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17 Mar – St Patrick’s Day

ST. PATRICK’S DAY 1997
12.00 NOON MASS
IN
ST- PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, ARMAGH
HOMILY BY CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY

I was in Portsmouth Cathedral yesterday for Corrymeela Sunday. When I arrived there on Saturday a great Irish lady was busy cleaning and shining the statue of St. Patrick to make sure he was looking his best for the feast.

Last night I came to London to St. Augustine’s Church on Fulham Palace Road and again the statue of St. Patrick was very prominent – and with lots of beautiful flowers and candles to honour the saint. In the early hours of the morning the strains of Danny Boy were wafting their way towards Hammersmith Bridge as the London Irish lost no time in getting the celebrations under way. The Irish had already gathered in Westminster Cathedral yesterday for a special Mass, of course, the place to be on St. Patrick’s Day is Armagh City where devotion to St. Patrick exists all the year round and reaches its climax on March 17 each year.

So it is a great honour for me to celebrate this Mass in honour of our Patron Saint with you all here today. It is a daunting thought to be his Successor – therefore I ask your prayers, especially today and I thank you for your prayers at every Mass that is offered in this Cathedral and in this Archdiocese.

In a sense we are all successors to St. Patrick, for we have all inherited the faith which he brought to this land. We who live here in the City of Armagh, in Patrick’s own city, and who pray and worship here in Patrick’s own Cathedral, are especially proud and happy today. We give sincere thanks to God for Patrick and for the faith which Patrick brought. We ask God for all the strength and grace and help which we need to live up to that faith. We think of all who are dear to us and we pray that they too may be loyal and faithful to the God whom Patrick made known to us and that they may reject Satan and all his empty promises.

We think of all the Irish, wherever they may be today that, in the words of Patrick: “they may give faithful testimony of God until their death”. Indeed we can all make our own Patrick’s prayer:.
“Therefore let God never permit me to lose the people that He has won in the ends of the earth. I pray God”, says Patrick, “to give me perseverance and to deign to allow me to give faithful testimony of Him, until my death, for the sake of my God”.

So today, St. Patrick’s Day, let us try to get behind the snakes and the shamrock and try and get to know the man himself. For that we have to turn to the two letters written by him and which have survived his Confession and his Letter against the soldiers of Coroticus.

You may be interested to know that the earliest manuscript which we have of these letters was copied into the Book of Armagh early in the Ninth Century soon after the year 800. These letters give us very little factual information about the details of his life but they tell us quite a lot about the kind of person Patrick was.

Patrick was a Briton, born probably near Carlisle in England. It is probable that his father’s farm was somewhere in the western part of Britain – in a part which was open to raids by Irish pirates. When he was sixteen years of age Irish plunderers descended on the district around his home. Patrick, along with many others, was kidnapped and taken as a slave in Ireland. After six tough years Patrick escaped from his slavery. He eventually arrived home. His family expected him to stay and settle down, but that was not to be. Patrick had a dream, calling him back to Ireland. Remarkably, against all the odds, and against the wishes of his family, Patrick followed that dream.

He probably came to the North East of Ireland. He would have come as a Bishop, not on a mission to a totally pagan country, but to some sort of Christian community that was already established.
He wrote the Confession to defend himself against accusations. These accusations were made before a gathering of His seniors. He makes three points:

Firstly, he defends what he has done in going to the ends of the Earth among the heathen Irish – to preach to them.

Secondly, he insists that God had guided him, guided him directly by inspirations received in a dream.
Finally, he says that he did not profit financially from his mission.

These are the external facts. Now what of the inner life, the story of his soul.

Patrick begins his Declaration “I, Patrick – a Sinner, am a most uncultivated man and the least of all the faithful and I am greatly despised by many”

I, Patrick, a sinner – Patrick takes responsibility for what he has done. He does not blame anyone else, it is His own fault. Even though he was only sixteen when he was kidnapped he says it was well deserved. “I had neglected the true God and when I was carried off to captivity in Ireland it was well deserved for we cut ourselves off from God and did not keep his commandments. Then the Lord made me aware of my unbelief so that however late, I might recollect my offences and turn will all my heart to the Lord my God”.
Cut off from his family and his homeland, Patrick now saw that he had been cut off from his God also. His exile from His Creator was much more serious than his exile from his homeland.

Like the Prodigal Son Patrick found himself feeding pigs. Like the Prodigal Son Patrick came to his senses. “More and more”, he tells us “the love and fear of God came to me and faith grew and my spirit was exercised until I was praying up to 100 times a day and in the night nearly as often”

In the midst of his loneliness Patrick discovered God to be a real father. In the middle of all his sufferings Patrick came to know Jesus as his Saviour. In the hour of his need the Holy Spirit taught him to pray. It was all God’s doing. Patrick cannot stop praising God.

“I was like a stone that had fallen into deep mire, and He who is mighty, came and in His mercy picked me up and lifted me high to place me on top of a wall”.

Perhaps that image was inspired here around Armagh. Maybe he was out walking and had seen someone lift up a stone out of a drain, down near the Callan River and perhaps maybe that same stone is still lying around on top of the wall – who knows? One thing is certain, Patrick was reconciled to His God because of God’s love for him. Then, secure in the knowledge that he really was loved by God, Patrick was set free of the bitterness and hatred which he probably felt towards his Irish captors and oppressors. Patrick was set free from anger and fear as well.

He was set free for greater things. When God called Patrick to return to Ireland, Patrick was free to answer that call. He was able to overcome the obstacles and the protests of his family and give himself to this work for the Irish, despite the fact that some of them had been his gaolers and his oppressors.
Patrick quite rightly decided that not all the Irish had wronged him. He had seen the goodness of the majority of the people. He saw that they were open to hearing the Good News of God’s love for them. Today we give thanks that Patrick was reconciled first with his God and then with his former enemies.
So what would Patrick say to us today? He would probably begin: “I Patrick, a Sinner, wish to remind you that you are all sinners”. We have all failed. We have all fallen short of God’s plans for us. We are all like that stone that has fallen into the mud. He would also urge us to recollect our offences and turn with all our heart to the Lord.

Yesterday was Corrymeela Sunday. Corrymeela is a Centre of Reconciliation on the North Antrim coast. It has brought thousands of people together from both sides of the divide over the past thirty years. The come together to tell their story and to listen to the story of other people. The Sunday nearest to St. Patrick’s day was chosen as Corrymeela Sunday because Patrick is seen as a model of reconciliation and an apostle of reconciliation. Patrick was someone who lived the words of St. Paul: “forgive each other as soon as a quarrel begins. The Lord has forgiven you.. Now you must do the same”. Offer Forgiveness, Accept Peace was the message of Pope John Paul for World Peace Day – 1 January of this year.

