Parishes: Lower Killeavy, Middle Killeavy, Upper Killeavy
Vicar forane: Very Rev. Richard Naughton, P.P., V.F.
Co-Leader:
Pastoral Area Events:
Parishes: Lower Killeavy, Middle Killeavy, Upper Killeavy
Vicar forane: Very Rev. Richard Naughton, P.P., V.F.
Co-Leader:
Pastoral Area Events:
In response to the announcement today that Pope Benedict XVI has accepted the resignation of Bishop William Walsh as Bishop of Killaloe and the announcement of the appointment of Reverend Kieran O’Reilly, SMA, as Bishop of Killaloe, the following statement was issued by Cardinal Seán Brady, President of the Irish Bishops’ Conference:
“I wish to acknowledge the contribution that Bishop Willie Walsh has made to the work of the Bishops’ Conference and to the Diocese of Killaloe. Bishop Walsh has served the Bishops’ Conference for 16 years and he has served his diocese as priest and bishop for 51 years.
“The motto which Bishop Walsh took at his Episcopal Ordination in October 1994 was ‘Cinealtas Chriost’ which means ‘the gentleness of Christ’ and he has very much lived out this motto in his Episcopal Ministry. Bishop Walsh is never afraid to speak out and to use his talent in communication to speak for the poor and the marginalised in our society or when it came to issues of injustice and wrongdoing.
“I warmly acknowledge Bishop Walsh’s pastoral support for marriage through his work with ACCORD, the Catholic Marriage Care Agency. He has been involved with ACCORD in his own diocese since its inception there and in recent years as President of ACCORD at a national level. In this time of challenge for marriage, Bishop Walsh has been an inspirational leader who has at all times demonstrated deep compassion and understanding for all entering into marriage and also for those experiencing difficulties in their marriages and relationships.
“I offer him my prayers and blessings and I wish him many years of good health and happiness in his retirement.
“I want to take this opportunity also to congratulate Reverend Kieran O’Reilly, Superior General of the Society of Missionaries of Africa on his appointment today as Bishop of Killaloe. I have known Father O’Reilly for many years and we worked together as recently as October 2008 at the General Synod of the Church in Rome, the theme of which was ‘The Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church’.
“He is well aware of the deep faith of the people of the diocese and I have no doubt that he can count on their prayers and support as he takes on his new role as Bishop.
I welcome the publication today of the Second Annual Report of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI). I want to thank the members of the Board and the National Office of the NBSCCCI for their outstanding dedication, professionalism and commitment in supporting the sincere desire of Bishops and leaders of Religious Congregations to become exemplars of best practice in safeguarding children. I also want to thank them for holding us to account and for pointing out frankly and constructively those areas of policy, practice or attitude which require corrective action or further development. This has been a year of extraordinary challenge for the NBSCCCI with the publication of the Ryan Report and Murphy Report which made exceptional demands on the members and staff of the Board and the National Office.
I hope today’s Report will help to reassure everyone that while important challenges remain, the Catholic Church in Ireland has come a long way in addressing the failings of the past. I welcome in particular the Report’s two clear conclusions: “Firstly, that children should be safer today within the Church than they once were. Secondly, those that seek to harm children should feel much less secure.”
I also welcome the news that 2,356 individuals have been trained and are now acting as child safeguarding representatives in Parishes across the country, with coverage of all Parishes to be achieved in the coming months. This represents an extraordinary achievement by any standard and is a remarkable example of lay participation in the life and ministry of the Church. I want to thank all those who give of their time, talent and expertise in safeguarding children. Building whole communities that actively keep children safe, together with effective structures of accountability and transparency, is the key to the future of child safeguarding within the Church and, indeed, within society as a whole. Each one of us has to take responsibility for keeping children safe and for addressing the attitudes and practices which had such tragic consequences for so many children in the past.
There is no room for complacency. The tragic experience of the past reminds us that constant vigilance is needed as well as full adherence to robust, comprehensive and ongoing systems of accountability. As Pope Benedict XVI said to the Bishops in his Pastoral Letter to the Catholics of Ireland, “Only decisive action carried out with complete honesty and transparency will restore the respect and good will of the Irish people towards the Church to which we have consecrated our lives. This must arise, first and foremost, from your own self-examination, inner purification and spiritual renewal.”
I want to thank all those whom I have met over recent weeks as part of my own reflection on the next steps we might take. I listened firstly to those who are survivors of abuse. Some of these meetings were made known to the public while others were held in private at the request of those I was meeting. I thank them all for their generosity and courage in sharing their experiences and their wide variety of views with me.
I also listened to people from the Diocese, in Parishes and in Diocesan groups. I spoke with lay Catholics from across the country, as well as to many priests, religious and others. Again, I want to thank them all for their honesty and help and for the tremendous support and encouragement they have given me.
In the years that remain to me as Archbishop of Armagh, I am fully committed to building on the substantial progress made in child safeguarding in recent years and to working to bring about the healing, repentance and renewal set out for the Church in Ireland by Pope Benedict XVI. I am fully committed to the path that as a Church we must take to the truth that will set us free.
As part of this process, and as a sign of my personal commitment to the task of renewal that lies ahead, I am taking a number of practical steps:
•    I have asked the Holy See to include the Diocese of Armagh among those Dioceses to be included in the Apostolic Visitation announced by Pope Benedict XVI.
