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I am very pleased that Pope Francis has appointed Father Michael Router from the Diocese of Kilmore to be the next Auxiliary Bishop of Armagh.
Around this time last year, five years after the retirement of the late Bishop Gerard Clifford as Auxiliary Bishop, I asked Pope Francis to consider appointing a new Auxiliary Bishop to assist me. This morning I thank God for the appointment of Father Michael Router and I am very grateful to the Holy Father Pope Francis and to His Excellency Archbishop Okolo, Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland, for facilitating my request. Father Router’s appointment is particularly welcome given the Holy Father’s recent request that I would take on additional responsibility as Apostolic Administrator to the Diocese of Dromore.
I am thankful to Father Michael for generously accepting this new call from God to leadership responsibility in the Church. I am grateful to his parents and family and to Monsignor Liam Kelly and the Diocese of Kilmore for giving us such a talented and devoted pastor. Father Michael has already gained considerable experience in leading pastoral development and adult faith formation and I look forward to his assisting me by contributing to these pastoral issues as well as others within both the Archdiocese of Armagh and the Diocese of Dromore. These are challenging times for all of us in the Church in Ireland but I have no doubt that, if we are open to the promptings of the Holy Spirit, there will be new life and hope in our parishes – may the Holy Spirit therefore guide and inspire Father Michael in his mission among us.
Over the past sixty years, the Auxiliary Bishops of Armagh have made a significant contribution to the life of the diocese – from Bishop William Conway who came to us as Auxiliary Bishop in 1958 from County Antrim and who went on to become Cardinal Archbishop of Armagh – to Bishop Clifford from Louth who gave more than twenty years devoted service to the people of the diocese. Today as we welcome another Cavan man (following Cardinal Seán Brady) to the Archdiocese, I have no doubt he will bring new gifts, ideas and motivation to our mission of spreading the joy of the Gospel in this time and place.
I am confident that Father Michael will receive a warm welcome from the people, priests and religious in both the Archdiocese of Armagh and the Diocese of Dromore. I remember after my own ordination as archbishop six years ago and feeling hugely supported by assurances of prayer and support all around me from the people of the Archdiocese and from my family and friends.
Please pray for Father Michael as he prepares for his episcopal ordination in the summer months. May God bless his mission and ministry and may he have the gifts of wisdom and courage in abundance.
Statement of Father Michael Router on his appointment as Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Armagh
On Monday morning of Holy Week, I was sitting at my desk writing a funeral sermon for an elderly man of great faith. I was contemplating using, as the theme of the sermon ‘Into your hands, O Lord I commend my Spirit’, the final words of Jesus on the Cross proclaimed in the gospel at the Passion Sunday Mass the previous day. As I began to write I received a phone call from Archbishop Okolo, the Papal Nuncio, informing me that he would like to have a chat with me at my convenience. As the funeral was taking place in Dublin the following Wednesday, I arranged to meet him that day. At the meeting the Archbishop gently told me that Pope Francis wished to appoint me as Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Armagh. My reaction was one of shock, surprise and no little dismay. The theme running through Holy Week for me had suddenly become more personal, and indeed alarming: ‘Into your hands O Lord, I commend my Spirit’. Until that moment I had been happily serving as parish priest in Bailieborough and reasonably expecting, that God willing, I would be there for several more years; perhaps even until retirement. I never saw myself as someone worthy of this office and, as I stand before you today, I am very conscious of my limitations and weaknesses. I am very grateful to Pope Francis for the trust he has placed in me and I pray that the Holy Spirit will provide what is otherwise lacking.
Despite the surprise and shock that his message brought to me I wish to thank Archbishop Jude Thaddeus Okolo for his kindness and for his gentle reassurance in my meeting with him and indeed in the weeks since then.
It is truly an honour for me to join the clergy and people of the Archdiocese of Armagh, founded by our patron, Saint Patrick and also to assist the Archbishop in his roles as Archbishop of Armagh and as Apostolic Administrator of Dromore Diocese. Archbishop Martin has been most welcoming and helpful to me since he heard of my impending appointment. He has certainly done everything possible to make this transition and upheaval as painless as possible for me. Archbishop Eamon I thank you for your kindness and I look forward to supporting you in whatever way I can in the years ahead.
