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Statement by Bishop Michael Router on Pope Francis’ Message for the World Day of the Sick 2021

Statement by Bishop Michael Router on Pope Francis’ Message for the World Day of the Sick 2021

 

 

As chair of the Council for Healthcare of the Irish Episcopal Conference, I welcome Pope Francis message for the World Day of the Sick which takes place on, 11 February, the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.

The past year has been an extraordinary one.  As a deadly and disruptive virus circled the world, we became more acutely aware of the importance of healthcare provision and the contribution of those working on the frontline.  Pope Francis, in his message, states that the World Day of the Sick provides an “opportunity to devote special attention to the sick and to those who provide them with assistance and care both in healthcare institutions and within families and communities”.

The Pope reminds us that, as Christians, we should always practice what we preach and reach out in a tangible way to those who are sick and suffering, particularly the marginalised and the poor.  Thankfully, so many people, through both secular and religious groups, are doing so by reaching out to those who most need help in their local communities.  Such outreach has provided a beacon of hope and positivity in an otherwise challenging time.

Pope Francis emphasises that sickness makes us very aware of our own vulnerability, our need for the care and assistance of others and our dependence on God.  Illness is experienced at more than just a physical level.  It can also be accompanied by fear and bewilderment, particularly, when we are faced with our own powerless.  Sickness normally raises questions about the meaning of life which we bring in faith before God.

The Pope also draws attention to how the current pandemic has highlighted and aggravated the “inequalities in healthcare systems and exposed inefficiencies in the care of the sick”.  This has come about because of many different factors: political decisions, the unequal distribution of resources and a lack of commitment to equal healthcare for all.  Health is essential for the common good, therefore, care and assistance for the sick should always be a priority.

At the heart of the Pope’s message is an insistence that for therapy to be effective it must have a “relational aspect” which can enable a more holistic approach to the patient.  There must be a relationship of trust between healthcare professionals and those who receive their care and expertise.  Pope Francis describes it as a relationship based on “mutual trust and respect, openness and availability”.  He points to the example of Jesus in the gospel who “heals not by magic but as the result of an encounter, an interpersonal relationship”.

The Pope concludes his message by stating that a society is truly human when it cares effectively for the sick and suffering in a spirit of communal love.  We must all strive to make sure “that no one will feel alone, excluded or abandoned”.

Pope Francis entrusts the sick, healthcare workers, and all those who assist the suffering to the care of Our Lady.  In the midst of the health crisis caused by Covid-19, I encourage all the faithful to take part in the Novena to Our Lady of Lourdes, from 3-11 February, to pray for those who are sick, for all who work in the medical profession, and for an end to the pandemic.

Bishop Michael Router 

 

The Presentation fo the Lord in the Temple – World Day for Consecrated Life 2021

World Day for Consecrated Life 2021

On this the feast of The Presentation of the Lord  The Church celebrates World Day for Consecrated Life.  We pray for all men and women who have dedicated their lives to serving the Lord through a vocation to consecrated life.

On this special day we pray also for vocations to the priesthood and religious life and encourage those who are discerning a call to priesthood or religious life to contact their local vocations team. 

 

 

 

Here in the Archdiocese of Armagh you can contact Fr Peter McAnenly who is Vocations Director for the Archdiocese.

Address: Parochial House, 42 Abbey Street, Armagh, BT61 7DZ
Phone: (028) 3752 2802
Email: [email protected]

 

Prayer For Vocations to Consecrated Life

Loving and Generous God,
it is You who call us by name
and ask us to follow You.
Help us to grow in the Love
and Service of our Church
as we experience it today.

Give us the energy and courage
of Your Spirit
to shape its future

Grant us faith-filled leaders
who will embrace Christ’s Mission
of love and justice.

Bless the Church here in the Archdiocese of Armagh
by raising up dedicated and generous leaders
from our families and friends
who will serve Your people as Sisters,
Priests, Brothers, Deacons and Lay Ministers.

Inspire us to know You better
and open our hearts
to hear Your call.