•    The distress caused to many survivors of abuse and others as a result of the drip-by-drip revelation of past failings has to be addressed. In 2009, I asked the National Board for Safeguarding Children to engage with all Bishops and leaders of Religious Congregations in Ireland to explore the possibility of a voluntary and comprehensive audit and review of safeguarding practice.  The Board is now engaged with the members of the Irish Episcopal Conference, the Conference of Religious of Ireland and the Irish Missionary Union to explore how this process can be brought forward and completed as quickly as possible.  I have asked the Board to prioritise the review and audit of the handling of cases and the implementation of agreed policies in the Archdiocese of Armagh.  I commit myself to fully implementing the recommendations of that review and to sharing its findings in the first phased publication of such reviews proposed today by the National Board.
•    To build on the excellent work already undertaken in recent years by the Child Safeguarding staff in the Diocese of Armagh, I will shortly be advertising for a full-time director of Child Safeguarding for the Diocese, who will have responsibility for handling all future suspicions and allegations of child abuse, for reporting directly to the civil authorities, North and South, and for supporting all Parishes and Diocesan organisations in ensuring compliance with civil obligations and Church policies in this area.
•    I have asked the Child Safeguarding staff in the Diocese of Armagh to make all necessary preparations for our full participation as a Diocese in the work of the new Independent Safeguarding Authority, which comes into place in Northern Ireland later this year.  In the future, it will be this statutory authority and not the Church (or any other organisation which works with children in Northern Ireland) that will decide who is permitted to work with children.  As part of our registration with this new Independent Safeguarding Authority, Bishops in Northern Ireland will give a commitment to sharing ‘soft information’ held or known about any person working in a Church context, as well as all allegations of abuse, with the new Authority.  I regret that this important statutory safeguard will only be available in that part of the Diocese of Armagh which is in Northern Ireland.  I would welcome the establishment of a similar system for sharing of information on a North-South basis.
•    To assist me in addressing the vital work of healing, repentance and renewal, including engagement with survivors of abuse, as well as the many other challenges and opportunities which confront the Diocese of Armagh and the Church in Ireland at this time, I have asked Pope Benedict XVI for additional support for my work, at Episcopal level.  
In recent weeks, in my capacity as President of the Irish Episcopal Conference, I have encouraged Bishops, lay associations and ecclesial movements, youth groups, religious and clergy to continue the process of reflection and dialogue on the Pastoral Letter of Pope Benedict XVI to the Catholics of Ireland.  In particular, I have asked for their proposals on the “new vision” that we need, in the words of Pope Benedict XVI, “to inspire present and future generations to treasure the gift of our common faith.”  
I commit myself, with all my human weaknesses, to walk humbly with all in the Church in Ireland as a fellow pilgrim on this journey of renewal and to discern God’s will for the Church at this time. I will seek, as Pope Benedict XVI has asked us, to work ‘with courage and determination’ – and with humility, sincere repentance and careful listening – to address the many challenges which confront us. As a fellow pilgrim, searching with the whole community of faith for a clear way forward, I will do all I can to help sow the seeds for a genuine healing and renewal in the Church which, for so many of us, is our family and our home.
As a part of the Strengthening Parishes for the 21st century initiative Cardinal Brady invites the people of the diocese to a celebration in Armagh Cathedral at 7.30pm on Tuesday 8 June.    The elements of the celebration will include the launch of the new Diocesan Pastoral Council Constitution, the adoption of the diocesan aim and the commissioning of the new pastoral area resource teams.
A poster for downloading is available here
Every time I hear that Gospel, I am reminded of a visit which I made to the Holy Land a couple of years ago. We were staying in Jerusalem, but on the Sunday morning, we travelled north to that country between Samaria and Galilee, which was mentioned in the Gospel we have just heard. It was exactly in the land which Jesus met the ten lepers. We came to this little Christian village, which is a tiny pocket of Christians in the midst of their neighbours who are all Arabs and Muslims.
We celebrated Mass with them. I have never forgotten the enthusiasm and the faith of that parish community. The men sat on one side of the church and the women on the other and the children in the middle as we used to do here fifty years ago. But they sang with great gusto and I imagined that perhaps they were descended from those ten lucky men on whom the Lord took pity on all those centuries ago.
After Mass we were brought to the Parish Hall, as we will do here this evening, and I was introduced to the Parish Elders and treated to a tiny cup of black coffee, laced perhaps with a hint of brandy. I was reminded of the wonderful occasion here this evening, not alone by the account of the miracle which took place there 2000 years ago, but also by the joy and enthusiasm which gathers us here to give thanks to God this evening.
I have read the lovely Commemorative Record specially prepared for this celebration. It reminds me of how much we have for which to thank God. First and foremost, the people and their faith, a faith which is nourished and strengthened and has been nourished here over the last 175 years. It is nourished by the Word of God. I am glad to see the Ministers of the Word mentioned first. It is indeed a key role. What a treasure to have so many willing volunteers to prepare for and to proclaim the Word. Of course it is always an immense privilege to announce God’s Word to God’s people. As you do so, my dear Readers, I hope that your own spiritual life is the first to be nourished by it.
I was thrilled to hear that there are over 100 parishioners who have Holy Communion brought to their homes each weekend. This immense generosity of the extraordinary Ministers ensures that these parishioners do not feel isolated or cut off from the life of the parish but instead are able to receive the Body of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament. That generosity of course springs from the generosity of Christ who gives us his body and blood to be our food.