I wish to thank also Bishop Leo O’Reilly, Bishop Emeritus of my native diocese of Kilmore, who has been a tremendous example and inspiration to me over the past 22 years. His retirement in January of this year has deprived us of his leadership but I pray that his wisdom, guidance, and encouragement will be available to me and to many others in the years ahead. We are fortunate to have in Kilmore, during the interregnum, a very able administrator in Monsignor Liam Kelly and I wish to thank him as well for his encouragement and support.
The most supportive and loving people in my life are, of course, my parents Tony and Nora and my sisters Breda and Martina my brothers in law, Derek and Ollie, my nieces and nephews and all my family circle. I thank them today for all they have contributed to my life thus far and for the support they have given me throughout my thirty years of priestly ministry.
I am in many ways a complete stranger to this area but I suppose I do have some spiritual connections. From my home place in Virginia, Co Cavan, there is a beautiful view across Lough Ramor to the Loughcrew hills, near Oldcastle, the birthplace of Saint Oliver Plunkett who served this Archdiocese in very difficult times and was obedient unto death. We are going through testing times today as a Church but those tribulations pale in comparison to what Saint Oliver and his contemporaries endured. I pray that I will have some of his courage and strength in my calling.
Another spiritual connection which comes to mind this morning relates to Saint Benan, known in Latin as Saint Benignus. Three years ago, when we reorganised the Pastoral Areas in the Diocese of Kilmore, we were searching for a name for the grouping of parishes centred around Bailieborough. One of our Pastoral Area Council members suggested the name of Saint Benan, who as a boy was one of the first converts of Saint Patrick. Legend has it that Benan, on one of his missionary excursions with Saint Patrick into Breffni, established a Church in Drumbannon, on the outskirts of the present-day town of Bailieborough. He later became the first assistant bishop to Saint Patrick here in Armagh and was also his cantor or psalm singer. I hope I am able to assist Archbishop Eamon in many ways but I’m afraid my singing voice is such that I won’t be able to assist him as a cantor. Thankfully the Archbishop has abundant talent of his own in that area. Like Saint Benan I move from Bailieborough to the Archdiocese of Armagh and, as I do so, I pray for his intercession and help[i].
As I grew up in County Cavan from the 1960’s to the 1980’s the work, influence and example of lay people, clergy and religious in the Church community, both locally and nationally, were a hugely positive influence in my upbringing. My parents were always closely involved in parish life and their experience was positive and rewarding – a source of blessing and fulfilment for them and for our family to this day. The commitment, the spirit and the faith of the local clergy in my native parish of Lurgan, Co Cavan, and the dedication and kindness of the religious who taught me, laid the foundations of my personal faith and nurtured my vocation to the priesthood. As a priest I have been very fortunate to have the inspiration, the support and true Christian example of the people, priests and religious in the diocese of Kilmore over the past thirty years, particularly in Saint Patrick’s College, Bailieborough Community School and in the Diocesan Pastoral Centre and also in the parishes of Killinkere, Kilmainhamwood and Moybolgue, Castletara, Cavan and in my present position in Bailieborough in the parish of Killann.
I am sharply aware that many people do not share the same positive experience of Church that I do. For various historical and cultural reasons, the Church in this country became, for many years, too comfortable in its position of temporal as well as spiritual authority. The present time, however, is a period of unprecedented change for the Church in this country and the pace of change will only continue to increase in the years ahead. But as people of faith we must anticipate and embrace that change. We must never hanker for the certainties of the past but work towards creating a new expression of what it means to be Church in this time and this place. Even though I take on this role with fear and trepidation in my heart I do so also with a sense of excitement that we are at a crossroads where we can shape a new existence for our faith communities. As a Church we move more and more from the centre to the margins and even though that is painful for many it will be, I believe, a positive thing in the long term. From the margins the Church can give full reign to its prophetic voice and challenge, head on, the injustice, the economic inequality, the violence, the despair and the sense of alienation that exists in society today. Now is the time for us, while we still have reasonable numbers and a little energy, to shape the future that we want to see and to continue to bring ourselves and our communities into a deeper relationship with Jesus Christ who will bring us freedom and take on all our burdens and our anxieties if we trust in Him.
