CNS/JONATH AN ERNST, REUTERS
Protesting punitive law Amilcar Ramirez weeps as he holds a U.S. flag at a May Day rally in Washington on May 1. Demonstrators at rallies across the nation criticized Arizona’s new immigration law, which makes it a state crime to be in the United States illegally. page 10
THE EAST TENNESSEE
Volume 19 • Number 17 • May 9, 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
VATICAN CITY (CNS)—After nine years of work involving Vatican officials, English-speaking bishops around the world, and hundreds of consultants, Pope Benedict XVI received a complete version of the English translation of the Roman Missal. The white-bound gold-edged Missal, which contains all the prayers used at Mass, was given to the pope during a luncheon April 28 with members of the Vox Clara Committee, an international group of bishops who advise the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments about English liturgical translations. “Soon the fruits of your labors will be made available to English-speaking congregations everywhere,” the pope told Vox Clara members. “Many will find it hard to adjust to unfamiliar texts after nearly 40 years of continuous use of the previous translations,” the pope said, which is why
Talks will help ‘keep kids safe’ Catholic Charities’ Kim Cook is speaking to parents around the diocese on personal safety. By Dan McWilliams he recent admission by East Tennessee priest William Casey—that there was credibility to a man’s charge that he sexually abused him when he was a boy in the 1970s— has led the Diocese of Knoxville to hold a series of talks around East Tennessee to help the faithful deal with the news. At the talks parents will also learn how to discuss sexual abuse with their children. Warren A. Tucker, now 44 and living in Jeffersonville, Ind., made the charge April 14 that Mr. Casey “sexually abused me in every way imaginable” from the time Mr. Tucker—a former student at St. Dominic School in Kingsport—was 10 to 15 years old [April 25 ETC]. Bishop Richard F. Stika permanently suspended Mr. Casey from ministry April 14 after the latter made his admission. The talks around
T
ISTOCKPHOTO.COM
Pope receives complete copy of new Roman Missal in English
A series of sessions in the four deaneries will help parents learn how to talk with their children about sex abuse. The first took place May 3; others are set for May 6, 12, and 13. FAMILY TIME
the diocese are being conducted by Kim Cook, case coordinator with Columbus Home Assisting Parents (CHAP), a program of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee that educates parents on preventing
abuse and neglect and the removal of children from families because of those factors. Representatives of the diocese will be on hand as well at each meeting. The first talk was held at Notre Dame
Church in Greeneville on May 3. No longer allowed to use the title “Father,” Mr. Casey has lived in Greeneville in retirement, and the news about him may have hit hardest at Notre Dame, where he had
served for many years. The talks, all scheduled to begin at 7 p.m., will continue Thursday, May 6, in the parish hall at St. Dominic Church in Kingsport; WednesTalks continued on page 3
Missal continued on page 2
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.
All East Tennessee parishes now have ‘full status’ The diocese, for the first time ever, has only ‘full’ parishes, as two missions and a quasi-parish establish the financial independence needed for elevation. BY DAN M C WILLIAM S
he Diocese of Knoxville’s only remaining quasi-parish and its last two mission parishes have now
T
been elevated to full-parish status. Effective Feb. 15, St. Anthony of Padua in Mountain City, a quasi-parish,
and the missions of St. Christopher in Jamestown and St. Francis of Assisi in Townsend became full parishes. In a first for the
DAN MCWILLIAMS
Please pray for our priests
ONCE A MISSION PARISH Bishop
Richard F. Stika speaks at the dedication of St. Christopher Church in Jamestown on July 25, 2009. St. Christopher and St. Francis of Assisi in Townsend, formerly missions, have been erected as full parishes, along with St. Anthony of Padua in Mountain City, previously a quasi-parish.
diocese, founded in 1988, all of its parishes—47 total—are full parishes. The Presbyteral Council heard the petition of Bishop Richard F. Stika regarding those parishes’ status at its February meeting, and that made their elevation official. In late April diocesan chancellor Deacon Sean Smith finished a canonical decree for the bishop to sign to complete the process. “The only requirement for a bishop to erect a parish is that the Presbyteral Council has to hear the petition, and that happened at the meeting on Feb. 15,” said Deacon Smith. “That’s when it all went into effect.” A quasi-parish has “particular circumstances,” per canon law, that prevent it from being a full parish. Financial independence is one such circumstance. “To simplify, it is one in which they’re not in a financial situation in which they can exist independently from another parish,” Parishes continued on page 3