What a delight to know that since 2003, thanks to the initiative of Fr Tommy McGeough and Fr McKeever, there has been Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament for up to twelve hours every Tuesday and Wednesday. It is an excellent devotion and especially welcome as w prepare for the Eucharistic Congress in 2012.
I read, with interest, the historical notes on St Patrick’s, Clonalig and Anamar Primary Schools and St Joseph’s High School. Here this evening we gladly thank God for the work of teaching and education which goes on here. We ask God to bless the teachers of the parish and reward them for this.
The Booklet condenses the history of this Church into five pages, which I will not attempt to summarise here. You will have to read them for yourselves. I recommend that you do so and that you do so carefully for those pages contain your history and the history of your parents and grandparents and great grandparents. There are references to the 14 Parish Priests who have been here over the last 200 years and a list of the 56 churches.
It is good that the Lourdes Jubilee statue gets mentioned. I always associated people from Crossmaglen with pilgrimages to the Shrine of Our Lady at Lourdes. But, of course, it is not easy to summarise in a few words what that means. It means a deep love of Our Lady, a tender devotion to St Bernadette, a wonderful care and compassion for the sick. All that is best about any parish, and certainly all that represents the very best of life in this parish of Upper Creggan. I am really grateful for the immense support given by this parish to the Diocesan Pilgrimage to Lourdes.
There is a lot more in the Booklet which describes the life, culture and tradition of you, the people of Upper Creggan.  That is only right because the joys and the sorrows, the hopes and the dreams, the achievements and the failures of its people are also those of the Church.  Over the past 175 years this Church of 
St Patrick has been central to all of that.  
Naturally there is a lot about Gaelic Football and the exploits of the former Gaelic Clubs in this parish, Silverbridge, Shelagh, Cullaville and Crossmaglen Rangers. For obvious reasons the Rangers get the ‘lion’s share’ of the coverage.
Long before I became Archbishop of Armagh I had heard lots about Crossmaglen. I used to attend the Annual Congress of the GAA – where the Blessed Oliver Plunkett Park – later to become, of course, The St Oliver Plunkett Park used to feature prominently on the agenda. So, in 1996, when I came here to bless the new Ceannarus I felt I was, in a way, coming to a place which I already knew very well. I am also glad to recall that in that year the glorious run, which landed 13 County, 7 Ulster and 4 All-Ireland titles, began.
I use the word ‘glorious’ deliberately because the fact is that we all like glory. We are all made for glory. We are all made for glory that lasts, not just for thirteen, or for thirty years, but forever. That is why this evening’s First Reading from the prophet Ezekiel is so relevant.
There the Prophet describes the vision he had of the glory of the Lord God which fills the temple. The voice of the Lord which said:  “I shall live here among the sons of Israel forever”.  That everlasting glory of the Lord God is the only kind of glory that will ever satisfy the hungers of our hearts.  
And that takes us to the heart of this evening’s ceremony when we come to try and replay the Lord for his goodness to each one of us.  It would be good for each one of us to list ten things for which to give thanks.  ‘The thankful person is a happy person’ the scientists tell us.
St Paul tells us he never stops thanking God for al the graces which his readers – the people of Cormil had received through Jesus Christ.
Basically that is essentially what we are doing here this evening also – thanking God that you have ben enriched in so many ways – especially in teachers and preachers. They have enriched you with their wisdom and their help in this Church down through the years.
We give thanks that this witness to Christ that has been so strong among you. That witness is to be seen in the response you give to all you have heard within these four walls
•    In your response to the call to repentance during Parish missions.
•    In your response to the invitation to give praise and glory to God.
•    In your response to go out and bring God’s healing help and love to so many.
This evening we give thanks that so many of us are willing to put the gifts you received from the Holy Spirit at the service of the work of building up God’s kingdom. You do this in various ways. For example through your work on various committees and societies. We look to the future with great confidence and great joy – our Risen Lord Jesus Christ will keep you standing until the last day. The reason is simple – by calling you, God has joined you to his son, Jesus Christ and God.
GOD IS FAITHFUL
Those who built this Church knew from their experience that God is faithful. Within 10 or 12 years they would learn that the hard way as they gathered here to bury the victims of the Great Famine. Yes – God is faithful.
This is the Year of the Priest. We thank God for all the sons of this parish who have chosen the path of the priesthood life. We are especially grateful for their parents and families to whom, under God, we priests in a sense, owe our vocations.
All of us feel that the late Cardinal Ó Fiaich belongs to us and, of course, he does. I have many fond memories of his many visits to Rome between 1980 and 1990. The delightful reminiscences by Deirdre Ó Fiaich will revive many precious memories for a lot of people. The greatest monument which we all could build to his memory would be a firm resolution to pass on our faith to those who come after us and to pray that many others, from this parish, will follow in his footsteps and so find fulfilment in this life and in the next.
INTRODUCTION
We gather to give thanks to God for 175 years of the life of the Church of St. Patrick, Crossmaglen. As we do so I am very conscious of the plight of Natasha McShane – a native of this parish – who is critically ill in Chicago – as a result of the injuries received in a physical attack. We bring Natasha and her family before the Lord this evening.
I welcome you all here this evening and if I may presume to do – I welcome especially the priests – either native sons or who have worked here in the past.