Even though I am very conscious of my own weakness and limitations, and I very reluctantly take on this role today, I abandon myself to God’s will and I call on the power of his Holy Spirit to guide and inspire me. I know that His help, support and encouragement will come to me through the people and priests of this great archdiocese; people and priests that I will be greatly honoured to work with, to learn from and to serve in the future.
Saint Patrick, pray for us, Saint Bridget, pray for us, Saint Malachy, pray for us, Saint Oliver Plunkett, pray for us, Saint Benan, pray for us.
ENDS
ENDS
• Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Dromore.
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10 February 2019
Saint Macartan’s Cathedral, Monaghan, Diocese of Clogher
· “It is time to encourage and form our lay faithful, and especially our young people, to be alert and open to the promptings of the Holy Spirit … I also pray that every member of the Church – married or single, ordained or consecrated – will realise that they are called by the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation to be part of the ‘new springtime’ for the faith” – Archbishop Eamon Martin
Introductory remarks
Brothers and sisters, that powerful entrance hymn, Priestly People is a perfect way to begin our ordination Mass. The French Spiritan Priest, Father Lucien Deiss composed it in 1965 to celebrate a key message coming from the Second Vatican Council – that all baptised people share in the mission of the Church. We are indeed a priestly people, a Holy people, a kingly people. As God’s chosen people we gather to today in great joy to praise and thank God for calling Monsignor Larry Duffy to be the next bishop of Clogher.
I welcome “this great assembly” of people, priests and religious from across the Diocese of Clogher and especially the bishops emeriti – Joseph Duffy and Liam MacDaid – and with them Monsignor Joseph McGuinness who has faithfully and diligently administered this diocese since Bishop Liam’s retirement. I am delighted to welcome Monsignor Larry’s family members and close friends, my co-consecrators His Excellency Archbishop Jude Thaddeus Okolo, Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland and Bishop Noel Treanor of Down & Connor and my brother bishops as well as the many priests who will join in concelebrating this Mass. We are grateful for the presence of so many representatives from other churches, including Bishop John McDowell and Archbishop Michael Jackson, as well as representatives from civic society. A warm welcome to you all on this special today.
Over the west door of this splendid cathedral, there is a marble relief of Christ handing the keys to Peter to be shepherd of God’s people, and alongside it are statues of Saint Peter and Saint Paul – the great missionaries of the early Church. It reminds us that our new bishop, Larry, by the laying on of hands, will become both your shepherd and your teacher. Let us pray for him as he begins this new ministry and mission among you.
And we call also on the great saints of Clogher to pray for him and guide him – Saints Macartan, Tiarnach, Molaise, Davog, Davnet, Fanchea and Molua. It is a great honour for me, in the name of Saint Patrick of Armagh, to join in the ordination of the next successor of Saint Macartan. I welcome you, Monsignor Larry, I wish you every blessing on this special day. Know that you are surrounded with love and prayer on this great occasion.
Homily
Back in 1976 in this Cathedral of Saint Macartan a young man heard these words: “Let Larry Duffy, who is to be ordained a priest, please come forward”.
The gathering that day included his Clogher classmates, Michael Daly and Noel Treanor, and in the congregation there were many of those who had nurtured Larry’s vocation – his parents and family members, neighbours from the parish of Magheracloone and his friends and staff from Saint Patrick’s College, Carlow. Larry stood up and said: “Present” – echoing the words of the prophet Isaiah we heard in today’s First Reading: “Here I am. Send me”.
Today, Monsignor Larry Duffy has stepped forward again, this time to be ordained as bishop. In a few moments he will stand to be examined on his resolve to uphold the faith and discharge his duties as Bishop of Clogher. I will ask if he is prepared:
– to build up the Church as the Body of Christ;
– to be a devoted father to the people of God here in Clogher;
– to show kindness and compassion;
– to be a good shepherd;
– to pray without ceasing; and,
– to carry out his duties with no grounds for reproach?
To each question, Larry will answer “I am”.
To be examined like this in front of “this great assembly” is enough to make anyone feel weak at the knees! We all know that commitments such as these can only be made with the help of God, and with the grace and strength that comes from the Holy Spirit.