Yes, Patrick defended his rights, especially when he was attacked by his seniors but I am quite certain that he would be the first to recognise that other people have rights as well.

Patrick, Apostle of Reconciliation, would certainly be working to reconcile conflicts and to reduce tensions. As his letter to the soldiers of Coroticus shows, Patrick would never approve of violence as a means, he condemns it in the strongest terms.

So as the advent of another marching season begins to cast its long shadow over the lives of us all, I imagine Patrick would be advising us to draw hope from what happened in Derry last year. There, the peacemakers simply refused to give up or lose heart. Those efforts bore fruit and an accommodation was reached.

There is hope that this year a similar process of negotiation at local level will produce success in other places where parades are contentious. Nobody should fear taking part in negotiations. Nobody should have to negotiate out of fear. Let us all pray earnestly that an accommodation may be reached and that the trauma of last year may be avoided.

A total cessation of violence would create the climate where these and other negotiations could take place. No-one can really claim to be for peace in Northern Ireland and rationalise or justify the use of force to pursue political ends. I hope that the IRA will come to see this and restore the cease-fire. Only the power of Christ can reconcile our divisions. In Christ Jesus, those who used to be so far apart have been brought very close.

Yes, the journey may remain unfinished but a lot of the road has been travelled. It is Patrick who first told us about Jesus breaking down barriers and destroying hostility. Patrick revealed the plans of Jesus to restore peace through the Cross and to unite this world in a single body and reconcile them with God.
Today Patrick would want to say “Get on with the job, finish the journey, continue to break down the barriers caused by fear and mistrust. This is the greatest border of all. It separates people in a deeper way than any physical border. Only by overcoming this legacy of fear and suspicion can the true border be crossed into the land of real freedom”.

Grant us on Lord, a heart renewed, recreate in us your own spirit O Lord. We say and pray those words in these weeks. May they become a reality in the life of each one of us. A heart renewed with the knowledge that we can be and will be restored to God’s friendship if only we ask.

A spirit recreated and energised within us for the task of breaking the barriers that divide us and seeking all that unites us. Praise to the Lord of my Salvation. Salvation is of Christ the Lord.

AMEN

27 Mar – Chrism Mass

CHRISM MASS
ST PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL
Thursday, March 27, 1997
HOMILY BY MOST REV. SEAN BRADY

Grace and peace to you from Jesus Christ the faithful witness.
The words from the Book of Revelation, which we have just heard, were written during the time of persecution. They were meant to give hope and determination to people suffering for their faith. They are read today to give us hope and determination.

Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, carried out his Father’s plan for the world. He revealed his Father’s love for all of us. No one has ever seen God – we read in the Gospel of St John. It is the only Son who is nearest to the Father’s heart, who has made Him known.

Jesus not only revealed the love of God. He himself loves us and has washed away our sins with his blood. He has made us a line of Kings – to serve his God and Father. Christ has come as the High Priest of all the blessed. He has entered the sanctuary once and for all, taking with him, not the blood of goats and bull calves, but his own blood.

It is Holy Thursday. Today we remember the events of the first Holy Thursday: The Last Supper of Jesus with his apostles. His farewell words to them. His washing their feet. His agony in the garden; his betrayal by Judas and his abandonment by the others.

Today we remember with gratitude the three great gifts given by Christ to his Church on this day: the Sacrament of the Blessed Eucharist; the Sacrament of Holy Orders and the new commandment: to love one another as He had loved us – a commandment dramatically illustrated by the washing of the feet. These three gifts lie at the heart of our faith.

This particular Holy Thursday occurs in the middle of the first year of immediate preparation for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, the Millennium. The first year is centred on Jesus Christ.

The Mass of Chrism focuses our attention on Jesus Christ – the Priest. The Preface of the Mass sums it all up well. Addressing God the Father it says:

“By your Holy Spirit you anointed your only Son, High Priest of the new and eternal covenant”.
Jesus has come as High Priest of all the blessings. He has gone through to the highest heaven. He has offered himself once and for all on the cross.

God’s plan is that this priesthood of Jesus Christ should continue in the Church. Since it is God’s plan it will continue. We need have no fear or worries on that score.

Christ gives the dignity and gift of priesthood to the people. He has made his own by baptism. When baptised, people do works which are befitting followers of Christ, they offer spiritual sacrifices. When we live lives worthy of our dignity as children of God, we proclaim the power of God to the world. Whenever the followers of Christ pray and praise God, they make of themselves a living sacrifice which is holy and pleasing to God.

So offering sacrifices, proclaiming the “Word of God”, praying and praising God, these are all priestly works. Those who do them are faithful witnesses. They bear witness to the love of Christ active in their lives. Those who do these works are exercising their priesthood. That priesthood belongs to all of us by our baptism. We are all a chosen race, a royal priesthood.

Yes, Christ gives the dignity of a royal priesthood to those he has made his own in baptism. But from these, with a brother’s love, he has chosen some to share his sacred ministry by the laying on of hands.
Let us listen again to today’s Preface. He calls them to lead his Holy People in love. Nourish them by God’s Word and strengthen them through the Sacraments. The Letter to the Hebrews puts it this way: Every priest has been chosen by God to act for people in their relations with God. It is a tremendous honour. No-one takes this onto himself but each one is called by God as Christ was appointed by God, the Father, who said. “You are a priest according to the order of Melchisedek”.

Yes, it is a wonderful honour to have been called by God to lead his holy people in love. To bring them Good News and to strengthen them through the sacraments. It is a tremendous challenge to bring Good News to a world that is fed up to the teeth of bad news. It is something special to announce freedom to people who are captured and captivated in so many ways by the superficial, the cynical and sensational. It is a joy to be called to announce new sight to people who have been blinded by hatred and anger and despair.

We are to bind up broken hearts, hearts aching from broken promises and broken hopes, hearts hurt by broken resolutions.

The Good News that we announce is Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the first-born from the dead. The amazing thing is that despite all our sins he continues to love us and has washed away our sins with his blood. To those held in captivity by sin it is our privilege to say: “I absolve you, I set you free from your sins”. Yes, this text has been fulfilled in our regard. We have been anointed by the spirit of the Risen Christ.