Amen

 

Knock Shrine to host special online faith discussions during Lent

Knock Shrine to host special online faith discussions during Lent

Ash Wednesday falls on 17 February and heralds the beginning of Lent 2021.  This year Knock Shrine will host a new series of online discussions to help engage Christians during Lent, under the title ‘Living Christian Faith – Lenten Conversations’.

What nurtures our faith and what challenges it today?

Where do we find hope and joy in our lives?

How can our faith build mental strength, wellbeing and resilience?

How has the Covid pandemic impacted upon our faith? 

 

 

These are just some of the questions that will be explored over the 6 weeks of Lent during a new series of online discussions on the topic of ‘Living Christian Faith’. Faith Renewal at Knock Shrine is all about reaching out to people. This will open a conversation on contemporary issues of faith and church life.

Chaired by Father Eamonn Conway DD, Priest in Tuam diocese and Professor of Theology at Mary Immaculate College, the conversations will explore a different theme each week and guest speakers will discuss some of the important questions we all face in living out our faith.

The discussions will be streamed online via the Knock Shrine website offering people from all over the world the opportunity to engage in relevant topics and to hear from a range of people, from those in public life such as Baroness Nuala O’Loan and Senator Ronan Mullen to groups of young teachers and members of the clergy.

Thursday 18 February ‘Living Christian Faith in the Family’                  
Saint John Paul spoke about how the future of humanity passes by way of the family. Patrick and Linda Treacy, who have four children and run a centre for domestic spirituality called Integritas from their home, will speak about the joys and challenges of living Christian Faith as a family today. 

Thursday 25 February ‘Living Christian Faith as Young Adults’              

A group of young Irish adults, for whom Christian Faith is of great importance, will discuss the strength it gives them and how we can better communicate the joy of the Gospel today. 

Thursday 4 March ‘Living Christian Faith in the Classroom as Young Teachers’

Three recently qualified primary teachers explain how their religious faith is important to them and how it influences their work as teachers in the classroom. 

Thursday 11 March ‘Living Christian Faith in Public Life’           

Baroness Nuala O’Loan, Senator Ronan Mullen and discuss their own faith, how it informs their public service and the challenges people of faith encounter in the public sphere today. 

Thursday 18 March Proclaiming Christian Faith as a priest or religious today’

Sr Ursula Lawler, lecturer in Christian Ethics at Mary Immaculate College, returned missionary and editor of the Africa Magazine, Father Sean Deegan SPS; Ballyhaunis Parish Priest Father Stephen Farragher and Father Eamonn Conway will discuss living priesthood and religious life today in conversation with young Irish Catholic journalist Jason Osbourne. 

Thursday 25 March ‘Studying Christian Faith’

Máire McDonald is Vice Principal of a busy secondary school in Dublin. Judith King is an internationally recognised psychotherapist and Margaret Naughton is a busy hospital chaplain. Yet they have all found time to fulfil their passion of doing a PhD in theological studies. They share with us how their theological studies enriches their faith and their work. 

The talks will be streamed at 8.30pm every Thursday during Lent.

Join us at www.knockshrine.ie/watch-live

or on Facebook @knockshrine

Year of Reflection and Prayer extended until the end of June 2021

Year of Reflection and Prayer Extended until June 2020

As the Diocesan Pastoral Plan in the Archdiocese of Armagh for the period 2015 to 2020, drew to a close, the Archdiocese launched a Year of Reflection and Prayer in January 2020 so that it could begin making preparations for a new Pastoral Plan in a new decade!

The purpose of the year was to encourage reflection and seek the wisdom and guidance of the Holy Spirit in discerning the way forward for the diocese in the years ahead.  No one could have foreseen the arrival of a worldwide pandemic in 2020, nor the immense changes and challenges that it heralds.  For this reason, the Archdiocese has decided to extend the year of reflection and prayer until June 2021.

In the video above Bishop Michael Router and Leah Marron reflect on the year that has passed, acknowledging the difficulties it has presented, and outlining some pastoral initiatives that the Archdiocese has engaged with.  

Our Diocesan Pastoral Council believes the process of planning for the future is too important to be rushed. It is essential to give time as well to reflect on all that has been achieved over the past few decades of Pastoral Planning and consider how the past year and the Covid-19 pandemic has impacted each one of us.  The extended period of reflection is an opportunity for everyone in the diocese to get involved in the process and to offer their thoughts and insight.  