It is only human to be anxious or uncertain about what lies ahead. When Isaiah heard the call he said, “I am wretched and lost, a man of unclean lips”. The prophet Jeremiah protested that he was too young; he would not know how to speak. Even the Virgin Mary, at the Annunciation, paused before giving her “Yes” to God. “How can this be?”, she asked the angel.
God knows our weaknesses and our capabilities, our sinfulness as well as our good points, but God still calls us forward – to do His will. I notice the inscription in Irish on the confessional Chapel here in the cathedral: Dúirt Íosa leo. “Mise atá ann. Ná bíodh eagla oraibh.”
It brings to mind the message from today’s psalm – God does not ask for sacrifice or holocaust or victim – all He wants from us is an open ear, a humble and generous heart, the selfless offering of our lives, and our courage to answer: “Present, Here I am”.
My brother Larry, since you said “yes” to God on the day of your priestly ordination, you have served God faithfully in parishes both north and south of the border and during your missionary experience in Kenya. Today, God asks you to extend that selfless “Yes” to include a new challenge, namely, as Bishop of Clogher. If 1976 was your “Here I am” moment, then today is your “Here I am again Lord”!
It is your “call within a call”.
Saint Mother Teresa speaks of her “call within a call”. She was travelling on a train journey from Calcutta to Darjeeling for her annual retreat when she heard Jesus speaking in her heart, “Come be my light”. She felt an overwhelming desire to leave her teaching role as a Loreto sister and to establish her own congregation, the Missionaries of Charity, working among the poorest of the poor.
To become bishop is your “call within a call”. But do not lose your priestly and pastoral instinct to serve, and to build up hearts. This is one of your gifts and you can bring it to your episcopacy. Your choice of episcopal motto: “God is Love” is simple, yet profound and challenging. Remember how Saint Paul, and his companion Barnabus, known as “son of encouragement” went around “putting fresh heart into the churches”. Keep encouraging your people! As Pope Francis says, do not allow them to be “robbed of hope”.
When he was with us in Dublin last August, Pope Francis said that he wanted to encourage us. At the final Mass in Phoenix Park the Holy Father remarked that, “each new generation, brings the promise of a new Pentecost … a fresh outpouring of the Spirit, the Paraclete, whom Jesus sends as our Advocate, our Consoler and indeed our Encourager”. It reminded me of something Pope Saint Paul VI once said, “The Church needs her eternal Pentecost; she needs fire in her hearts, words on her lips, a glance that is prophetic”.
The Holy Spirit is constantly building up and rejuvenating the Church. This is not a time for us to yearn for, or mourn for, a bygone era, but to prepare and till the soil for the “new springtime”.
I am convinced that the Spirit is already at work here in Ireland preparing us for new growth in faith. Our task, as bishops and priests, is to “walk with” our lay faithful and to carefully discern with them what the Spirit is saying to the Church in Ireland – to search for what Pope Francis calls the “new ways for the journey in faith” that the Spirit wants for this time and this place.
The Lord calls us, as he did Simon and his friends on Lake Gennesaret, to “put out into the deep and pay out the nets for a catch”. Sometimes our reaction is to be sceptical like the disciples, shaking our heads and saying “Master, we worked hard all night long and caught nothing”.
Perhaps the Lord is asking us, as he did Saint Teresa of Calcutta, to do something different, even something radical. That might mean letting go, leaving behind some of the ways we have been doing things in the past – daring to answer the “calls within our calls”, and to “put out into the deep”!
We must never think, as bishops and priests, that we are in this alone. It is time to encourage and form our lay faithful, and especially our young people, to be alert and open to the promptings of the Holy Spirit, calling them and “gifting” them for the service of the Gospel. Every day I pray for vocations to the priesthood and to the consecrated life. But I also pray that every member of the Church – married or single, ordained or consecrated – will realise that they are called by the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation to be part of the “new springtime” for the faith.