Today, in his message to priests, Pope John Paul suggests that we meditate on the words of Christ’s farewell to the apostles at the Last Supper. “There is no greater love than this: that someone would lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants for the servant does not know what his Master is doing, but I have called you friends”.

Jesus calls the apostles ‘friends’. This is what He wishes to call us, who, thanks to the sacrament of Holy Orders, share in his priesthood. As priests of the new covenant Jesus allows us to act in his name. Is there any more eloquent proof of his friendship? Jesus has chosen all of us and has appointed us to go and bear fruit that shall last. Today we give thanks to God for the fruits of our priestly life, for the service given to God’s people. We ask the Creator spirit to raise up new generations of young people who will be ready and willing to go to the Lord’s vineyard, to spread the Kingdom of God to the ends of the earth.

Yes, we are called to be like Christ, faithful witnesses. In fact so often we find ourselves having to settle for being just weak witnesses. This must not discourage us, but rather spur us on to put our trust in Jesus. The Letters to the Hebrews tells us to never let go of the faith we have professed. For it is not as if we had a high priest who is incapable of feeling our weaknesses with us, but we have one who has been tempted in every way that we are, though he is without sin. Jesus understands our weaknesses and wants to help us overcome them.

Yes, we know that we are quite unworthy servants. Nevertheless we are very thankful to God for having wished to make us His servants.

It is our privilege to carry the Holy Oils from this Cathedral to the parishes and to the people we serve.
Perhaps we sometimes let that word ‘serve’ slip too easily from our lips, but it is a fact that the ministerial priesthood is at the service of the priesthood of the faithful. When we celebrate Mass and administer the sacraments we lead the lay faithful to a greater awareness of their own sharing in the priesthood of Christ.
Bearing the Holy Oils is a privilege, bearing the blessings of God of which the Oil is a sign is a far greater privilege. For oil is at once a symbol of love and friendship, a sign of happiness and joy. What a challenge then to be at once the ministers of God’s love and friendship to His chosen people. To be the bearers of joy and happiness to the people Christ has redeemed with his precious blood. The world will always need that love and friendship. It always welcomes that joy and happiness.

Perhaps this is a day for us to ponder how Jesus has in fact been faithful to us down through the years. It is a day to get in touch with the deep causes of our joy at being a priest and to savour and to let that joy sink in – to the depth of our being – not in any sense of smug superiority or complacency but in a spirit of profound humility and gratitude.

We can all make our own the prayer that Pope John Paul wrote to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of his priesthood:

And you, Mary, Mother of Christ,
who at the foot of the Cross accepted us
as beloved sons with the apostle John,
continue to watch over our vocation.
To you we entrust the years of ministry
which Providence will grant us yet to live.
Be near us to guide us
along the path of the world
to meet the men and women whom your Son redeemed with His blood.
Help us to fulfil completely the will of Christ,
born of you for salvation of humankind.
O Christ – you are our Hope.
In you Lord we put our trust, we shall never be put to shame.
Amen.

29 Mar – Easter Message

PRESS RELEASE
EASTER MESSAGE
ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, ARMAGH
VIGIL MASS, 29 MARCH 1997, 9.00 PM
CARDINAL SEAN BRADY

Easter celebrates the most important moment in the history of the world, when Jesus suffered, died and rose from the dead. He passed from death to life. He set the world free from the slavery of sin and from the fear of death. He led us all into a freedom that will last forever. He is the Saviour of the world.
We all have bodies and sufferings. When we celebrate the Easter ceremonies commemorating the sufferings, death and resurrection of Christ, we are placing our own bodies and our own sufferings under the sign of the cross. It is our way of saying to Christ: “We want to share in the mystery of your bodily dying and rising”. It is our way of expressing the hope that one day God will raise up and transform our poor, sick, sore bodies and our poor, sick, sore divided world.

Easter is a time of new life and a time of new hope. The light of the Easter candle reminds us of the sure hope that the spirit of the Risen Lord continues to act in our lives and in our world. Easter is a time when we realise that what we yearn for in the depths of our hearts actually could become a reality. We long for a world that is safe and peaceful; a world where people can live in faithfulness to God and to each other; where people can live with dignity; where people can live free from fear and intimidation. We yearn for a world where everyone, especially the sick and the weak and the old, is welcomed and loved and cared for; a world free from corruption and greed; Where the Church promotes and proclaims God’s endless mercy and justice fearlessly and ceaselessly. Yes, the victory of Christ gives real grounds for hoping that every human hunger can be satisfied, the hunger for truth and beauty and honesty, the hunger for love, respect and fidelity.

“Empty dreams”, “Pie in the sky”, “sweet talk” may well be the comments of those who know so well the weakness of our condition. At Easter we name the forces of darkness that are present in our world and in our lives, and we celebrate the victory of Christ over those forces. We celebrate that victory of Christ with joy because it points to God’s final triumph over every power of evil.

We pray that the light of Christ, rising in glory, may dispel the darkness of our hearts and minds. For only the light of Christ gives hope that does not deceive. Only the light of Christ is powerful enough to drive out the hatred and the anger from our hearts: hatred and anger nourished on the memory of ancient wrongs but powerful enough to sour and embitter us for life. Only the love of Christ can move hearts, hardened by bigotry and prejudices. Only the light of Christ can enable us to see ourselves as we really are, weak sinners destined to become saints, and to see those who differ from us whether in politics, culture or religion, as equal and precious in the sight of God.

2 Apr – Dedication Of Newly Renovated St Patrick’s Church, Dundalk

RE-DEDICATION MASS – ST. PATRICK’S, DUNDALK
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 30, 1997
HOMILY BY CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY

Local history tells us that in 1748 an Army officer was so impressed by the fidelity and devotion of the Catholics of Dundalk to the Mass that he persuaded the Earl of Clanbrassil to give them a site for a permanent church. He had seen them at Mass gathered in and around an old shed one Sunday morning on St. Helena’s Quay. The result was that the old St. Patrick’s was built in 1750 in Chapel Street. It served its purpose for almost a century.

With the achievement of Catholic emancipation the need for a larger church became evident. Doctor Matthew McCann secured the site in 1834. In 1845 its Trustees were listed as: Archbishop Crolly, Father Coyne, Parish Priest, James Carroll, merchant of Earl Street and Nicholas Martin, merchant of Clanbrassil Street. Dr. Matthew McCann engaged Mr. John Duff, Newry, as architect and the foundations had just been laid when Dr. McCann was called to his eternal reward early in 1837. Mr. Duff was the original architect of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh also.