We are all here to recall the goodness of a generous and gracious God. We are here to recognise the loving presence of that God in our midst and to respond to that presence with honour, praise and glory. As we do so, we hope that one day, in the future, in union with all who ever worshipped in this Church, we will ourselves share in that supreme glory.
In the Pastoral Letter to the Irish people, Pope Benedict encourages all of us to rediscover the Sacrament of Reconciliation. The Pope invites us to avail ourselves more frequently of the transforming power of its grace. Transforming power is precisely what it is – because one of the most liberating experiences of life is to discover our own dark side, our sins, to acknowledge their existence in Confession, to ask pardon for their consequences and to be set free from the shadows of guilt.
I am hopeful that the visit of the Relics of St John Vianney may prove to be a providential opportunity to renew our faith in the power of God’s forgiving love in the Sacrament of Confession. The fact is that we all need forgiveness, whether we know it or not. The Christian simply cannot ignore the Lord’s call to repent. None of us is capable of forgiveness in the sense that Christ forgives. When Christ forgives He reaches into the roots of our being and if we are ready and willing to be touched and healed, then Christ does so. But no human being can forgive sin. In fact we cannot change people at all unless we have the capacity to love them with the love of Christ. If people are going to be touched by the forgiveness which we offer them, then we first need to be freed of an inability to love.
The saints are people who led this amazing appreciation of God’s love for them. They saw the power which God’s love affected in their lives and they responded to that love in a most remarkable way.
We are gathered this afternoon to welcome the Relics of St John Mary Vianney. Some people are sceptical about devotion to the relics of the saints. They think we treat them as if they were a magic wand. We are devoted to relics because they help our memories. They remind us that the saints got their heroic strength and ability to love not from themselves but from the merits of Christ, our one and only Saviour. They also remind us of the importance of our own bodies. It is in our bodies and through our bodies that we live our existence here on this earth.
John Mary Vianney used his body well to get to know people and to speak to them and to help them figure out why they are here on earth. The Relics remind us of a man who used his body and his time well, to talk to God and hear Confessions. In so doing he built up this wonderful friendship with God. In his 16 hours a day in the confessional, his poor body helped hundreds of thousands to get to know Jesus and to make their peace with him and find their joy in him.
For a long time, as a priest, I had the great desire to visit Ars. I wanted to see for myself where this great priest spent all those years. Finally I got my chance to go there when I joined the staff of the Irish College in Rome. In summer I used to drive my car home all the way from Rome, through France, to Ireland.
When I eventually did get to the village of Ars in France what struck me was how small the original Parish Church actually was. I suppose I shouldn’t really have been surprised as it was only a parish of some two hundred and thirty people when St. Jean Vianney arrived there as its Parish Priest. All of that changed dramatically as a result of his life of prayer and penance, the power of his sermons and his dedication to hearing confessions in that little Parish Church. We are told that in the last years of his life some one hundred thousand people, a year, would visit as he spent 16-18 hours each day in the confessional.
Today the Sacrament of Reconciliation is in crisis. Perhaps this is because this Sacrament is the most personal of all the sacraments, the most intense and therefore the most difficult. It demands a lot of us. It is very hard to try to see ourselves as God sees us and to express that condition in words to another person. It requires such maturity and a capacity to face up to the reality of who we really are as opposed to the person we pretend to, ourselves and to others, to be. It challenges us to overcome our instinctive self-sufficiency and pride. The Sacrament of Reconciliation puts us in touch with the very mercy of Christ. It heals the deepest part of us, our soul – that deepest part of the human person where conscience, character and God’s own presence interact.
I am reminded of something Pope Benedict XVI said in his Letter announcing the Year for the Priests:
‘In France, at the time of the Curé of Ars, confession was no more easy or frequent than in our own day, since the upheaval caused by the revolution has long inhibited the practice of religion. Yet he sought in every way, by his preaching and his powers of persuasion, to help his parishioners to rediscover the meaning and beauty of the Sacrament of Penance. By spending long hours in church before the Tabernacle, he inspired the faithful to imitate him by coming to visit Jesus with the knowledge that their parish priest would be there, ready to listen and offer forgiveness. Later, the growing numbers of penitents from all over France would keep him in the Confessional for up to sixteen hours a day. It was said that Ars had become “a great hospital for souls”.
If the priest of twenty-first century Ireland is to become a mediator of the grace of the divine healer and doctor of souls, then I believe he will have to rediscover the healing power of this great gift of the Sacrament of Reconciliation in his own life. Indeed, if every priest was to take the opportunity of the Year for Priests to make the most comprehensive and sincere confession of his life to date then I believe the fruits of this initiative would be immense. We cannot heal those around us if we do not know what it is to be healed and restored by the forgiving love of Christ ourselves.
Pope Benedict also wishes a revitalization of the priest hood in Ireland. He prays that it may come about through the intercession of the Curé of Ars.
St John Mary Vianney modelled himself on the Good Shepherd. He got to know his parishioners. He shared their troubles. He stated clearly his concern for their eternal salvation if they did not change their ways.
Like, the Good Shepherd, he was fearless in confronting the thieves and robbers who would dare rob his people of their faith. Of course he soon discovered that he would have his share of trouble, disappointments and difficulties. He soon found that while the power of Jesus on earth progressed and grew, the power of evil on earth had not disappeared. So he decided not to be surprised and certainly not to be overawed. So he was not daunted by the fact that the evil one singled him out for special targeting.