Imagine, if everyone here present could find their unique “call within a call”; say their personal “Here I am, Lord” and become part of the new evangelisation in Ireland! Together we could haul in “a huge catch” for the Lord! It would be a shame if we saw the involvement of our lay faithful in the life and mission of the Church merely as a consequence of the decline in the number of clergy and religious. At the Second Vatican Council the Pastoral Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, was clear that all the baptised are part of God’s chosen people with a share in the priestly, prophetical and kingly functions of Christ. Baptism endows them with a right and responsibility to exercise their mission in the Church and in the world (see Lumen Gentium, 31).
My brother Larry, this “call within a call” will bring you many new responsibilities and challenges. As bishop, you may sometimes feel yourself sinking beneath so many competing demands and expectations. Ach ná bíodh eagla ortsa!
Call on the Holy Spirit when you need wisdom, and fortitude – and stay close also to Mary, our Blessed Mother; she knows what it is like to say “Yes” to God, and to be completely open to God’s will. Ask also for the prayers of your people, religious and priests. In difficult times I find myself buoyed up by the prayers and support of so many good people. Every prayer and word of encouragement you give them, you will receive back a hundred fold.
Thank you for having the courage to say again, “Here I am, Lord”. God bless your ministry as Bishop of Clogher. Amen.
Notes to Editors
· Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland
· His Holiness Pope Francis appointed Monsignor Larry Duffy as Bishop of Clogher on 8 December 2018. The Diocese of Clogher encompasses all of Co Monaghan, most of Co Fermanagh and portions of Tyrone, Donegal, Louth and Cavan. It has a Catholic population of 88,000 across 37 parishes, which is served by 58 priests and 2 deacons. There are 85 churches in the diocese. The patron saint of the diocese is Saint Macartan, d. 506AD.
· Life and ministry of Bishop Larry Duffy
Since 2013 Bishop Larry Duffy has been Parish Priest of Carrickmacross, Co Monaghan. He comes from the neighbouring parish of Magheracloone. He was born in Ballybay on 27 November 1951. Bishop Duffy’s parents were the late Thomas and Elizabeth Duffy. He has three surviving siblings, his sister Anna and brothers Patrick and Peter. Their other brother Brendan died two years ago. Having completed his studies for the priesthood at Saint Patrick’s College, Carlow, he was ordained in Saint Macartan’s Cathedral, Monaghan, in 1976. Since then Bishop Duffy has served in various parishes of the Diocese of Clogher including Enniskillen, Castleblayney, Monaghan and Rackwallace (Cathedral parish), Ederney, Clones and Carrickmacross. In addition, he spent four years ministering in the Diocese of Kitui in Kenya. While in Africa he led the building of a new church in Mwingi in the diocese. Bishop Duffy was also a keen supporter of religious communities in their setting up of schools in the Diocese of Kitui. Bishop Duffy was Vicar General of the Diocese of Clogher from 2013 until the retirement of Bishop MacDaid in 2016. A former player with Magheracloone Mitchells GAA, Bishop-elect Duffy is also an avid GAA fan and a keen golfer.
01 January 2019
Reflection on the message of Pope Francis for 52nd World Day of Peace: ‘Good politics is at the service of peace’
◦“On this World Day of Peace I ask all our public representatives to make a resolution to reject divisive language and actions at all times during 2019. The progress we have made over the past twenty years is fragile and should be handled with care. There can be no going back to the days of violence and death on our streets.”
◦“In 2019 I urge everyone – in their families, communities, schools, colleges and workplaces – to sensitively and respectfully present life-saving alternatives to abortion, so that no vulnerable woman in crisis will feel that the only way out for her is to end the life of her unborn child. This life-saving work deserves the full support of our local and national political representatives.
In his message for today, the 52nd World Day of Peace, Pope Francis recalls the words of Jesus to His disciples as He sent them out on mission. Jesus told them, “Whatever house you enter, first say, ‘Peace be to this house!’” At the start of this New Year, Pope Francis makes this greeting his own. The Holy Father wishes that we might find true peace in three ways: peace with ourselves, peace with others, and peace with all creation.
Pope Francis entitles his New Year message: “Good politics is at the service of peace”. “Peace”, he says “is based on respect for each person, whatever his or her background, on respect for the law and the common good, on respect for the environment entrusted to our care and for the richness of the moral tradition inherited from past generations”. “Good politics” respects and promotes fundamental human rights. Those holding political office and political responsibility in any country should therefore “make every effort to protect those who live there and to create the conditions for a worthy and just future”. They should exercise their politics “with basic respect for the life, freedom and dignity of persons”.