We know that owing to Dr. McCann’s illness slow progress was made with the work during the years 1835 and 1836. The new Parish Priest was Fr. John Coyne formerly Parish Priest of Tandragee. The work really got underway in 1837. On New Year’s Day a Committee of ninety people was appointed to speed it up. A Building Committee of twenty-six was chosen to see to all matters connected with the building. Mr. Duff chose to use Newry granite and to build the church in the Gothic style. St. Patrick’s was built by direct labour with two members of the Building Committee in strict rotation, undertaking the duty of supervising the work, ordering the materials, employing workmen, paying wages and ensuring that the decisions of the Committee were carried out.

All of these were busy people, with their own jobs to look after. We are told that not one of them ever failed to do his allotted part of the work. It is a tremendous tribute to their self-sacrifice and generosity. St. Patrick’s was in use in 1842 but wasn’t considered finished until 1847. It was built at a cost of £25,000 and without any outside help. This huge sum, huge for those Famine days, was realised by weekly contributions from the parishioners. St. Patrick’s stands as a noble testimony to their strong faith and immense generosity.

Father Coyne’s other great contribution to Dundalk was the introduction of the Sisters of Mercy. Their contribution to the educational and health care life of this town has been enormous.

Dr. Coyne died in early February 1848. Before his death he had the great consolation of seeing this beautiful Church completed. Daniel O’Connell described him as a “most learned, respectable, and exemplary clergyman”. His mortal remains rest here before the altar and a mural tablet to his memory may be seen on the right wall.

St. Patrick’s Dundalk was one of thirteen churches built in the diocese of Armagh during the 1840s. Here in County Louth the Church of St. Mary, Kilsaran, was built in 1840 and the Church of the Assumption, Sandpit, Termonfechin parish, was built in 1846. In a publication called: “Centenary Record of St. Patrick’s Dundalk” the author makes this comment:

“By adding his own valuable quota each Administrator, with the able assistance of the Parochial Committee, has contributed to render St. Patrick’s what it is today, one of the finest churches in Ireland”.

The present Administrator, Father Gerry Tremer, and the other priests, and the Parochial Committee, continue that fine tradition. I congratulate them on planning and carrying out an extensive programme of events to commemorate this 150th anniversary. I congratulate Father Murtagh on his excellent history published earlier this year: ‘St. Patrick’s Dundalk, an Anniversary Account’. I thank and congratulate all who were involved in the renovations and repairs undertaken in the Church itself. They not only render St. Patrick’s one of the finest churches in Ireland but will ensure that it remains such for a long time to come. The improved lighting will enable us all to see more clearly and admire the splendid mosaics which adorn the walls of the sanctuary. There are many features of the work done such as the raised sanctuary, the new altar, ambo and chair which will definitely contribute to and enhance the liturgy.

So tonight a new chapter in the history of St. Patrick’s, Dundalk, opens with the blessing and dedication of this lovely new altar. We give thanks to God for the people who put St. Patrick’s here in the first place and who have kept it in existence over the last 150 years. We rejoice to see so many native sons and daughters present on this happy occasion. We give thanks to God for all who have celebrated Mass here over the last 150 years and again it is good to see so many of those present, especially Cardinal Daly. We give thanks for all who have played an active part in the ceremonies celebrated here over these 150 years, the choir, the organist, the collectors, the stewards and many other people, especially the Sacristan, who has completed fifty years of wholehearted service and is about to retire. We wish him many blessings in his retirement.

We praise God for all the parish groups and organisations involved in the various processions here this evening. As the altar is dedicated we are reminded it is the place where people offer their lives and their gifts. Where they unfold their good intentions and pour out their prayers. So I hope that this altar really will prove to be that sort of place for all who enter St. Patrick’s who come in here whether it is simply to say a prayer or to attend Mass, whether they come in joy or in sorrow in their youth or in their old age.
The altar will be anointed with oil, the oil of Chrism. Oil is one of God’s most powerful gifts. In many countries it is used as food. It gives strength and nourishment. One of the prayers this evening asks that we may find nourishment and strength as we stand at the Lord’s table. Oil is a great source of healing, from wounds, from pain, from illness. Friends of Christ who gather around the altar which has been anointed with oil, cast their burdens and their cares upon the Lord and take up their journey restored. The altar is a visible sign of Christ who offered himself for the life of the world. He offers himself to each one of us in Holy Communion to be our nourishment and food on the journey of life – that we may have the strength to do what he tells us to do.

The Gospel we have just heard is taken from words spoken by Jesus in the temple. It says: In the daytime he would be in the temple teaching but he would spend the nights on the hills called the Mount of Olives (presumably in prayer), and from early morning the people would gather round him in the temple to listen. Jesus spent his time in the temple teaching. He prepared for that teaching by prayer. The people listened to him. There is a lesson there for all of us, especially for those of us who preach.

Jesus was well aware of what was going around him. Rich and poor came to hear him. He saw them putting their offerings into the treasury. It was then that he was moved to praise the poverty-stricken widow who had put in all she had to live on. Then Jesus goes on to speak of the coming of the Son of Man. He will come again in a cloud with power and great glory. His first coming was without power and glory in a stable in Bethlehem. In this passage the Gospels speak of men dying of fear as they await what menaces the world. Jesus urges his disciples to stand erect and hold their heads high because their liberation is near at hand.

There is a third coming of the Son of Man. It is taking place here and now. Now he comes in word and sacrament and is really present in our midst. He comes in word, calling on us to believe in him, not to put our trust in anything else. Not to put our trust in the false Gods of power or wealth or popularity or success. He comes in his Word now to warn us to be on our guard and not to allow ourselves to become pre-occupied with too much feasting and drinking, nor with the worries of this life. The writer of the Gospel doesn’t want us to be caught unprepared when the day of the Son of Man could be sprung on us like a trap and catch us off our guard. So he tells us to be on the alert and to pray that we will have the strength to go safely through all those things that will happen and to stand before the Son of Man.
So as St. Patrick’s Church begins it 151st Advent Season the message of Advent is and always will be the same. To pray that we will have the strength to go through safely all that will happen, and have the wisdom to hear the Son of Man speaking to us in his Word and beckoning us to follow him no matter what the cost. He is inviting us to believe in him, to believe that he is present in his Words and in his Sacraments and in our lives and in our neighbours. If we see him and serve him there, well we may have no fear. Then we can confidently stand and hold our head on the last day for he will be coming to set us free.

