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Archive for the category “Faith”

THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT

Copy (2) of Project33

Well here we are nearly at the midpoint of Lent the third Sunday, of course the midpoint is next Wednesday 3 weeks in with three more to go. With the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI, the thought that came into my mind on Friday was Here today gone tomorrow. After his resignation coming into force at 8pm on Thursday the popes name is automatically taken out of the intercession in the Eucharistic Prayer  and all other official references made of him in the Liturgy cease. In the same way when a pope dies his ring and seal are both smashed by the Cardinal Camerlengo and the papal apartments are sealed until the new pope is elected this all took place on Thursday evening. I’m sitting here just after 8pm on Thursday evening thinking has all this happened and as we know it has and so life goes on as we reflect on the readings for this Sunday

In this Sundays  gospel we hear again the urgent call of the Christ to change our way of life, to repent, to begin a new relationship with God our Father. The passage shows the compassion of Jesus, but this compassion does not exclude the need for repentance. To undergo resurrection in Christ is to undergo the judgment of God! Indeed, the time of Lent is nothing other than the time of the life of the Church: these forty days of repentance are the days given to the Church in order that she might prepare for her meeting with the risen Jesus, the Lord of Lords, He who is “the Alpha and the Omega” (Rev. 21:6). 

God, in his mercy, gives us time to get right with him, but that time is here and now not in the past and not in the future. We must not assume that there is no hurry. There is always a hurry when it comes to faith because a sudden and unexpected death leaves us no time to prepare to settle one’s accounts when we must stand before the Lord on the day of judgment. Jesus warns us that we must be ready at all times. The Lord in his mercy gives us both grace and time to turn away from sin, but that time is right now. If we delay, even for a day, we may discover that grace has passed us by and our time is up.  

As a Church, we learn from the lessons of history and we remind ourselves that we the people of god  and the Church  we are part of are always in need of renewal and purification. We are in the middle of Lent; it is that time of the year when we have a lot to think about but the message of today’s readings is clear. It is that the task that lies before us is one of repentance. This means that we need to examine our consciences carefully and admit to God our sin and unworthiness and in all humility seek his forgiveness.  In simple terms the urgent call of the Christ to change our way of life and leave all the sinful ways behind us as  we look forward in hope to a better life  the eternal life offered us by the risen Lord at Easter.

SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT

Moses and Elijahon the Mountain with Jesus

Moses and Elijah
on the Mountain with Jesus

On this second Sunday of Lent, the Church invites us to contemplate  the mystery of the Transfiguration of the Lord Jesus. It is a privileged moment which prepares us to relive the Passion of Christ at the time of the Great Week: Holy Week, that  comes to a close on Easter Sunday. For at the time of the Transfiguration, Jesus appears in Glory. Now, if Jesus appears in Glory, and if his disciples see him in this sublime state, it is precisely so that these same disciples may be comforted by this celestial vision before passing through the tragic test of the Passion of the Savior.”Now Peter and those who were with him were heavy with sleep, and when they wakened they saw his glory and the two men who stood with him.”What the disciples of Jesus saw and heard on that day was an anticipation of the Resurrection of Christ. In advance, and to comfort them before the moment of his Passion, Jesus allowed his disciples to enjoy a few instants of the divine glory that is his own. Also, it was not acceptable to speak of it as long as Christ had not yet returned to life. Saint Matthew relates the following words of Jesus to his disciples: “Tell no one the vision, until the Son of man is raised from the dead.” (Mt. 17:9) .We too shall see, with the eyes of faith, the glory of the Resurrection of the Saviour: today, during the celebration of the Eucharist, we are going to contemplate Jesus in his sacrament, seeing him, through faith, as he is now, in the glory of Heaven! So, already comforted by his Resurrection, we shall be able to participate joyously in his Sacrifice of Calvary: we are going to proclaim the Death of Christ in the expectation of our own Resurrection in the end times! May Mary, who was present at the foot of the Cross, while having within her, through faith, the fullness of the Spirit of God,  come to help us today and always!