In the video Bishop Michael asks two questions to help in that reflection:

He invites you to send your considered responses to these questions to [email protected]

 

 

 

Theology of Safeguarding Videos Created by National Office for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland

Videos Created by National Office for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland

 

Every month for the nine months beginning on the 21st January 2021, the National Board will place a short video on an aspect of a Theology of Safeguarding on their website.

 

 

 

Nine videos have been commissioned from theologians, scripture scholars and ethicists who live and work in Ireland, Italy and the United States. In month 10, October 2021, the National Board will host its National Conference on the theme of Towards a Theology of Safeguarding at which the questions posed by the video contributors will be addressed.

 

January 2021

The first presentation by Fr Hans Zollner can be accessed below.  Fr Hans Zollner SJ is founding President of the Centre for Child Protection and Professor at the Institute of Psychology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. He is member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and consultor to the Congregation for Clergy. He is honorary professor at Durham University, UK. Lectures and conferences have taken him to many countries on six continents

 

February 2021

The second presentation is from Sr. Nuala Kenny who is a Sister  of Charity of Halifax.  

Sr. Nuala was the paediatrician member of the St John’s, Newfoundland Archdiocesan Committee on Child Sexual Abuse which produced a “landmark report’ in 1992. This committee identified both individual and systemic/cultural factors at work in the crisis.  In 1990-1992, she was appointed to the Canadian Conference of Bishops Ad Hoc Committee on Clergy Sexual Abuse. This Committee produced From Pain to Hope, the first set of national guidelines on this topic.

Following this involvement, Sr Nuala returned to her academic and clinical career as paediatrician and medical ethicist and has travelled extensively giving reflections to clergy and laity from her books “Healing the Church: Diagnosing and Treating the Clergy Abuse Crisis”(Novalis, 2012) and Still Unhealed: Challenges for Conversion and Reform from the Clergy Sexual Abuse Crisis (Novalis and Twenty Third Publications, 2019. Her newest book focuses on pathology needing personal and ecclesial conversion in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Titled Prophetic Possibilities for the Post Pandemic Church it is due from Novalis in January, 2021.

March 2021

Dr. Ethna Regan CHF is Associate Professor in Theology and Ethics in Dublin City University.  A Holy Faith Sister, she taught for over a decade at the University of the West Indies, and worked with Credo Foundation for Justice in Port of Spain with socially displaced children, and in the campaign for the abolition of the death penalty in the Caribbean. She also worked for five years in Samoa. Her PhD from the University of Cambridge was on theology and human rights, and she has also published in the areas of Catholic social thought, theological anthropology, and ecclesial responses to child abuse.

April 2021

Fr Paddy Boyle

A priest of the Archdiocese of Dublin, Administrator St. Benedict’s Grange Park and St. Monica’s Edenmore. Chaplain to the Deaf Community in Dublin. 2004/2005 trained with VDA as child Safeguarding Trainer. Training and Development Co-ordinator with the Dublin Diocese 2005 – 2016. Currently Tutor with the National Office for the Safeguarding of Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland. Part-time lecturer in Biblical Theology in All Hallows College, Dublin 1998 – 2014.

The video presentation will be available on the 15th April.

You can find out more about the speakers, the conference and theology of safeguarding by following this link https://www.safeguarding.ie/national-conference-2021 .

For those interested in reading more about the work of the National Board for Safeguarding you can access their December Newsletter by Clicking Here

 

Statement by Archbishop Eamon Martin on the Research Report on Mother and Baby Homes and Magdalene Laundries in Northern Ireland

Statement by Archbishop Eamon Martin on the publication of Research Report on Mother and Baby Homes and Magdalene Laundries in Northern Ireland

 

The month of January 2021 will go down in history as the time when the people of Ireland – north and south – came face to face with a stark reality of our past which we preferred would remain hushed and hidden – the way we stigmatised and harshly judged many vulnerable pregnant women in crisis and treated them and their children in such a cold and uncaring manner.  We made them feel guilty and ashamed.