Jesus told us that he came into the history of the world not to bring peace but to bring a sword. Christmas is not a feast of display and show-off. It is feast of the powerlessness of the love of God, a love which only through death will reveal its super power. The time that intervenes between the first Christmas and the last Judgement is nothing else than the time given to people to decide whether to believe in Jesus or not. He came not to judge the world but to save it. Those who reject him and do not accept his message have one who will judge them. The words that he has spoken will be their judge on the last day. Jesus came into the world as light so that everyone who believes in him should not remain in the darkness. May St. Patrick’s continue to reflect that light ever more brightly. May everyone who comes in here be helped to accept the message of Jesus so that they may have life and have it to the full. May Mary, who is honoured here so lovingly and so tenderly, especially in the month of May, watch over and protect the people of Dundalk.
AMEN

9 May – Death of Robert Hamill

STATEMENT ON THE DEATH OF
ROBERT HAMILL
BY MOST REVEREND SEAN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH
9 May, 1997

I am deeply shocked and saddened at the death of Robert Hamill. I am appalled that he died as a result of a brutal and sectarian beating in Portadown. I know that all right-minded people will join with me in condemning this killing.

I offer my sympathy to his parents and family. I welcome the statement that those responsible will be pursued and brought to justice. We must all work to bring about a situation of justice where people of different traditions can live together in an atmosphere of tolerance and respect for the rights of others.
I appeal for calm and restraint at this time. I know that his family is shocked, saddened and angry. The anger must be directed towards building a society where such a tragic event will not happen again, where no other family will have to go through the agony, the pain and the suffering which the Hamill family have endured over the past couple of weeks.

13 Apr – The Burning of Mullavilly Church

BURNING OF THE CHURCH OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, MULLAVILLY
MASS IN THE COMMUNITY CENTRE
SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EASTER
HOMILY BY CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY

I am sure that we can all say where we were when we heard the shocking news of the burning of your Church, the Church of the Immaculate Conception, on Monday morning last.

It is something that we are not likely to forget for a long time. Since then a lot of people have contacted me to express their sympathy. Those messages came from all parts of Ireland and from overseas. They were from people of many different religions. I know that the sympathy and support of your own neighbours here on Monday last were particularly impressive and have meant a lot to you. So this morning I wanted to come here to convey those messages of sympathy personally to you and to express once again my own sorrow.

So, I come to do that and to celebrate this Mass with you and for you. I want to be here to show my support for Father MacOscar and Father Gates and for all of you in this difficult time. I know well that you all feel numbed and saddened and sickened at what has happened as people feel numbed and shocked and saddened when they lose someone or something that is very dear to them. I recall coming here on Tuesday 4 March last for Confirmation. It was a very joyful occasion. I particularly enjoyed meeting so many of you afterwards here in the Community Centre. Yet on that occasion someone spoke to me of the fear and sense of isolation which Catholics feel here. It seems as if that person had a premonition of what was going to happen.

You, the priests and people of this parish have suffered a lot, far too much, at the hands of the arsonists and bombers over the years. Of course innocent people have suffered similar, indeed in some cases, far greater wrong and hurt and harm all over Northern Ireland as a result of the violence and destruction. Is there any point in asking why do people- act in this way? It has been suggested that your Church has been burned out of a sense of grievance, a grievance caused perhaps by acts of arson in other parts in recent times. Others have wondered why a Catholic Church belonging to a small, peaceful, and peace-loving people has been targeted? It is yet another example of bitter sectarian hatred and you are the innocent victims in this case. One thing is certain. Violence is not the way to resolve conflict. Neither the desecration of a Church in Mullavilly nor the attempted murder of a policewoman in Derry, is going to make any contribution to the resolution of our problems here in Northern Ireland. Desecration of the House of God is an insult to God in whose honour the Church was built. The destruction of a human life is at once an insult to God, the author of life and a terrible injustice to the person concerned.

As the clergy in Portadown said in response to the fire here in Mullavilly:
“Destruction and violence have caused pain and suffering for so many people in this community”.
Destruction and violence are never going to give us the respect and dignity which we all seek. The lesson is clear: violence is not the way to resolve conflict. There are other ways and better ways. Conflict can only be resolved satisfactorily when those in conflict begin to talk to one another and to understand one another more fully.

On Monday morning I noticed three things which had survived the fire: the Celtic cross on the gable end of the Church, the Trócaire boxes in the porch and the notice giving information about ACCORD, the Catholic Marriage Advisory Service, also in the porch.

The Cross is at once the sign of suffering and of hope. “We adore you O Christ and we bless you because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world” is a prayer which we often pray in Lent. To the world, the suffering and death of Christ on the cross appeared senseless and stupid. Yet God allowed that suffering and death to take place as the means of saving the world. In the same way, God has allowed this suffering and destruction to take place for some good purpose. Have no doubts about that. It is not clear to us at the moment but it has some good purpose.

‘Hail O Cross our only hope’ is the title of a hymn we often use in Holy Week. The Cross is the sign of hope because Christ, who died on the cross, rose from the dead. Dying he destroyed our death, rising he restored our life. By so doing he give us all the hope of victory over death.

The Cross here is a Celtic cross which is a symbol of the presence of the Irish Roman Catholic identity. Some people resent that presence. They fear it. They feel threatened by it. Let me assure them that they have nothing to fear from that presence. There is no need or cause to have it smashed. As for the other two items which survived the fire, the Trócaire boxes and the ACCORD notice are symbols of what is best in Irish Roman Catholic identity. Trócaire is as you know the name of the Catholic agency established by the Irish Bishops in 1973 to express the concerns of the Church for needs and problems of the people of the developing world. Trócaire is also the Irish word for ‘mercy’.

ACCORD on the other hand is a voluntary organisation in the Irish Church, a lay organisation, which aims to promote a better understanding of marriage. It helps people to prepare for marriage and to sustain their marriage. It offers help to people experiencing difficulties in marriage. So concern for the poor of the world, help for people in difficulties, those are the kind of things which the Irish Catholic Church cherishes dearly.

The Catholic Church like many Christian Churches is deeply involved in advancing the human dignity of those entrusted to its care by the Lord. It considers human dignity a Gospel value. That dignity cannot be despised without greatly offending the Creator. The struggle for advancement is only a threat to those who want to infringe the rights of others. It poses no threat to those who uphold values such as freedom and the right to profess one’s religion. The Church vigorously defends human rights. It considers them a necessary part of the recognition which must be given to the dignity of the human person, a person created in the image of God and redeemed by Christ.