On Friday past  22nd February we celebrated the feast of the Chair of St. Peter, it struck me that just one week down the road from there on Friday 1st March  the chair of St. Peter would be vacant after the resignation of Pope Benedict at 8pm   the previous evening. There are so many people saying this that and the other about where the Cardinal Electors will go to elect the new Pope. In reality  none of us really know where the new Pope will come from or who he will be, that is why we should pray that the Holy Spirit will be the  Cardinals guide  during the time of the Vacant See (Sede Vacante) and the election (Conclave) so that will  of God will happen in the Church through the successor of Saint Peter our new pope and shepherd of our souls.

And so as a Christian community we pray:

O God, eternal shepherd,
who govern your flock with unfailing care,
grant in your boundless fatherly love
a pastor for your Church
who will please you by his holiness
and to us show watchful care.

Through Christ our Lord

THE FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT 2013

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Here we are at the first Sunday of Lent at the end of what can only be termed as an extraordinary week, or as one person put it to me that was the week that was and from my perspective this certainly was true. With the Pope’s Resignation on Monday I think most of the Catholic world was left a bit gob-smacked to say the least as this was the first time that a pope had resigned in 600 years. In less than two weeks time the Catholic Community throughout the world will be like sheep without a shepherd as the Pope resigns the See of Peter at 8pm on the 28th of February. We pray for the outgoing Pope Benedict 16th that he will have a good retirement and we also pray that the Holy Spirit will inspire the Cardinals in their choice when we come to  the conclave in March. Meantime the year of faith continues as we stop to think about the readings for this Sunday.

We are now as you know in the liturgical season of Lent, preparing for Easter, at this time three things are traditionally recommended to us: Prayer, Fasting & Almsgiving. Lent is a time of sober reflection, reassessment and rededication of our lives to God and to the faith we profess. We review our lives, seek forgiveness, do penance and recommit ourselves to Christ. This is all done within the context of the Passion of the Lord, which we are constantly reminded of during Lent as we build up to the solemn re-enactment of the passion and resurrection of Christ during Holy Week and   Easter. The forty days of Lent is the people of Gods annual retreat in imitation and remembrance of Jesus’ forty days in the wilderness. We are called to journey with the Lord in a particular way with prayer, fasting, almsgiving,  repentance, and renewal as we prepare to celebrate the feast of Easter, the Christian Passover. The Lord gives us spiritual food and supernatural strength to seek his face and to prepare ourselves for spiritual combat and testing. We, too, must follow in the way of the cross in order to share in the victory of Christ’s death and resurrection.

As human beings, we will always be confronted with the temptation to do wrong.  We are going to be tempted to seek joy in places where the Lord is not found and there may well be no longterm joy or happiness. In our Gospel reading for today Jesus himself was tempted by the devil to accept the pleasures of the world rather than remain united to the Father. The temptations of Jesus in the dessert point back to the temptations of Israel in the past, and point forward to the trials that the Church and all its members will undergo in the future. It is now we who are in the wilderness, with no lasting city, on a long journey to the Promised Land.Even to our dying day  each trial that life brings is a crisis, but is also an opportunity to trust more completely that the Lord is with us, and that we do love God with all our heart, and with all our soul, and with all our might. All of us should be  confident that we will triumph in our trials of faith, not because of our own strength, but because Jesus has given us his holy Spirit to be with us. As we begin this holy season let’s ask the Lord for a fresh outpouring of his Holy Spirit that we may grow in faith, hope, and love, and embrace his will more fully in our lives.  Then we can pray with confidence in the words our saviour has given us: Our Father, do not let us be defeated by temptation, but deliver us from the evil one

 

 

5th Sunday of Ordinary Time C

5sunOT

Here we are fast approaching Lent. Believe it or not next Wednesday is Ash Wednesday. We move forward as the Palm Branches left aside from last year are burned for the ashes and the Green vestments of Ordinary time give way to the Lenten purple. Here we go again comes to mind as it seems no time since we celebrated the start of the Lenten Fast in 2012. But whether we like it or not Lent starts on Wednesday and there will be much said about what we might do or not do   in the days ahead. That said back to today and our readings for this Sunday:

Why did Jesus perform the miracle of the great catch of fish? No doubt the great crowd of people who had pressed upon Jesus had something to do with this miracle. They were very hungry for God and were eager to hear his word are we that hungry when it comes to our weekly observance of our faith?

