CNS/L’OR VIA CATHOLIC PRESS
Papal patient Pope Benedict XVI greets medical staff before leaving Umberto Parini Hospital in Aosta, Italy, July 17. The pontiff was treated at the hospital for a fractured right wrist after he slipped and fell in the bathroom overnight. page 7
THE EAST TENNESSEE
Volume 18 • Number 22 • July 26, 2009
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 www.d ioces eof kn ox ville.or g
‘This sacred space’ DAN MCWILLIAMS
Bishop Stika dedicates his first church—the new St. John Neumann in Farragut. By Mary C. Weaver he nearly new St. John Neumann Church in Farragut was dedicated on July 12, bringing to completion a process that began with the Diocese of Knoxville’s first bishop and came to fruition with its third. Ground was broken for the 17,000-square-foot Romanesque church on Sept. 24, 2006, but the $11.1 million structure wasn’t complete until late December 2008. The first Mass was celebrated in the new building on Christmas Eve that year. “When we dedicate space to Almighty God, it is a space that is unique,” said Bishop Richard F. Stika, during his homily at the dedication Mass. “I must confess, many of the churches built in the last 25 years just don’t remind me of a church,” he said. “When we enter a church, we should have an elevated spirit, an elevated sense of holiness. Without a doubt, when we enter that space, we know it’s special.” With its cruciform design, three rose windows, 10 large stained-glass “sacrament” windows, Texas limestone exterior, and nearly 100-foot span from the copper-clad cross atop the dome to the ground, the building is anything but ordinary. The church was designed by Ethan Anthony of HDB/Cram & Ferguson
IT ‘MEANT A LOT’ TO THE SOLDIERS Lt. Col.
Eric Mankel used this monstrance, now at Holy Ghost Church in Knoxville, while serving in Afghanistan.
Monstrance does a tour of duty in Afghanistan B Y DA N MCWI LLIAMS
n its sacristy Holy Ghost Church has a monstrance that performed a tour of duty for U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan before coming to the Knoxville parish earlier this summer. Army Lt. Col. Eric Mankel, who served a year from August 2007 to 2008 as the command inspector general for the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, was the Catholic lay leader for his unit at Camp Eggers in Kabul. When the need arose for a monstrance that would allow the unit to have first Friday adoration for its handful of Catholic soldiers,
I
Mankel continued on page 3
Please pray for our priests
DAN MCWILLIAMS
T
Bishop Richard F. Stika dedicated the new St. John Neumann Church in Farragut (seen in this March 10 photo) on July 12.
‘AN ELEVATED SPIRIT’
Inc., a Boston firm that dates to the late 19th century and is known for its religious architecture. Messer Construction of Knoxville was the contractor. The dream of a new church began in January 1992, when the parish purchased the 42-acre lot on which it and the school now stand. At that time Father Bill Casey was the pastor and Bishop Anthony J. O’Connell the diocese’s shepherd. According to a Jan. 12, 1992, ETC story, the goal was to build a school (com-
the ETC then, he had a special connection to St. John Neumann. The saint had founded St. Mary Church in Catasauqua, Pa., in 1857, while bishop of the Diocese of Philadelphia. Bishop Kurtz once served as pastor of that church. The church’s mosaic Stations of the Cross have a Philadelphia connection as well, having once been installed in a church of that city. Knoxville’s new bishop has an even more direct line to the saint. During the Farragut continued on page 6
Marsella’s poverty-stricken residents can still smile
Dear Lord: We pray that the Blessed Mother will wrap her mantle around your priests and through her intercession strengthen them for their ministry. We pray that Mary will guide your priests to follow her own words, “Do whatever he tells you” (John 2:5). May your priests have the heart of St. Joseph, Mary’s most chaste spouse. May the Blessed Mother’s own pierced heart inspire them to embrace all who suffer at the foot of the cross. May your priests be holy and filled with the fire of your love, seeking nothing but your greater glory and the salvation of souls. Amen. St. John Vianney, pray for us. ■ Download prayers and a rosary booklet: bit.ly/priestprayers
pleted in 1997) and eventually a new church, to replace the original church on Jamestowne Boulevard, which was completed in 1980. It had been built to accommodate 700 families, and by the early 1990s the parish had grown to more than 1,100 households. But as it turned out, the plan for a new church was long delayed. Then–Bishop Joseph E. Kurtz and current pastor Father John Dowling presided over the groundbreaking at the new site in 2006. As the bishop told
The Colombia town affectionately embraces its East Tennessee visitors. B Y DA N MCWI L L IA MS
he face of Jesus was everywhere in Marsella, Colombia, on June 14, when travelers from East Tennessee visited the homes of the poorest of the poor in the mountain town. Bishop Richard F. Stika, diocesan chancellor Deacon Sean Smith, and other East Tennessee Catholics had just attended the first Mass of new priest Father Jorge Andres Cano earlier that afternoon at Immaculate Conception Church. The bishop, who had ordained Father Cano the previous day in Pereira, joined a group led by Colombia native Father Antonio Giraldo on the home visits just a few blocks away from the church. Father Giraldo is the associate pastor of St. Thérèse of Lisieux Parish in Cleveland.
DAN MCWILLIAMS
T
WELCOME, VISITORS A young girl from Marsella greets guests from East Tennessee at her home June 14. Bishop Richard F. Stika joined missioners and others from East Tennessee on home visits in the mountain town. View more Colombia photos at dioceseofknoxville.org.
Bishop Stika urges the faithful in nearly every homily to be the Lord’s face to the world. What made the Colombia travelers’ experience all the more fruitful was seeing the face of their Savior looking back at them—as in one smiling child who welcomed the visitors to her home. The little girl, clad in a school uniform, only a short time before had joined other youth in singing two songs for Bishop Stika at the Mass. The fact that she lived in a corrugated-metal, leakyroofed, dimly lighted home seemed to matter not in the least to her as she greeted the guests. Many of the East Tennesseans were high school students from the parishes of St. Jude in Chattanooga Marsella continued on page 2