Cardinal Martini of Milan chose as his Motto a phrase from the Word of Gregory the Great: “To love adversity for the sake of truth.” He says that if we are really doing our job as followers of the Good Shepherd, we should expect to be touched by adversity. At the same time we should trust absolutely that the Lord will preserve us from being crushed.
The Curé of Ars modelled himself on the Good Shepherd, who leads the sheep out to rich pastures and protects them from the robbers and the wild animals. He does so in the sense of teaching them the truth about God and about eternal life and about sin.
But he also modelled himself on the Good Shepherd who goes looking out for those who have a strayed and got lost. When he finds them he persuades them to come back. In chapter 5 of St Paul’s Second Letter to the Corinthians we read: “All this is from God who, through Christ, reconciled us to Himself and gave us the Ministry of Reconciliation.” For Paul the Ministry of the New Covenant is a Ministry of Reconciliation.
This Ministry of Reconciliation is active throughout our lives but especially on two different occasions. The first is during Mass. Priests perform this service when they offer the Body and Blood of Christ and present Him to the people. It is the supreme moment when we say, “Behold the hand of God who takes away the sins of the world.”
If only we fully understood the extraordinary quality of this action and of these words. We are often depressed at the reports of crimes and atrocities and still we say, “Behold Him who takes away the sins of the world.” There we are stating the certainty that this world, despite the fact that it is immersed in sin, is going to be repaired.
The second occasion is in the Sacrament of Confession. There God restores the sinner through a free and creative act. It really is miraculous that a human being can get forgiveness from God for very serious offences that are capable of destroying the human soul.
We cannot give peace if we do not have it. We cannot offer reconciliation to others if we are not ourselves reconciled.
We should turn to Mary, the Mother of Jesus, often – for her help. She is the mother of reconciliation.
When Jesus on the Cross entrusted Mary to John, and John to Mary, it is a sign of reconciliation that has been achieved by Jesus. That entrusting of the disciple to Mary is a guarantee that all the divisions between us have been resolved.
We thank God for the presence of this wonderful relic and for God’s love and care for His people. We thank God for the powerful inspiration of St John Mary Vianney. We rely on His intercession for ourselves and for all those who are dear to us.
We have just blessed the Easter fire and lit the paschal candle. They symbolise the light of the Risen Christ breaking into the world to scatter the darkness of sin and death. During the blessing, five grains of incense, in honour of the five wounds of Christ, were placed into the candle in the form of a cross. Then I prayed: “By his holy and glorious wounds, may Christ our Lord guard us and keep us. Amen.”
On this holy night we celebrate Christ’s resurrection from the dead. We recall his victory over the powers of evil that had long held humankind captive. We rejoice in the freedom that Christ has won for us. We look to the future with hope. As the great Easter hymn, the Exsultet, proclaims: “The power of this holy night dispels all evil, washes guilt away, restores lost innocence, brings mourners joy; it casts out hatred, brings us peace, and humbles earthly pride.”
St Paul echoes this Easter joy in tonight’s epistle reading. There he proclaims that Christ, having been raised from the dead, can never die again. Death has no power over him any more. If this is so, if we can rejoice that Christ is truly victorious, why do we focus so much on his wounds that we even mark them on the Paschal candle as a permanent reminder?
We do so because Christ did not simply rise from the dead: he rose with his wounds. On the evening of that first Easter Sunday, he appeared to his disciples and showed them his wounded hands and side.
We might well ask: if God the Father could raise Jesus from death, why could he not do the relatively simple job of healing the wounds of his Passion? The wounds of Christ remain on his glorified body as a simple but powerful reminder that although the sins of the past can be overcome and atoned for, they cannot be wiped from the page of history.
God takes sin and its consequences seriously. He does not pretend that evil never happened or that it doesn’t really matter. Too often, those who have been hurt by others are casually told to ‘forgive and forget’, or ‘to let bygones be bygones’. The physical resurrection of Jesus teaches that we cannot choose to simply forget the past, skip by it, pretend that it never happened. We must fully face the truth of what occurred in the past. We should not try to flee the consequences of those offences, which can continue to mar the lives of those who suffered because of them.
The lives of survivors of child sexual abuse, the faith of members of the Church, and the credibility of Church leadership, have all been wounded grievously by the evil deeds of priests and religious who exploited their position to wreak havoc on the lives of helpless children. Those wounds were aggravated by serious mismanagement on the part of bishops and other leaders in the Church. Those wounds, like the wounds on the body of the risen Christ, will not go away. We must take them seriously. We can only move on into the future if we first own our own personal misdeeds. We have to recognise the harm they have done and be resolved to do whatever is necessary to atone for the crimes that have happened and prevent their reoccurrence.
Once again, I apologise with all my heart to all survivors of clerical child sexual abuse. Yesterday, at the Good Friday ceremonies in Dundalk I pledged that proper reparation would be made for the harm that has been caused and I renew that pledge tonight.
This week I met with individual survivors of abuse and with representatives of survivors’ groups. Having listened to their accounts of the terrible hurt they have endured, I am resolved to continue to keep the safeguarding of children central to the Mission of the Catholic Church in Ireland. We all have a critical part to play in safeguarding children.