Jesus wanted to use this occasion to teach his disciples an important lesson.  Although Simon was wearied from a night of fruitless toil, he nonetheless pressed upon Jesus for his word of command: At your word I will let down the nets. When you meet disappointment and failure, do you press upon the Lord, like Simon, to hear his word and to receive his command? This incident tells us an important truth about how God works in and through us for his glory. God expects of us greater things than we can do by ourselves. When we cooperate in his works, we accomplish far beyond what we can do on our own for those who have faith all things are possible. When people respond to God’s word with faith and obedience they are changed and made “a new creation” in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:17). God chooses ordinary people, like you and me, as his ambassadors and he uses the ordinary circumstances of our daily lives and work situations to draw others into his kingdom. Our lives in Christ depend upon an unlimited trust in the Lord, following his words with energy and hope even when his will for us leads into uncharted waters, when he commands that we “put out into the deep”,

even those well-plumbed depths which have in the past yielded up for us only empty nets will bear fruit in plenty. The readings today are all about vocation; the vocations of Isaiah, Paul and the Apostles. Each one of us has a vocation each one of us has been given the task of proclaiming the Good News in our daily lives, a calling from the Lord. Each one of us is commissioned through our baptism to be an Apostle of Christ in the world. Some are called to the very particular service of Priesthood or religious life but many others are called to the vocations of married or single life. There are so many other vocations I can’t think of them all but all of them have so much value in leading people to God. Whether we are helping in a food pantry in our local community, participating in mission trips across the world, or living amongst another culture for many years, it is the love for the other that is at the very heart and soul of the Christian notion of mission.

Having faith trusting in God, as Paul states in Corinthians, “We have such a hope, we act with great boldness.” We should have that boldness that comes from the realization that we are all Sons and Daughters of God and that God loves us all more than we can  imagine.  We are called, we are sent, to lead people to God.  Every action of our lives has purpose not just for ourselves but as beacons of hope for those who are seeking the Lord. The family Motto of my family is Light in the darkness we that is all of us are called to be the spiritual light that is meant to be set on hilltops so all can see.  We pray today for the courage to respond to the Lord’s summons to be his apostles with every action of our lives especially as we begin our observance of Lent during the Year of Faith.

4Th Sunday of Ordinary Time

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This Sunday’s gospel passage is a continuation of last week’s reading when Jesus entered the synagogue and declared Isaiah’s prophecy fulfilled. In that declaration, Jesus referred to himself as God’s servant, the Chosen One upon whom God had given his Spirit. Jesus’ mission was proof of that claim; he preached, taught, and healed in the name of God’s Kingdom. His simple, straightforward declaration would cause controversy to those who thought they knew “Joseph’s son.”  They brought him to the brow of the hill and were about to throw him over the edge but as it wasn’t his time he escaped through them and went away.

When Jesus came to his home town of Nazareth and began to teach, the local Jewish community was quite proud of him. After all, they had heard of the things that he had done at Capernaum and were convinced that he was some sort of prophet from God. They believed that Jesus had just won the lottery, so to speak, and was about to shower them with God’s favour because, after all, he was one of them, so of course that is what he would do. Besides, they agreed with what he was saying – at least at first. But as long as they were pleased, they were proud and they wanted to seen in the light of special favour from God.

When Jesus speaks to his home town synagogue, he’s speaking to us in our home town church, too. Paul echoes Jesus’ message, “And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.” What does God’s love look like in your idea of church? Open the ears of your heart to listen for it, and your eyes to see and walk in grace to find out.

