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RELIGION LITURGY AND LIFE

Archive for the month “October, 2020”

THE FEAST OF ALL SAINTS

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We begin by sparing a thought for all those who lost their lives in Nice in southern  France during the week that they may rest in peace and their families find consolation from those around them at this sad time.

This weekend we have the two feasts the feast of All Saints on Sunday and the feast of All Souls on Monday. On November 1st the Church celebrates all the saints: the multitude of those who are in heaven enjoying the beatific vision that are only known to God. During the early centuries the Saints venerated by the Church were all martyrs. Later the  1st  November was set  as the day for commemorating all the Saints. We all have this “universal call to holiness.” What must we to do in order to join the company of the saints in heaven? We “must follow in Jesus footsteps and try to practice what Jesus preached as we seek  to do  the will of the Father in all things throughout our lives.

When we try to do that the holiness of the People of God will grow into an abundant harvest of good, as is admirably shown by the life of so many saints in Church history” Among the saints in heaven are some  people whom we have known such as Pope Saint John Paul or Padre Pio who both lived in the last 100 years.  Padre Pio died in 1968 and of course John Paul died in 2005. But there are so many ordinary people who show us how to be saints by the way they lead their lives.  After rejoicing  with the saints  on All souls Day we  pray for all those who, await the day when they will join the company of saints. None of us, I feel sure, is aspiring or expecting to be a canonised saint. We don’t think that one day the pope will tell the world what saints we were. We don’t kid ourselves that our picture is going to pop up one day on the walls of churches. Not for a moment do we imagine anyone saying prayers to us or carrying around pieces of us as relics. We don’t foresee any statues of us being carried high in processions. But in its document on the Church, the Second Vatican Council wrote a chapter called ‘The Universal Call to Holiness’ and all of us Are called to be holy as our heavenly father is Holy.

A few days ago, on October 10th, a remarkable 15-year-old Italian teenager, named Carlo Acutis, who died of leukaemia in 2006, was declared ‘Blessed’ in the basilica of St Francis, Assisi. Carlo once said that his life project was ‘Jesus’. Surely, his beatification and our Feast this Sunday are reminders of our deep-down longings to become better people than we are already, and the best we can be with faith in god and one another ! Surely too they remind us that Jesus Christ can and will empower us to live what we believe, to practise what he preached!

All Souls Day, November 2 | All souls day, Prayer for deceased, All souls

30th SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Over the past week or so many people have gone back into lockdown or circuit breaker and for many people this has been hard. In terms of business, health and well being the next few weeks and even months will be hard going with many business not reopening. With all of this going on around us we stop to reflect and we remember all that we have come through over the past 6 months and we thank god that we are able to be here and talk about our experiences. We remember in a particular way those who have lost their lives, those who are working in our hospitals and health care facilities  and all those families that are not together as a result of the current regulations. We look forward to better times as we deal with our current situation.

There is a saying that “Love makes the world go ’round.”  Have you ever had the overwhelming sense you were loved? How do you know you are loved? In spite of the cynics from the board room to the court room to the news room, love does motivate people to keep going in hard times . The Pharisees in the Gospel Reading for this Sunday are all out to get Jesus because he had silenced the Sadducees. In an attempt to do this they asked him this question Master, which is the greatest commandment of the Law?’ Jesus said, ‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. It is hard to love someone that we have never met in person but we love God because many others have passed on their love of God to us. There is a sense in which we could say that it takes a lifetime of practice to love God with all our heart, soul and mind, to live the first commandment, putting God before all else. To direct us all our lives God has given us guidelines, the Ten Commandments and he also gives us things like the beatitudes as well many people who have given the love of god to us.