As a Catholic Church leader in Ireland it is I who now feel embarrassed and guilty over the way in which we in the Church contributed to, and bolstered, that culture of concealment, condemnation, and self-righteousness.  For that I am truly sorry and ask the forgiveness of survivors.  How did we so obscure the love and mercy and compassion of Christ which is at the very heart of the Gospel?  Shame on us.

The persistence and the powerful testimonies of these same courageous survivors has lifted the lid on this dark chapter of our shared history and exposed our hypocrisy to the glaring light.

The important work of Dr McCormick, Professor O’Connell and their team is another step on the journey towards revealing the full truth of our past.  I thank them for their Report and encourage everyone to spend time with it, reflecting in particular on the striking oral history section which grounds their research in the testimonies of mothers and their children.

The story of Mother and Baby Homes and Magdalene Laundries in Ireland – north and south – touches the lives of countless families across this island.  No doubt it will rekindle troubling memories and raise difficult questions for many of us.  However we can all play a part in the journey towards healing and reparation.  We can also ensure that lessons are learned for the present and the future.  No mother or child today should be made to feel unwelcome, unwanted or unloved.  No father today should shirk his responsibilities.  No priest or bishop or religious sister or any lay member of the Church today should deny the mercy and forgiveness of Jesus.  No family today should shun their child to protect some misguided notion of “respectability” in the parish community.  We still have so much to learn and so much work to do.

It is clear from the Research Report that there is scope for further investigation or inquiry into aspects of this complex story.  I encourage all in leadership within the Church and State to extend their full cooperation with the work of the independent investigation announced today so that those who have been most impacted can be helped to find hope and peace for the future.

Death of Fr Tommy McGeough PE

The death has taken place of Fr Tommy McGeough PE on Monday 25 January.

Due to government guidelines and coronavirus restrictions, Fr Tommy’s funeral Mass will take place privately on Wednesday, 27 January, in the Church of the Nativity of Our Lady, Ardee, at 12.00 noon.  The Mass can be viewed at the following link: 

https://www.churchmedia.tv/camera/church-of-the-nativity-of-our-lady.

We ask that you keep Fr. McGeough in your prayers at this time, May he rest in peace.

 

CURRICULUM VITAE

 Very Rev Thomas McGeough PE

 

Born:               30 August 1932, Parish of Knockbridge

Studied           

St Patrick’s College, Armagh             1944-49

St Patrick’s College, Maynooth          1949-56

Ordained:        17 June 1956, St Patrick’s College, Maynooth

Appointments

On Missions with Kiltegan Fathers, Nigeria              1956-59

Emigrant Missions, England                                   1960-62

Curate, Errigal Ciaran                                            1962-69

Administrator, Coagh                                             1969-82

On Missions, Lagos, Nigeria                                    1982-91

Parish Priest, Crossmaglen                                      1991-06

Pastor Emeritus, Assistant Pastor, Ardee & Collon      2006-14

Pastor Emeritus                                                      2014-21

Date of Death: 25 January 2021, Corderry, Knockbridge, Co Louth

 

 

 

 

Death of Very Reverend Joe McKeever

The death has taken place of Fr. Joe McKeever on Saturday 23rd January 2021.   

Due to the coronavirus restrictions, Fr. McKeever’s funeral will be private. It is hoped at a later date to arrange a Mass in his memory so that his many friends and former parishioners can attend.

We ask that you keep Fr. McKeever in your prayers at this time, May he rest in peace.

 

 

Very Rev Joseph McKeever PE

CURRICULUM VITAE

 Born:                     27 May 1951, Parish of Drumcree

Studied                  St Patrick’s College, Armagh.         1962-70

                             Strawberry Hill, Twickenham.         1970-73

                             St Joseph’s College, Belfast.          1976-79

                             Queen’s University, Belfast.           1983-84

                             St Patrick’s College, Maynooth.       1986-91

Ordained: 30 May 1991, Church of St John the Baptist, Portadown

Appointments

Curate, Holy Redeemer, Dundalk                                                 1991-93

Curate, Dungannon                                                                    1993-99

Curate, Crossmaglen                                                                  1999-06

Parish Priest, Crossmaglen                                                           2006-16

Pastor Emeritus                                                                           2016-Present

Seminarian Liaison                                                                       1998-2016

Date of Death: 23 January 2021

 

Catholic Schools Week 2021, Sunday 24th Jan – Sunday 31st January

Catholic Schools Week 2021 AMIDST COVID 19 RESTRICTIONS


Catholic Schools Week 2021 will be celebrated from Sunday 24 January to Sunday 31 January 2021 on the theme ‘Catholic Schools: Communities of Faith and Resilience’.  