Prophets in every age are holy people that is people with God at the heart of their lives. They are uncompromising in their faithfulness to the word of God. They always speak the truth, regardless of the consequences, offering encouragement and hope to people who have no sense of meaning or purpose in life. They challenge people to repent for their sins and to seek God’s mercy. That is true compassion.

There is still a need for prophets in our society, men, women and even children who are faithful to their baptismal commitment. We need to listen to them and learn from them. Also, we need to remember that every Christian and that means all of us including you and me has to exercise the prophetic vocation in the world of work, leisure and family life, praying for the grace to fulfil this important part of our Christian life.

Being a Christian isn’t easy. Jesus never said that it was going to be an easy road to go along and we remember Good Friday and the Cross of Calvary.  Our faith as Christians calls us to live, to die to ourselves and be resurrected with Jesus over and over and over again.

With each time, our hearts get a little wiser, we know grace that much more deeply, and we are able to follow Jesus a little bit more down the road of love. Being a Christian is always going to have a cost no matter what way you look at it.  That is because good is always going to be opposed by evil and good always triumphs over evil and the evil that is within the world will never win. May we not be afraid of being what we are and that is people who are called by Jesus to follow him in faith.

 

3RD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME

 

ANS ALL EYES WERE ON HIM AS HE BEGAN TO SPEAK

AND ALL EYES WERE ON HIM AS HE BEGAN TO SPEAK

Luke tells us that Jesus began his public ministry in his own land of Galilee where he was raised as a child. Just think about it for a moment Jesus’ first public words in his hometown synagogue amazed both his family and townspeople. I wonder do these same words amaze us in the here and now of today because more often than not they are  an accurate description of what we are and what we are not in our modern world.  In the time of Jesus It was customary for the president of the synagogue to call on different people each week to read from the Hebrew bible and say a few words. Jesus read the text from the prophet Isaiah that explained how the Messiah would come in the power of the Holy Spirit to bring freedom to those oppressed by sin and evil (see Isaiah 61:1-2). Jesus told his audience that he himself had been anointed to fulfil this prophecy.

Now the way Jesus works today in 2013 is through his mystical body, the church that is through you and me in our own time and place. Through each of us and all who are baptized into his body, Jesus strives still to live out his mission, bringing good news to those who don’t have any, setting free those chained in captivity, opening the eyes of the blind, helping the oppressed and exploited find their life, and unrolling the floor plan that sets out God’s reign where justice and peace prevail.

Jesus did these things while he walked upon the earth and still does these things, because we his church do them. The poor gain hope, whether it’s their souls or their bodies that are starved. The captives experience freedom, whether they are prisoners in a jail or prisoners in a mansion and there are many more types of prisoners than these. The blind receive sight, whether it’s cataract surgery at the local   hospital or the scales of prejudice falling off the eyes of a bigot. The oppressed are set free, whether oppression is a political regime or a chemical dependence of any sort. When Jesus read  that passage in the Nazareth synagogue, he announced a mission statement for himself and for us members of the church.

As we strive to keep faithful to those words Jesus read aloud in the synagogue and lived out in his life, let us remember the words he said relating them to ourselves and our lives.

The Spirit of the Lord is upon us.

The Spirit of the Lord has anointed us to bring and be good news to the poor.

The Spirit of the Lord has sent us to proclaim release to the captives and there are many more captives in our world of today

The Spirit of the Lord has sent us to help the blind recover their sight and that may be physical or maybe even spiritual.

The Spirit of the Lord has sent us to free the oppressed.

The Spirit of the Lord has sent us to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour and for those of us who are Catholic we have our year of faith. But the year of the Lord’s favour is open to all who will accept it.

Today, this scripture has been fulfilled in our hearing and seeing through Christ the Lord. Amen.