I am convinced that by committing ourselves fully to the challenges of reform, healing and renewal, the wounds of the past, like those of the risen Jesus, have the greatest chance of being transformed. By destroying all arrogance, pride and corruption in the Church, by becoming the humble, just and caring community of disciples that Christ intended us to be, we may look back at this historic moment and see in it God’s life-giving and transforming grace.
But, if we are to engage in the work of reform successfully we must first undertake an honest and incisive investigation of the causes of the scandals of the past.
The Holy Father has suggested various contributing factors to this crisis, such as:
•    A misplaced concern for the reputation of the Church and the avoidance of scandal that led to a failure to bring offenders to justice. 
•    A tendency in society to favour the clergy and other authority figures, and;
•    Inadequate procedures for determining the suitability of candidates for the priesthood and the religious life, as well as; 
•    Insufficient formation in seminaries and novitiates. 
We have to reflect deeply on these dimensions of the current crisis and act on them with determination. The voice of catholic lay-people needs to be heard on these and other aspects of this crucial matter.
Pope Benedict referred to a tendency in Irish society to favour the clergy and other leadership figures above the laity. He calls it one of the elements that gave rise to the present crisis. To remedy the situation, the lay-faithful need to be supported in becoming more aware of their equal dignity in the Church by virtue of their Baptism.
While the ordained priesthood has a specific character and role, Baptism makes us all sharers in the office of Christ, priest, prophet and pastor. All baptised people are called to be co-responsible for the well being of the Church. Co-responsibility requires that lay-people be equipped to live out their baptismal calling and commitments and to be aware of their rights and duties in the life of the Church.
Therefore, to build up knowledge and a sense of self-worth among the faithful people of God, in whatever way I can, I will continue to promote improved programmes of religious instruction for our schools and better faith formation for adults in our Diocese. Together we can rebuild Christ’s Church and make this a time of new beginning, of true resurrection for us all.
Finally, the Pope refers to a misplaced concern for the reputation of the Church and the avoidance of scandal. The result was failure to follow proper procedures and, until more recent times, to bring abusers to justice in the civil courts. I realise that, however unintentionally, however unknowingly, I too allowed myself to be influenced by that culture in our Church, and our society. I pledge to you this evening that, from now on, my overriding concern will always be the safety and protection of everyone in the Church – but especially children and all those who are vulnerable. We have already committed substantial resources to devising and implementing world-class safeguarding policies. Some of you may have lingering concerns that nothing has changed in the Church. I promise you, it has changed radically. There is now no hiding place for abusers in the Church. Our policy is to do whatever is necessary to protect the vulnerable and ensure justice for all.
I also welcome the Apostolic Visitation announced by the Holy Father in his Pastoral Letter to the Catholics of Ireland. It will play a vital part in the process of rebuilding and renewal. I pledge to co-operate fully with it and to implement all its recommendations. It is my intention to propose to the Holy See that the Diocese of Armagh would be one of those Dioceses which will be visited as part of the Apostolic Visitation announced by Pope Benedict.
I also welcome the proposal of a nation-wide mission to be held for all bishops, priest and religious in Ireland. May it help us to draw nearer to Christ, crucified and Risen. I am well aware of the feelings of the priests and religious as a result of all that has happened. I hope that despite everything, they will experience the joy of Easter in the sure knowledge that Christ is truly risen.
In the process of renewal, healing and reform that lie ahead, we must take the person of Jesus Christ as the role model we should follow. In this way we arrive at a vision of the virtuous life – the sort of life we ought to live if we are to fulfil the goal of our vocation.
We take heart from St. Peter in tonight’s Gospel – he believes the women, acts on what they say, and goes to see the empty tomb for himself. After his denial of Jesus three times, he surely had the deepest sense of shame at his past failings. Yet he knew that Jesus had given him a big responsibility when he said to him – “But I have prayed for you Simon that your faith will not fail. And when you turn back to me you must strengthen your brothers”.
Peter was determined to fulfil his responsibilities. I realise that I have many past failures and inadequacies – for which I am sorry and apologise. I realise that I also have been given a great responsibility to God and to you, for leadership and renewal in the Church. I take that responsibility very seriously, a responsibility which, with the help of God, I hope to fulfil at all times to the best of my ability. I am immensely grateful for the support of your prayers at this time as I implore God’s grace and wisdom for the work that lies ahead.
By the grace of the words of the Risen and glorified Lord, may the Church in Ireland be truly transformed; may our past scars lead us to a more humble service of the One who gave his life in service of us all. May we never forget our past but learn from it, learn, in particular, from its most painful lessons.
The Risen Christ broke through the dark dungeon of evil and death. Tonight he calls us to arise with him – for the first sign of dawn is at hand. With St. Paul we say – ‘Awake O sleeper, rise from the dead and Christ will give you light’.
AMEN
This week I have spent a lot of time listening to survivors of sexual abuse tell their stories. They spoke of what they have suffered at the hands of clergy and religious.
I am very grateful to them for sharing their experience with me. I realise that this was not easy for them. I think that this listening will have to continue. I believe that there are many others who want to tell their story and they have a right to be heard also. It is all part of acknowledging the sinful and criminal acts which have taken place and which must be addressed.
We also have to consider seriously the way the Church authorities dealt with what happened. Yesterday at the Chrism Mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Armagh, in the presence of the priests and people, I accepted that we bishops failed, sometimes grievously, in our response to the crime of child abuse. I said I was sorry that this had happened and how this sorrow must move us to find ways to repair the damage that has been done and to right the wrong that they endured.