17 Apr – Poverty Hearings Address

POVERTY HEARINGS
ST KEVIN’S HALL, BELFAST
Thursday, April 17, 1997 at 9.30 a.m.
ADDRESS BY MOST REVEREND SEAN BRADY

I want to thank all those who have told their story here this morning. They were very courageous people and very honest. I found those stories very powerful and very moving.

They have opened my eyes to many things. My own blindness for example to the many faces of poverty that often stare us in the face. They have made me at least very conscious of my own poverty, in the sense of not being able to respond in any adequate way to all the problems that have been mentioned. They have opened my eyes to the fact that I have been relatively privileged. And sometimes I have been perhaps insensitive and certainly ill-informed in my attitudes towards those in different circumstances.
What I have heard this morning has given me new insights into how people get trapped in poverty and how it can take over peoples’ lives, removing their rights and their choices. This morning has alerted me to the hurt which people feel when they are judged harshly by people who have no idea of the pressures of life.

What I have heard convinces me yet again that poverty has many faces. It is more than just a lack of physical resources. It has to do with exclusion, powerlessness, a feeling of not counting. Poverty is wasteful, it leads to social fragmentation. I have found it a discomfiting experience just as a meeting with Jesus would, I imagine, be a rather discomfiting experience.

What we have just heard challenges us all. It challenges especially those of us who are Christians. In the life and teachings of Jesus the plight of people in poverty and at the margins of society held a special place.

Over the centuries Christians have tried to develop their understanding of what Christ’s commandment – to love one another – requires of them in the particular circumstances of the society in which they find themselves. They have elaborated social teachings and developed key principles to guide their response to social issues. In the Catholic Church, for example social teaching has given particular emphasis to the concepts of “the common good” and “social solidarity”. Ultimately all these principles refer back to the founding message to love our neighbour.

It is clear that this is not a commandment to feel some general sense of goodwill towards other people; rather it is a CALL TO TAKE ACTION. In the first epistle of John, he speaks of the inconsistency between claiming to love one another while failing to do what is required to help those in need. He adds:

“Our love is not to be just words or mere talk, but something real and active”
1 John, 3 16-18 (The Jerusalem Bible)

Pope John Paul II has frequently spoken of the importance of social solidarity. This is not to be understood as a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of others.

“On the contrary, it is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good; that is to say to the good of all and of each individual, because we are all really responsible for all” (On Social Concern, n.38).

It is clear that our responsibility to love one another and to work for the creation of a more just society cannot be delegated to others. Nor can it be fulfilled solely by making a contribution to voluntary organisations – important and valuable though this most certainly is. We must tackle the root causes which keep people poor and this is an issue that goes beyond all divisions of religion or race or politics. In modern society these root causes lie deep in social and economic systems which we may find hard to understand, let alone influence. Yet we must strive to do so; otherwise they will continue to create conditions which offend human dignity and deny people’s rights.

We have to acknowledge that no matter what has been done, it is never enough. All of us have our contribution to make to our community and when people are allowed to play their part in planning their social and political destiny, it guarantees the sort of public life that promotes human values and rights, including the rights of people on low income.

We, Church people, address the issue of poverty. We sometimes speak as if the membership of our own churches did not include any people who are poor. This, of course, is not the case. Churches as institutions must examine how poor people experience life within the Church. Do they feel marginalised even within their own Church? Do churches ensure that the experience of those of their members who are poor inform sufficiently the issues they concern themselves with and the decisions about the priorities for the use of the resources of the churches? Do churches draw on the experiences of their members who are poor to speak out in an informed way about public policies?

In Baptism we are all made equal in Christ; we must constantly strive to ensure that this essential equality among all members is reflected in the life and concerns of the church.

UNEMPLOYMENT
Last week the Council of Churches of Britain and Ireland published their Report on Unemployment and the Future of Work. It draws attention once more to the link between the employment situation and poverty. The Report highlighted that both unemployment and low pay are fundamental and very significant causes of poverty. One of the most important features of the Report is that it Challenges the now commonplace fatalism about unemployment and poor conditions of work. This sense that “nothing can be done”, has resulted in these issues being largely sidelined in public and political debate.

New technology and the globalisation of economic activity have changed the world of work in a very profound way. The Report highlights that a fundamental reason why these changes have been accompanied by such high levels of unemployment and an increase in poverty and social division has been the weakening in social cohesion – or in our sense of mutual social responsibility. The Report asks all of us, including the Churches to examine again what we can contribute towards renewing and rebuilding this sense of community.

POVERTY AND THE FAMILY
The effect of poverty and unemployment on family life should be a central concern. Many people display tremendous qualities in the face of huge difficulties. However, people can lose heart and hope as they lose control over their own and the family’s lives. In addition to low income, bad housing, over-crowded housing can put family relationships under tremendous strain.

We must speak up for the family as the basic cell of society. We must defend the rights of the family, especially the right of every human being to found a family and to have adequate means to support it.
Alongside the great Christian virtues of faith and love, stands hope. In the face of the severe difficulties which so many people experience in their lives and of the sheer complexity of the economic and social problems of modern society, it is important to remind ourselves what Christian hope implies.

At the end of the Pastoral Letter on Unemployment, Work is the Key, the Irish Catholic Bishops said that Christian faith and hope impel us to continue in our efforts to build a more just society. They added:
“Despite the resistance we experience, in ourselves as well as in others, we do not give in. Despite the apparent smallness of the results, we do not give up. Our one shame would be to not play our part”.

29 Apr – Drugs – Breaking the Silence

IRISH EPISCOPAL CONFERENCE
LAUNCH OF DRUGS INITIATIVE, BREAKING THE SILENCE
Dublin, 29 April, 1997
ADDRESS BY CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY

Thank you all for being with us today. Many of you represent the Government or voluntary and statutory organisations who were consulted by the working party during the work of preparation for this initiative. I thank you all for your help and co-operation which is highly valued.

I thank Archbishop Connell for his warm welcome and for hosting this gathering and for making personnel and facilities available for the preparatory work.

I want to thank the people involved in preparing this day and this material. I want to thank Fr. Kevin Donlon for the excellent resource provided by Intercom. The team at Veritas for publishing Breaking the Silence, the Contact People from each diocese in the country, and the working party who enabled this to happen. We are grateful to them for their work.