Recent circumstances in Ireland, Britain, Europe and the United States have led many people to become disheartened with politics and with politicians. Still, it is important to pray that all politicians will work at the service of peace. Politics is a noble vocation, and those who answer the call to public service often have to make great sacrifices in their personal and family life. We depend on our politicians to protect life and to build peace, to make just laws that enable us, our families, and the wider community to live good and constructive lives. We need them to lead and govern us, to work for the common good, to enable everyone to live in security and hope. In particular, politicians must speak and work for the voiceless, supporting the poor and disadvantaged, the homeless, migrants and the most vulnerable – even though doing so may not always win them popularity or votes.
In addition to praying for our politicians, it is important that people actively contribute to public discourse. People of faith are called to bring to these discussions their conviction that the teaching and Gospel of Jesus Christ have consequences for every aspect of our lives.
Before Christmas I pointed to the danger of increased community polarisation on account of the Brexit debate and the political impasse at Stormont. Ireland’s Church leaders are urging political leaders to make a real difference as we enter 2019 and to help restore a sense of hope. We feel that with ongoing political and economic uncertainty, “many businesses here are fearing for the future, while many families, struggling to make ends meet today, are anxious about what that future might hold”. Added to this, the lack of a functioning devolved government in Northern Ireland concerns us. It “not only drains hope from our society, but also has meant an ever increasing pressure on our schools, our hospitals, our welfare system and many other aspects of society’s infrastructure. As so often happens, it is the vulnerable and the marginalised that suffer most and they should be at the forefront of our thoughts and prayers as we enter into a new year”.
Last September the Church leaders invited political party leaders to meet with us, and we sought to provide a safe space to facilitate open discussion and mutual understanding. We were encouraged by this meeting and we have begun a series of regional meetings, “bringing together local politicians, community and church leaders to talk with one another, to build relationships and again to foster mutual understanding”. We hope that this initiative can help bring at least a glimmer of hope.
On a personal note, I encourage all our politicians in the coming challenging months to beware the temptation to retreat into partisanship. Many of our politicians and their predecessors have played their part in creating a more peaceful and more prosperous society here over the past twenty years. On this World Day of Peace I ask all our public representatives to make a resolution to reject divisive language and actions at all times during 2019. The progress we have made over the past twenty years is fragile and should be handled with care. There can be no going back to the days of violence and death on our streets.
Having just marked the seventieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it is important to remember that the principle of the inviolability of innocent human life is the most fundamental of all moral principles. It is the basis upon which every human right we enjoy as persons is predicated. This is not only a religious doctrine, but a universal human value, rooted in human nature itself, upon which our very freedom and dignity as a person rests. Freedom of conscience and freedom of religion are also internationally agreed human rights
The right to life is not given or taken away by the law of the land or by any politician. It cannot be relegated beneath the right to individual choice. Despite the legislation for abortion that is taking effect this month in Ireland, it remains gravely morally wrong to deliberately and intentionally take the life of an innocent person, whatever their state or stage of life. To co-operate in such an act, by supporting it directly or indirectly, either as an individual act or as a social policy, shall always be gravely wrong.
Although the Eighth Amendment has been removed from the Constitution of Ireland, it remains no less true that the life of a woman and her unborn baby are equally deserving of love, respect and protection. Any law which suggests otherwise has no moral force. In good conscience it cannot be supported; it has to be resisted and we must continue to call and work diligently for its limitation, amendment and repeal. No one should be forced, against their conscience, to participate in abortion or to refer patients to others for abortion.
As a bishop I have been overwhelmed over the past year by the courage and witness of so many people – including some consistently pro-life politicians – who kept reminding us that in pregnancy we are dealing with TWO human lives. In 2019 I urge everyone – in their families, communities, schools, colleges and workplaces – to sensitively and respectfully present life-saving alternatives to abortion, so that no vulnerable woman in crisis will feel that the only way out for her is to end the life of her unborn child. This life-saving work deserves the full support of our local and national political representatives. I also encourage the development and ongoing formation of pro-life support teams in every pastoral area throughout the country.