We have heard calls for material help and for spiritual help. Those calls must be considered and responded to properly. That process of making reparation for the past must continue. Part of it will mean a deepening concern for all the members of the Church – especially survivors of abuse – as Pope Benedict asks us in his Pastoral Letter.
The Holy Father also asks us to confess the serious sins committed against defenceless children. He asks us to express our sincere sorrow for the damage caused to those victims and their families.
This I do today, once again, in the hope that it will help to repair the damage that has been done. Yet, much more needs to be done. The Church in Ireland needs to continue to identify what exactly is required to make reparation for the past and to build solid foundations for true renewal in the future.
We are doing all of this in the light of what we are celebrating these days – the suffering of Christ. Like the survivors, Jesus Christ was the victim of injustice and sin. Like all victims, Jesus Christ still bears the wounds of his own unjust suffering. Jesus Christ understands the depths of the pain of victims. All of us must try to understand that pain also. Jesus understands the enduring effect of abuse on the lives and relationships of so many victims. We must all learn to understand that effect.
In his words to victims of abuse and their families – Pope Benedict writes:
“Christ’s own wounds, transformed by his redemptive sufferings, are the very means by which the power of evil is broken and we are reborn to life and hope”. “I believe” Pope Benedict adds – “deeply in the healing power of his self-sacrificing love to bring liberation and the promise of a new beginning”.
The self-sacrificing love of Jesus Christ is our only hope. Christ’s own wounds have the power to set us free from the power of evil. They get that power from the suffering which Jesus Christ endured in his passion and death. By his bruises we are healed. By his wounds we are reborn to new life and new hope.
The Pope appeals to victims to draw nearer to Christ. He prays that by God’s grace, the wounds afflicting so many individuals and families may be healed.
In his recent Pastoral Letter to the Catholics of Ireland Pope Benedict strongly advises all of us to reflect on the wounds inflicted on Christ’s body by the abuse and the sometimes painful remedies needed to bind and heal them.
He recommends five concrete initiatives:
1.    A time of prayer to implore an outpouring of God’s mercy and the Holy Spirit’s gifts of holiness and strength upon the Church in Ireland – perseverance and prayer are needed with great trust in the healing power of God graces.
2.    Friday penances for one year, between now and Easter 2011, to make reparation.  
3.    Fasting – Reading of Scriptures and works of mercy.  
4.    A rediscovery of the Sacrament of Reconciliation
5.    Adoration of Jesus – present in the Blessed Sacrament.
In fact, we must all try to draw nearer to Christ. He feels how weak we are when faced with temptation and that we often give in. He himself has been tempted in every way that we are. We have every right to be confident as we approach Jesus.
Think of what he said to those who put him to death:
“Father forgive them for they know not what they do”
He wasn’t thinking of himself despite it all.  Think of the good thief and what Jesus gave in answer to his frantic plea:
“Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom”
And Jesus said:  
“Indeed I promise you, today you will be with me in Paradise”.
What a promise to hear on the day of our death – a promise from Jesus – who always keeps his promises.
All eyes in the synagogue were fixed on Jesus. Then he began to speak to them:
“This text is being fulfilled today, even as you listen”
St Luke tells us that they were all well impressed with him and marvelled at the eloquent words that he spoke. Perhaps some were even relieved and pleased, at the brevity of what must be one of the shortest sermons in history.
In the Preface of this Mass we are reminded that we honour God by our courageous witness of faith and love. Today the Church challenges all of us to believe, courageously and lovingly, that this text is being fulfilled today, even as you listen.
This passage of Scripture has come true today as you heard it being read today.  Through your words and mine, the Good News is being brought to the poor.  Through your celebration of the sacrament of Penance those oppressed with the shame and guilt of sin, are being set free.
But, to have the courage to honour God by our witness of faith and love is not always easy.  I myself have found great strength in the Preface of today’s Mass.  I read again, with great joy, the words:
“Christ gives the dignity of a Royal Priesthood to the people he has made his own”.
Father Enda McDonagh has written recently that ‘it is only by setting the ordained priesthood in the context of the broader priesthood of the faithful that the Church can seriously confront its current problems’.
In other words, the Church is the People of God. It is the community of baptized believers. The royal priesthood of baptism is the setting in which the priesthood of ordination must be understood and exercised.
•    We – priests and bishops – come from a priestly people.  
•    We – priests and bishops – belong within a priestly people.
•    We are called to serve a priestly people after the example set by the foot-washer, Jesus Christ.
•    We – priests and people – receive great encouragement from a priestly people.
So, we must honour the priority of the sacrament of Baptism – as the root of all Christian existence. This honouring of the priority of Baptism will have consequences in many ways such as: clustering of parishes and pastoral councils. It could ensure that all of us, together – both baptised and ordained – assume our proper responsibilities within the Church. It could affect our attitude towards ecclesial movements, for example.
The Preface goes on to remind us that we have been chosen. The prophet Isaiah had foretold how the Spirit of the Lord would be upon Jesus – “because he has chosen me to bring good news to the poor”. Brothers, let us continue to courageously believe – that we have, indeed, been chosen.
Chosen to do what?
To lead God’s people in love. We have been chosen to be leaders and, if we have been chosen to do a certain job, we will be given the strength to do it. Let us have no doubt about that. God is faithful. The Holy Spirit has come upon us. Also, we have been chosen to nourish God’s Holy people by the Word, hence the importance of our preaching and our study and our on-going formation.