 So many people in the modern world have decided to turn away from God and from spiritual things. We as the Church have to face up to the fact that the love that god has for each of us means little or nothing for many of today’s people. Love of God. Love of neighbour is Easy to talk about and Difficult to live out especially in our own time and place. In spite of the difficulties this love in action will change us and our surroundings All we need to do is  to try and live like Jesus did. we should take one step at a time towards our creator and our fellow human beings and this will provide us with great reward.  And we should not worry where we are going even during the current  COVID19 related trouble, for God’s Spirit will lead the way and give us the courage to keep on going despite any difficulties we might encounter along the road.

MISSION SUNDAY

This Sunday we are celebrating the Missionary effort of the Church in the glare of the Covid19 and all the restrictions that it has brought to us. For all of us who live in Northern Ireland we are beginning another period of lockdown which they are calling a circuit breaker. At this time we should be asking ourselves what is our mission in regard to all that is happening around us these days and how do we support one another as well as all those out there who are bringing the faith to faraway places, places where the COVID 19 pandemic could be a lot worse than it is here.

God is always calling people to come and follow him  and share his mission. Mission is very much part of Christian tradition. Here in Ireland we have St. Patrick who was a missionary to the Irish People every  place will have examples of those who brought the faith to their own lands. Each of us are baptized into Christ’s mission to bring his  light and joy into the world where we are as well as other places. On World Mission Sunday, we renew and celebrate our calling to be missionary disciples.  We join with many people around the world to support the missionary church wherever it is being planted and taking root.

We are especially mindful of  the new churches or the little flocks of Jesus letting their light shine in remote and distant lands.  The people of god are challenged to witness to Christ in those places by their life of faith, hope and love and we in our turn are challenged to support them by our prayers and other forms of practical support. God wants all of us to  experience his saving presence in our lives will we accept the invitation to join in God’s mission? The great Irish missionary tradition is not just the fruit of great missionaries, but of humble people at home who gave and are giving generously to support the missions through the missionary Orders and other lay led organisations such as the Apostolic Work or Viatores Christi to name but a few. Christian discipleship and missionary endeavour which we celebrate today are alive and active and there is much work out there for everyone to do especially during these days of crisis in the wake of COVID19. This type of service should continue in the Church wherever we are when that happens we will be a truly missionary people bringing the presence of God to other people lives. To be servant in the way that Jesus was means that we should live in complete trust that God loves us and this will help us to pass his love on to others in an ever changing world. We pray that the Lord of the harvest will continue to inspire many people to join the missionary orders as well as the  lay missionary associations so that the  love of God will be passed on to each generation in its turn.

28th SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

During last week two things happened and neither of them were COVID19 related. We had the launch last Saturday of the latest encyclical from Pope Francis Fratelli Tutti and on Wednesday of this week we had the feast of the Holy Rosary. The Letter from the Pope is about   fraternity and social friendship that focuses on the universal dimension of the notion of fraternal love and we will hear about the letter in the days ahead. Last Wednesday we celebrated the feast of the Holy Rosary Pope Francis calls the rosary a “simple contemplative prayer, accessible to all, great and small, the educated and those with little education. in the Rosary while we repeat the Hail Mary we meditate on the Mysteries, on the events of Christ’s life, so as to know and love him ever better. The Rosary is an effective means for opening ourselves to God.”Each time we pray the Rosary, he said, “we are taking a step forward, towards the great destination of life”—heaven. May we take the opportunities that are given to us to join together in saying the rosary of our lady during this month of October in our families as individuals and as Parish Communities where we live.

In the Gospel reading for this Sunday we hear about the king sending his servants out to call all those who were invited to come to his son’s wedding but none of the invited guests would come. So the king told his servants to go out and invite everyone on the road to come to the wedding feast. Jesus tells the parable because his ways were criticized by the “chief priests and elders of the people.” They rejected him so now he turns to  everyone else and he welcomes the poor, sinners, and outsiders. Matthew emphasizes, the urgent need we have to respond to God’s invitation to his feast. In the parable those who did respond to the invitation, “bad and good alike,” did so with enthusiasm. They knew a good thing when they heard it and so grasped it immediately, filling the banquet hall just as the king had wanted for his son. Today all of us who say we are Christians are also invited to the wedding feast and this is a pointer towards our participation in the life of the Church. We hold precious the image of God who calls the good and the bad to the banquet of life that leads to eternal life. The expectation is that we will prepare ourselves now by being dressed appropriately for the occasion. Perhaps the best description of the proper wardrobe for a Christian is given to us by the apostle Paul.