 

 

 

 

The Baptism Of The Lord

BAPTISM

This Sunday we celebrate the baptism of the Lord, when Jesus was baptised in the river Jordan by John. None of us remember when we were baptised when we were infants having said that I have had the privilege of knowing two adults who were baptised in our parish in the last year and I wish them well for their future faith journeys.

 It may seem strange, but this is a Christmas Feast. Not if we think of Christmas only in terms of the Baby in Bethlehem, but if we have followed the ideas of the Feasts of Holy Family and especially Epiphany, and have seen the Season in terms of the growing manifestation or appearing of the Son of God: first to the shepherds and then to the wise men from the East. Now in the River Jordan, Jesus, Son of Mary, is revealed to all and everyone as the fullness of all God’s promises: “This is my Son, the Beloved“. On this day we stand before the revelation of God’s love for us, such that he would send his only Son into the world. Christmas without the Baptism of the Lord, and the words that are spoken from heaven, would be incomplete, since it is only in them that we fully see the wonder of what happened in Bethlehem, that we fully understand the reason for the joy with which we celebrated Christmas Day.

As we come to the end of Christmas time we do so having been shown who it is we listen to: the only Son of God, the Beloved in who the father is well pleased. As 2013 unfolds, will it be truly a Year of Faith for us and a new opportunity for truth and love to overcome the evil that surrounds us? Light always has power over darkness, especially when it comes through Jesus Christ  who is the way the truth and the life and His followers that means you and me. let us not be afraid to show the light of Christ to others in the months ahead.

THE EPIPHANY OF THE LORD

 

 

 

THE THREE WISE MENJOURNEYING TO JERUSALEM

THE THREE WISE MEN
JOURNEYING TO JERUSALEM

 

By long standing sacred tradition Christians celebrate Christmas as a season, with the twelve days between Christmas and the Epiphany as one long “Christmas day.” The season ends with the Baptism of the Lord which is also the first Sunday of ordinary time and that takes place next Sunday. Christmas celebrations with friends and family, decorations, and all of the other means of rejoicing, should continue throughout the season. We can never rejoice in the Lord’s birth too much. As Christians, we will very often find ourselves living in contradiction to the styles and preferences of the present age. We should get very much used to the fact that we will face conflict among friends, and even at times within families, as we seek, more generously and more regularly, to live out and celebrate the mysteries of our redemption in Christ Jesus.

“Arise, shine; for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you.”(Is 60:1) Isaiah the prophet describes the glory of Jesus Christ, who is “full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father”(Jn 1:14), our Messiah. The prophet also foretells the reality of those first three wise men, who represent the kings and the peoples of the whole earth, all of whom are called to realize their full dignity as sons and daughters of God in worship and praise of him for his glory and goodness. “Above you (US) the Lord now rises and above you his glory appears. The nations come to your light and kings to your dawning brightness.” (Is 60:2-3)

The story of the magi  or the three wise men carries with it an extraordinary richness. In it the evangelist teaches us about the mission of the Son of God. Jesus is ‘made manifest’ (epiphany = manifestation) as Messiah not only for his own people, but for those who come ‘from the east’, for all the peoples of the earth. At the same time this is the Messiah heralded by the prophets. The Scriptures are fulfilled.

This Messiah is born into danger, as the cruel tyrant, known to history as ‘Herod the Great’, is the first to threaten his life. The gift of myrrh alludes to the death he is to suffer. The presentation of gifts from the peoples of the world completes the Christmas scene. The magi represent the nations, but also the age-old quest among the peoples of the earth for true wisdom. This wisdom is found in Christ. May we not be afraid in the year that has just begun to seek the wisdom that God wants for us, that is the wisdom and the light of faith

The Feast of the Holy Family

 

 

THE HOLY FAMILY

 