The initiative we launch today concerns one of the gravest and most pressing problems confronting the world today. Drug abuse is crippling many societies. It is, in the words of the Holy Father, “an insidious social plague”. It destroys, debases and diminishes many lives, while the powerful barons of the drug trade feast on its fruits. It can induce a sense of despair, of helplessness, among its victims, their families, the communities where they live.

Ireland is far from being immune to this plague. Indeed, it could be said to have reached crisis point in many of our communities, both urban and rural. A growing number of our young people abuse drugs. Many families suffer grievously as a result of the drug abuse of one of their members. I wonder, therefore, how the dealers can sleep easily in their beds when they contemplate, even fleetingly, the lives wrecked by their evil trade.

However, it is futile to spend too much time and energy in bemoaning drug abuse and its effects. Concern must be the spur to action. We must take positive steps. We must, as Fr. Kevin Donlon says in his Intercom editorial, learn from this awful experience of drugs, learn how to face it and beat it.

Many are already doing this. We acknowledge the great work being done in healing and rehabilitation by voluntary and statutory bodies. The whole community owes them a debt of gratitude. They have, as we say in our statement, cared generously, taken risks, shown deep understanding and compassion towards the battered and broken. And their work has often been sparsely resourced.

What do we, the Bishops, offer today on behalf of the Catholic Church in Ireland? What is Breaking the Silence all about? Let me say first it is not about duplicating services already provided by others. It is not about setting up competing structures. In fact, it is not essentially about structures at all.

What we have to offer comes, as it must, primarily from our faith perspective. Jesus himself said “I came that you may have life and have it to the full”. The vision we wish to communicate to our people is succinctly expressed in a passage from our statement:

“We Christians are meant to recognise one another as brothers and sisters. We are meant to understand that each of us is part of a solidarity which knows the hunger for happiness… We have the hope which believes that there is a meaning which is stronger than any of the things that frighten us.”

We must try to understand the nature of substance abuse. To understand means that members of the Church try to inform themselves about the nature and the effects of illicit drugs on those who abuse them, on their families and on the wider community. It is not right, as we say in our statement, that the dealers should appreciate the nature of addiction better than those who try to heal or prevent.

So, one of the principal aims of our initiative is to promote a better understanding in all our parishes and communities. We give a pledge here today that the Church will endeavour to pursue that aim with vigour. Our Christian faith and, indeed, human experience tells us that the hunger for happiness can never be satisfied by resort to drugs.

Our speakers today have given us a very clear picture of the nature of addition, of what makes drugs attractive, of how dependence develops, of how denial follows on the path of dependence on drugs. It is vital that every Christian, every citizen, does his or her best to reach a better understanding.

We must try not only to understand. We must reach out to those, hurt by drugs and addiction. We must remember who these people are: some we have gone to school with, we have worked with, or been friends with. Others are part of our personal and wider families. All are our brothers and sisters in Jesus Christ. They are the prodigal sons and daughters who need to be welcomed home by you, by me. If we don’t welcome them, who will?

We must try to understand and reach out. We must also try to prevent. Prevention is always better than trying to cure what might have been prevented in the first place.

Ten months ago the Catholic Bishops of Ireland decided to address this issue in a co-operative, concerted and co-ordinated manner. We aim to complement and support the work done by so many in the statutory and voluntary sectors. We want to make that work more widely known among our people.

Views were sought from many agencies and groups who have practical and professional experience in the prevention and treatment of substance abuse. A network of contacts has been established by the dioceses of Ireland. The supplement in Intercom contains articles on various aspects of the drug problem and on suggested solutions.

Today I would ask you to read the statements and the materials in the supplement and to pass them on to your friends.

We have listened today to the eloquent testimony of a young person caught up in the cycle of drug abuse and to the mother of someone who has been traumatised by drug abuse in her family. To each of them, and to you here today, we pledge that we will try very hard not to fail you.

This initiative aims to help every member of the Church to play his or her part as fully and as effectively as possible. Many of the contact working through the dioceses, have long experience of helping individuals, families and communities in the area of drug abuse. Where necessary, they can provide excellent information and guidance to those seeking professional help.

I am happy and privileged to launch this initiative. I do so in a hopeful and confident spirit. The hope is that it will empower people to find their own solutions by availing of all the resources already there and, where necessary, by devising new strategies. People in the grip of addiction need to be awakened to hope. The Christian community is the instrument of God in this awakening and in bringing what help they can to their sister or brother in need.

8 May – Memorial Mass for Mother Teresa – Armagh

MASS FOR MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA
ST PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, ARMAGH
SEPTEMBER 10, 1997 7.30 P.M.
ADDRESS BY MOST REVEREND SEAN BRADY

On this day fifty-one years ago, 10 September 1946, Mother Teresa was travelling by train north from Calcutta to Darjeeling, in the foothills of the Himalayas. Suddenly she had the inspiration to found a New Order and devote herself to the poor. Last year, fifty years later, Mother Teresa came to Armagh to open the 563rd house of that New Order – The Missionaries of Charity. She came here to this Cathedral to pray in thanksgiving. At the end of the prayers, helped by two of her Sisters, the tiny frail 85 year old lady struggled to her feet. I said struggled because as a result of an accident she had sprained her ankle and was in a wheelchair. She spoke to us then about prayer and love, two topics which were dear to her heart.

I suspect that if she were here tonight she might return to those same subjects. She certainly would not wish this sermon to be a eulogy of herself. In 1971, when Malcolm Muggeridge wrote, “Something Beautiful for God”, Mother Teresa asked that it should not be a biography of herself. “The work is God’s work”, she would say, “so all of us are but His instruments who do our little bit and pass by. We are only pencils in the hand of God”.

Mother Teresa has died after an extraordinary life. Very many people feel a great sorrow and a great sense of loss at this time. For the abandoned and the outcasts, the little ones and the forgotten ones, she was a great sign of hope. They have lost a faithful and wholehearted friend.

The greatness of Mother Teresa came from her close union with Jesus Christ. That union was nourished and strengthened by hours of prayer every single day of her life. Every morning you would find her in her convent at prayer before 5 a.m. There she knelt for hours on the ground without seat or kneeler, deeply absorbed in conversation with Jesus. I last saw her on July 1st. She was not well enough to come to Chapel, so Holy Communion had to be brought to her in the infirmary. There she was with her bible and her prayer book, in deep recollection, preparing for the coming of her Lord and Master.

Some of you may remember that in Armagh that evening her Sisters gave out little prayer cards. “Mother’s business cards”, they called them. The card read like this:
“The fruit of silence is prayer,
the fruit of prayer is faith,
the fruit of faith is love,
the fruit of love is service,
the fruit of service is peace.