If we wear the clothes he describes the clothes of compassion, kindness humility, gentleness and patience we will never be thrown out of any banquet. In Colossians he tells us You are God’s chosen race, his saints; he loves you, and you should be clothed in sincere compassion, in kindness and humility, gentleness and patience… Over all these clothes, to keep them together and complete them, put on love. And may the peace of Christ reign in your hearts. (Colossians 3:12-15) This weekend’s parable reminds us that God’s invitation is his gift to us, and it is given to us so that we can freely accept or ignore it. Those who were gathered in from the highways and byways had no claim on God. We, too, have no claim on God, We do not merit God’s invitation on our own. It is a grace God lovingly offers to each and every one of us. Hopefully all of us will be able to accept the invitation to come to the feast.

27 TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

I begin this week with a thought about the second reading from St Paul to the Philippians. It could have been written for us in our present situation with covid19 pandemic. St Paul tells us that we should not worry and that we should pray to god for our needs and as a result of our prayer the peace of God will come to us and guard our hearts and our thoughts in Christ Jesus. This is a very consoling reading we should not worry because god will come to us to guard us and give us his peace during these hard times. Also this week we heard the news that the president of the USA and his wife have COVID 19. I personally wouldn’t want myself or anyone else to get this virus and I hope that everyone who is stricken down by COVID19 at the present time including the trumps will get well soon.

In this Sundays Gospel reading  we learn a great deal about God, about our place in God’s plan for creation, about individual and collective meaning and purpose, and the outcomes of ill-chosen thoughts, efforts, and relationships that bring failure to our role in God’s plan. The master of the vineyard created an ideal vineyard and trusts us to maintain it and encourage its fruitfulness.

 Humanity is trusted and is talented enough to handle the work of maintenance and productivity. In his trust of humanity, God is patient. He sends messenger after messenger to collect what is due him. God repeatedly asks us to return to him what is his due. The workers in the vineyard are responsible for their denial of what is due to the landowner. They beat his messengers, stone one, kill another, and continually reject the landowner’s claims to the fruit of his vineyard. Finally, the landowner sends his own son, thinking the workers of the vineyard will respect the son. But even the son is abused and murdered because the workers think they will have the vineyard as their own with the death of the son. In the end God will provide judgment on all who work in his vineyard. Even so, there is a focus on those who work in the vineyard. They are trusted, they are privileged to work at maintenance and on production in whatever way suits them. They are free to make decisions in their work. God is no micro-manager. But in all this freedom, there is a responsibility to bear fruit. Humanity is accountable for what comes of the vineyard and giving it to the Creator. In the original context the tenants represent “the chief priests and elders of the people”. In the parable the “tenants” become angry when they are reminded that the vineyard has been leased to them and they must be accountable for what they have done or not done with it and they do not like this.

Their anger grows ever more violent as the story develops, the root of their anger is revealed – they want to own the vineyard rather than to work there. Through the parable of the vineyard Jesus reprimands the “chief priests and elders of the people” gathered around him.  He focused on the unfaithful people who, by their sin and failure to listen to the prophets, had brought God’s anger down on them. Jesus’ reference to the killing of the King’s only Son was not lost on the Pharisees. They had already decided to kill Jesus who claimed to be the Son of God. Jesus’ words enraged them, and their hearts were further hardened against Him and it all ended up as we know at the Cross of Calvary on Good Friday.  So this weekend  we are asked to reflect on our own faith and we are called to go out into the vineyard that is the world where we live and have our being. Were we  work to nourish the vines of other people’s faith by what we do and say so that as a result of our efforts all of us  will be able to give glory to God our father in heaven.

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