THE HOLY FAMILY

Every year, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph on the Sunday within the Octave of Christmas. And that means a celebration of family life — births, weddings, funerals, anniversaries. In the first reading, we hear about a joyful birth — that of Samuel. After years of prayer, Hannah and Elkanah are granted a son. As soon as Samuel is weaned, his mother fulfils her promise and gives him up to the Lord’s service at the shrine at Shiloh. We in our parish have a particular reason to celebrate as we are the Parish of the Holy Family. As an example for us to follow, the Holy Family can seem a little too perfect: when we consider the more “dramatic” events of the Christmas and Easter stories, it can seem so far removed from us. And yet, as today’s Gospel reminds us there were also the so-called “hidden years” – the many years of family life in Nazareth, spent in doing ordinary family things. During that time, we hear how Jesus grew and matured, and in the glimpse of that family life we see our example. Our celebration of this feast announces that there is a lasting value in the ideals of family life especially when so many are denigrating what it means to be a family as well as the relationship between husband, wife, parents and children. Whatever the changing details of each age, honour, understanding and love always remain the recipe for the perfect, and holy, human family.

Today we remember the care that Mary and Joseph gave to Jesus. We recognize the sacrifice they made for Jesus, in the same way as we recognise the sacrifices our own parents made for us  and many more  are making for their children today in our I want I get world.   

Our families would find the disagreements, stressful relationships, and resentments that spoil the joy of family harmony so much easier to solve by imitating the faith and loving trust of the Holy Family. “Lord Jesus, you came to restore us to unity with the Father in heaven. Where there is division, bring healing and pardon. May all peoples and families find peace, wholeness, and unity in you, the Prince of Peace and Saviour of the world.”

 

CHRISTMAS DAY 2012

Art Christmas Day

Well  we are nearly at the great day itself CHRISTMAS DAY so happy Christmas wherever you are. For the last four weeks of advent we have been looking forward to the coming of Christ into our world with all its ups and downs and lumps and bumps along the road of life. We have completed our advent observance with all its preparation and now we celebrate with gifts and happiness all around So now  then let us rejoice in the Lord, not in the world; that is, rejoice in faithfulness and not in iniquity; rejoice in the hope of eternity and not the brief flower of vanity that is part of our  daily lives.  During these days of Christmas celebration we will often have occasion to sing as the angels did long ago, “Glory to God in the highest!” At this time when we celebrate the birth of “a saviour who has been born for” us, the One who is “Wonder- Counsellor and  Prince of Peace,” the One who is “a great light” in the darkness of war and strife around us, we welcome an opportunity to put aside our cares and worries, bask in the joy and generosity of the season, and sing out our “Glory to God in the highest as we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.  None of us will travel to Bethlehem to behold the  newborn infant lying in the manger in the way the shepherds and the wise men did in their time. But all of us travel the road of daily life, and we are called to see Jesus the newborn Infant in the youngster who needs companionship, the teenager who needs a listening ear, the parent who needs a helping hand, the older person who needs someone to care to name but a few there are so many others. We remember in a special way all those who have died since last Christmas and we keep their families in our thoughts and prayers. Some of our Christmas customs seem to turn away from Christ. Or do they? The giving of gifts expresses love of the other person. Festive decorations set this season apart from all others. Santa Claus was originally St. Nicholas, a bishop remembered for his generosity. Every letter sent and received bears the stamp of this special season, tidings of good will, and a reminder that those who are far away are close to us in mind and heart. The customs of this season are veiled announcements of one message: Christ is born for us. To remove the veil, to hear the good news, we gather together in our churches =. There the message of Christmas speaks loud and clear. The Letter to the Hebrews says, “In times past, God spoke in  various ways to our ancestors through the prophets; in these last days, he has spoken to us through his Son.”

The customs of Christmas speak the message in partial ways, but God speaks the message clearly through his Son, who is born in our midst this day. on this day the whole community of heaven joins with all believers of good will on earth in a jubilant song of praise for the good news proclaimed by the angels: Behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people, for to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord (Luke 2:10-11). So with Mary and Joseph with the shepherds and Angels and the Arch Angels and the whole company of heaven    Come let us adore him Christ the Lord.

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