovic, OP, mother general of the St. Cecilia Dominicans, at the dinner. Two guests traveled from Rome to celebrate the anniversary with the sisters. Archbishop Raymond L. Burke, prefect of the Apostolic Signatura, was the prin-

cipal celebrant at Mass. Father Carlos Azpiroz Costa, OP, Master of the Order of Preachers, was among the concelebrants. Bishop Anthony C. Fisher, OP, of Parramatta, Australia, was the dinner keynoter. “For the particular gift of the Holy Spirit given to the

foundresses of the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia and faithfully received and fostered by their daughters in religion for 150 years, I express my heartfelt congratulations,” said Archbishop Burke in his closing remarks at Mass. Host Bishop David R. Choby of Nash-

ville was joined by his fellow Tennessee ordinaries, Bishop Richard F. Stika of Knoxville and Bishop J. Terry Steib of Memphis. Three more archbishops—including Knoxville’s second shepherd, Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz of Louisville, Ky.— 150th continued on page 6

Pope creates new pontifical council for evangelization The new organization will help combat the profound crisis caused by secularization and help people rediscover the value of faith, Benedict says. BY C IN D Y WOODEN

the perennial truth of the Gospel” in regions where secularism is smothering church practice. Leading an evening prayer service June 28 at Rome’s Basilica of St. Paul

CNS PHOTO/PAUL HARING

VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Pope Benedict XVI announced he is establishing a pontifical council for new evangelization to find ways “to re-propose

‘RENEWED EVANGELIZATION’ Pope

Benedict XVI stops in front of the tomb of St. Paul as he arrives for an evening prayer service at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome on June 28. That night the pope announced he is establishing a pontifical council for new evangelization.

Outside the Walls, Pope Benedict said in some areas of the globe that have been known as Christian for centuries “the process of secularization has produced a serious crisis” in people’s sense of what it means to be Christian and to belong to the church. “I have decided to create a new organism, in the form of a pontifical council, with the principal task of promoting a renewed evangelization in the countries where the first proclamation of faith has already resounded and where there are churches of ancient foundation present, but which are living through a progressive secularization of society and a kind of ‘eclipse of the sense of God,’” he said. The challenge, he said, is to find ways to help people rediscover the value of faith. Pope Benedict made the announcement at the basilica built over what is believed to be the tomb of St. Paul, who dedicated “his entire existence and his hard work for the kingdom of God,” the pope said. The Pontifical Council for Health Care Ministry, established by Pope John Paul II in 1985, was the last pontifical council created. On June 30 the Vatican announced Council continued on page 10


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