I was reading some of St Oliver Plunkett’s letters recently.  I was surprised to find the emphasis he placed on preaching – good preaching – It does not happen by chance.  It takes prayer and preparation – lots of prayer and lots of preparation.
Finally we have been chosen, appointed and are called – to strengthen God’s royal priestly people through the sacraments. Today God’s royal priestly people – clergy and laity alike – have great need to be strengthened – to face the temptations of the Evil One.  We believe they can be strengthened immensely by our ministry – by our ministry of the sacrament of Reconciliation for example.  I hope we ourselves will set the example by ourselves during these days going to Confession ourselves.
Of course, we can sometimes find that we know exactly what we should be doing and still not be able to do it. Today’s Mass suggests to us that we try to grow more like Christ.
One of the promises contained in the Renewal of Commitment to Priestly Service tells us that we can grow more like Christ – by uniting ourselves more closely to him. It calls us to joyfully sacrifice our own pleasure and ambitions in order to bring the peace and love of Christ to others.
The Pastoral Letter of Pope Benedict calls us bishops to self-examination, inner purification and spiritual renewal. Pope Benedict exhorts us to renew our sense of accountability before God, to be holy, to live simply and to pursue personal conversion daily. He asks us to grow in solidarity with our people and to deepen our pastoral concern for all the faithful.
In particular he asks us to be attentive to the spiritual and moral lives of our priests. He goes on: ‘Set them an example by your own lives – be close to them, listen to their concerns, offer them encouragement. Stir up the flame of their love for Christ and their commitment to the service of their brothers and sister’. This is what I want to do but I want your help to do it. With your help, I believe we can do it.
The Holy Father reminds us of our failure and of our mistakes. We accept that we have made grave errors of judgment and that failures of leaderships have occurred. He urges us to remedy past mistakes and to guarantee that they do not happen again.
Pope Benedict asks all of us to encourage the lay faithful to play their proper part in the life of the Church. Has asks us to see that the lay faithful are formed in such a way that they can offer a convincing account of the Gospel. For this, in turn, the Pope says, ‘will help us, once again, become credible leaders and witnesses to the redeeming truth of Christ’.
Today I thank God for all those involved in taking or delivering the various formation courses throughout the diocese. I ask that they continue and be expanded, where possible, so that they can help us again become credible leaders and witnesses to the redeeming truth of Christ.
The Pope proposes concrete initiatives:
•    Persevering and constant prayer for an outpouring of God’s mercy and the gifts of the Holy Spirit upon the Church in Ireland. 
•    Friday penances for a period of one year between now and Easter 2011.
•    Reading of Scripture and works of mercy to obtain healing and renewal of the Church in Ireland
•    A rediscovery of the Sacrament of Confession
•    Eucharistic Adoration.
It is a great programme -a challenging programme but also a potentially daunting programme. However, I find great inspiration in the prayer – which will come at the end of the Renewal of Commitment in a few moments.
“Pray also for me – that despite my own unworthiness – I may faithfully fulfil the office of Apostle which Jesus Christ has entrusted to me.  
Pray that I may become more like the High Priest and Good Shepherd, the teacher and Servant of all and so be a genuine sign of Christ’s loving presence among you”
So I see that the great task is for all of us to unite ourselves more closely with Christ.  We are to get to know Him more intimately.  If we do that then we become more like Him and so we become a genuine sign and instrument of His loving presence in the world.  
I think that this is all closely linked to the Diocesan Aim
That of being ever more fully the Body of Christ
So that we may live like Christ.
The great Mission of Christ was to bring the forgiveness and healing love of the Father to a broken and sinful world. That message of forgiveness was the beginning – of his ministry – “Repent for the Kingdom of God is near”. It was also the end. “Father forgive them for they know not what the do and then he breathed his last.
May we all experience his mercy and forgiveness this Easter.
Introduction
I welcome you all to this Mass of Chrism. Every Holy Thursday – we thank God for four great gifts: –
• The gift of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, given to us in Holy Communion under the appearance of Bread and Wine;
• The gift of the Priesthood – we had Mother’s Day recently – and we will have Father’s Day – but this is the Feast Day of the Priests;
• The third gift is the gift of the washing by Jesus of the feet of his Disciples at the Last Supper. It is the gift of Example – a powerful example for all of us to follow;
• Finally we have the gift of the great New Commandment: “Love one another as I have loved you.”
So I welcome in a special way Bishop Clifford and the priests, who have come to give thanks and I personally want to thank God for a fifth gift today – the gift of the love and understanding, the gift of the prayer and petition, the gift of help and support of the priests and people of this Archdiocese in recent days and weeks.
I also welcome here today all who have come to celebrate the Blessing of the Sacred Oils. I welcome especially girls and boys who are receiving the Sacrament of Confirmation this year. Today the priests of this diocese will carry these sacred oils to the four corners of the diocese, and then to the four corners of their parishes – to Baptisms and Confirmations, to anoint the Sick and the Dying.
As they do so they will explain that these Holy Oils are at once signs and means of the Coming of God’s Love into the lives of those to be anointed. We remember Cardinal Daly who for the past twenty years attended this ceremony.
To prepare ourselves to do all of this Sacred Work – let us plead for God’s mercy and forgiveness – well aware that we have sinned and are in great need of pardon and peace.