 

During COVID 19 Schools are now used to working in class bubbles for safety. Any large gatherings are not safe and most schools are currently offering on-line learning. Our normal Diocesan Gatherings at the end of January are not feasible and for this reason we offer some resources and a prayer service that could be offered online so that this important point in the Catholic Schools Year can still be marked.

We have prepared a service using symbols for the KEY DAILY THEMES. Students might decorate these in colours and laminate them to suspend from a small tree at home or as a mobile using coat hangers. If you are a special school with children attending school in class bubbles you might suspend these from the trees we planted last year. Bishop Michael blessed these trees in Portadown last year.

For CSW 2021 Archbishop Eamon has recorded a message directly speaking to students. He situates this into their lives coping with learning at home, family life in the pandemic and new school realities and learning situations. He thanks students and gives them his blessing for this year. This is available to view above. 

RESOURCE LINKS

Click here to access resources prepared by the national body for Catholic Schools.  

Click here to access outline of Catholic Schools Week themes and outline of suggested celebration at local level amidst Covid 19 restrictions.  

Click here to access suggested “Local Prayer Service” for Catholic Schools Week 2021

Click here for activity and resource for use in “Local Prayer Service”.

 

OUTREACH

Over the past two years schools have made a small contribution for an outreach to an educational project in Africa. £500 was sent the last two years through the Franciscan Missionary Sisters at Mount Oliver Dundalk to a school in EMBICO.

Please consider sending an offering made out to “Archdiocese of Armagh” and post to Ara Coeli Cathedral Rd Armagh BT61 7QY

Please mark your envelope CSW 2021.

Bishops’ Conference statement: “Welcoming vaccines for the Common Good”

The Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference welcomes the encouraging news that a number of vaccines for COVID-19 are at an advanced stage of preparation and are likely to be available for use in the near future.  The Catholic Church recognises that safe and effective vaccination is an essential aspect of the prevention of disease.  We are encouraging Catholics to support a programme of vaccination, not only for their own good, but for the protection of life and the health of those who are vulnerable and for the common good of humanity.

Questions have arisen that human foetal cell-lines, which have their origins in abortions carried out in the past, are used in the development and production of some of the vaccines for COVID-19.

If a more ethically acceptable alternative is not readily available to them, it is morally permissible for Catholics to accept a vaccine which involves the use of foetal cell-lines, especially if the potential risk to life or health is significant, as in the case of a pandemic. Refusal to accept a vaccine could contribute to significant loss of life in the community and especially among those who are most vulnerable.  This reality must inform any judgement of conscience.

We reaffirm the consistent teaching of the Church that abortion is always gravely immoral.  The Church has always made a distinction, however, between formal (deliberate) involvement in an immoral act and material involvement, which may be incidental and remote.  The decision of those who decide to accept vaccines which have had some link with foetal cell-lines in the past does not imply any consent on their part to abortion. 

We note that many of the vaccines currently being developed do not depend for their design or production on foetal cell lines.  Catholics should continue to advocate for the availability of ethically-developed vaccines.  In that way they bear witness that biomedical research should always be conducted in a manner which is consistent with respect for life and for human dignity. 

Access to healthcare is a fundamental human right.  The Church, while respecting intellectual property rights, believes that essential medicines, including vaccines, should be made available on the basis of need rather than on the basis of capacity to pay.  This position is consistent with the TRIPS agreement of the WTO, which permits national governments to arrange for the manufacture of essential pharmaceuticals, for domestic use and for the use of poorer countries, even without the consent of patent owners.