Mother Teresa wrote that prayer out of her own experience. Silence, prayer, faith, love, service, peace, sum up her whole life. It is in the silence of the heart that God speaks. We need to listen to God. It is not what we say but what God says to us in prayer and through us that matters.

Mother Teresa is associated with feeding the hungry. “I was hungry and you gave me to eat”, was one of her favourite scripture passages. She knew well that there are different kinds of hunger in different parts of the world. There is the emotional hunger of those who are starved of love and affection. There is the spiritual hunger of those who are famished for want of purpose and meaning in life. She wanted to tackle those hungers as well. So she opened a house for Contemplative Sisters in New York. Their vocation is to pray most of the day. “Prayer feeds the soul”, she said, “As blood is to the body, prayer is to the soul. Prayer brings you closer to God”.

In the life of the Missionaries of Charity, more importance is given to prayer than to the actual work, but their work flows from their prayer life. Prayer puts people in touch with God and makes them capable of being His instrument. Prayer teaches us to look contemplatively at the world and to see there the living presence of Jesus. The Missionaries of Charity begin their day with prayer, both personal and communal, followed by the Eucharist, which is the real centre of their existence. Each evening they have an hour of adoration. The Sisters have a rule of reciting the rosary when travelling or while walking through the streets. Everything is done in an atmosphere of prayer.

LOVE
The source and strength of Mother Teresa’s whole life was the twofold commandment of love of God and love of neighbour. These two commandments cannot be separated. The fruit of faith is love. The Missionaries of Charity base their whole life on these two pillars, love of God and love of neighbour. They take a vow of wholehearted free service to the poorest of the poor. Every morning they recite this prayer:
“Make us worthy, Lord, to serve our fellow-men throughout the world who live and die in poverty and hunger. Give them, through our hands this day, their daily bread and by our understanding love give peace and joy”.

What is the legacy of Mother Teresa? The question has been asked often in recent days. She has left us the wonderful example of her life. It was a life so filled with the love of God that she was totally devoted to helping those in pain, those in greatest need, those who live in the slums, those who die in the streets. This love is not patronising, for charity is not about pity, it is about love. So many people admired Mother Teresa because she lived a Christianity they could accept and identify with. She inspired so many people to imitate her and has challenged them to rise to tremendous heights of generosity and self-giving. “Give till it hurts”, she said. She died possessing two saris and a pail in which she washed.

Mother Teresa is a prophet for our times and of course like all prophets she is sometimes misunderstood. She speaks a language that a lot of people don’t understand today, the language of humility and mercy for example, which is not so popular in a world which sometimes prides itself on being abrasive and assertive. She stands for reverence and respect. Respect for the weak as well as for the strong. Respect for all of God’s children, regardless of who they are. She teaches us to be patient with the patience of God himself who walks our roads with human footsteps.

Mother Teresa was a great symbol of hope because she brought love and help to those who were shunned and abandoned. She was a real missionary of charity, someone sent to tell us of God’s unconditional love for each one of us. She knew well that this love was revealed by Jesus Christ. It continues to be revealed by those who listen to his words. “As long as you did it to one of these, the least of my brethren, you did it to me”. Mother Teresa reminds us of God and of God’s claims on our love and on our time.

DEATH
Last week death took two remarkable women, Diana, Princess of Wales and Mother Teresa. They had met in life and become friends. Now they are joined in death. This evening we pray that they be united in the happiness of heaven. There is a sign on the door of the morgue of the house for the dying in Calcutta. It reads, “I am on my way to heaven”. An older lady once said to Mother Teresa, “I am full of fear. I am afraid of death. You can help me for you have seen many people dying”. Mother spent time with that fearful lady and talked happily about death. She explained her vision of death as going home to an always loving Father. The woman thanked her for comforting her by removing some of her fear. One of the great crosses in Mother Teresa’s life was the fact that due to the situation in Albania she was unable to see her own mother for many years before her death. “We will meet in heaven”, she would say. We believe that those who enter into a relationship of friendship with Jesus and love one another, here on earth, already possess eternal life and that Heaven is the fullness of that life.

May our prayer this evening deepen our own faith in the reality of life after death. May our reflection on the lives of those who have gone before us prepare us for our own death. May it inspire us to see and to serve Jesus and the least fortunate. The fruit of service is peace. May our loving service help those for whom we have prayed to enter into the fullness of everlasting life, Amen.

5 Jul – Statement Re- Drumcree Orange Parade

STATEMENT RE: DRUMCREE
BY CARDINAL SEAN BRADY
July 5, 1997.

This is a time of great distress in Northern Ireland. People are living in fear and apprehension. The marching season is with us once more and all that that entails.

However, there are glimmers of hope. Some have asked: ‘does it always have to be like this?’, and have decided to do something about it. The efforts of the many people who have worked so hard to find a solution to the vexed question of contentious marches deserve great praise. Some progress has been made. The North Commission has presented its report. The British Government has promised comprehensive legislation to deal with the situation. This, however, is for the longer term.

For the present we must concentrate on the now. For this now prepares a future of hope or fear for all of us. Negotiations have taken place in some areas. The slow progress towards greater understanding must not now be put at risk. Now is the time to redouble efforts to build a better and a peaceful future desired by so many, when people of both traditions can live together in harmony and respect.

Now is the time to ensure that no more seeds of future violence are sown by acts of mindless aggression or short-sighted triumphalism. There is only one triumph worth striving for – the victory of common sense and reason where no side is hurt or humiliated.

The request that outsiders should stay away from flashpoint areas should be respected. Local disputes must eventually be solved locally by the people concerned.

I appeal for great calm and restraint at this time. People must not allow themselves to be manipulated. They must listen and be guided by those leaders who are urging restraint and moderation. They must not allow themselves to be provoked and they must avoid provoking others to violence.

I invite those who feel they must do something or go somewhere to promote peace this weekend to take part either personally or spiritually in the annual pilgrimage in honour of St. Oliver Plunkett in Drogheda on Sunday. Oliver Plunkett was a tireless worker for peace and a fearless reconciler in his day. For the last few days many people have been praying fervently for peace through his intercession. We need his example and help now to guide us to the ways of peace.

This is a time for courageous generosity. It requires the kind of generosity that will listen to the two sides of the story and hears the hurts and fears of all. It calls for the wisdom to see that intransigence is not a sign of strength but of insecurity.