Last August Pope Francis, speaking to An Taoiseach and other political and civil representatives gathered in Dublin Castle, said, “True peace is ultimately God’s gift; it flows from a healed and reconciled heart and branches out to embrace the entire world”. Pope Francis explained that true peace requires a spiritual foundation and constant conversion on our part. Pope Francis then raised a challenging question – one which ought to continue ringing in our ears during 2019. The Holy Father asked, “Could it be that the growth of a materialistic ‘throwaway culture’ has in fact made us increasingly indifferent to the poor and to the most defenceless members of our human family, including the unborn, deprived of the very right to life?”
As we begin this new year, I invite you to pray regularly, at home and in your parishes, the ‘Choose Life’ Prayer for Ireland (below) and to consecrate yourselves, your homes and our country to the heart of Mary the Mother of God:
Lord Jesus, you are the source and lover of life.
Reawaken in us respect for every human life.
Help us to see in each child the marvellous work of our Creator.
Open our hearts to welcome every child
as a unique and wonderful gift.
Guide the work of doctors, nurses and midwives.
May the life of a mother and her baby in the womb be equally cherished and respected.
Help those who make our laws to uphold
the uniqueness and sacredness of every human life, from the first moment of conception to natural death.
Give us wisdom and generosity to build a society that cares for all.
Together with Mary, your Mother,
in whose womb you took on our human nature, Help us to choose life in every decision we take.
We ask this in the joyful hope of eternal life with you, and in the communion of the Blessed Trinity.
Amen.
Our Lady of Knock, pray for us.
All the Saints of Ireland, pray for us.
25 December 2018
“As we reflect on the Christ’s birth in the poverty of the stable, may we always be thankful for the food we have to eat, for our health, and for the warmth and security of a home; may we be more conscious of those less fortunate – the poor and the hungry, the sick, the lonely … We pray that all children – born and unborn – will be protected from violence, trafficking, abuse, abortion, neglect or exploitation” – Archbishop Eamon Martin
Homily
Two weeks ago NASA scientists announced that the Voyager II spacecraft has left our solar system and is hurtling on into interstellar space towards the next star. Since its launch in 1977 the spacecraft has travelled eleven billion miles – and counting … but don’t wait up! It won’t reach the next star for another 40,000 years!
Voyager’s fascinating journey into the heavens leaves me speechless at the vastness of the universe and the miracle of God’s creation. No wonder the psalmist wrote (Psalm 8):
Lord, when I consider your heavens,
the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which you have set in place,
what is mankind that you are mindful of them,
human beings that you care for them?
In many ways that psalm expresses the amazing mystery of Christmas:
To think that God, the Almighty, the creator of all that exists, could love each one of us uniquely and intimately!
To realise that, of all the millions of planets in the universe, God loved the world so much that he sent His Only Son to be our Saviour!
To see in that little child, born in a stable on a bitter Bethlehem night, the Eternal Word, who is God, made flesh and living among us!
An ancient Latin hymn sums up the “great and mighty wonder” of Christmas: O magnum mysterium et admirabile sacramentum!
O what a great mystery,
and wonderful sacrament,
that animals should see the newborn Lord, lying in a manger!
Just as it is not easy to imagine the vast galaxies of stars that make up the universe, so it can be difficult for us to comprehend that God loves each one of us uniquely and personally. God understands our weaknesses and mistakes, but still calls out of each of us the very best of what we are capable. The Christmas story reminds us that, although we are small and frail, with the grace of God, and our “yes”, like Mary’s, to God’s will in our lives, we can (as the second reading says): “give up everything that does not lead to God”. We can be transformed and in turn we can help to change the world for the better!
On this Christmas night, as we marvel at the wonder of the universe, let us pledge to care for Planet Earth, our common home, by being less wasteful, and more conscious of the damage that we can do to our environment by selfish living.
As we reflect on the Christ’s birth in the poverty of the stable, may we always be thankful for the food we have to eat, for our health, and for the warmth and security of a home; may we be more conscious of those less fortunate – the poor and the hungry, the sick, the lonely.
As we contemplate this Christmas the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, let us pray for our family members at home or away, and spare a thought for families who are wounded or separated by war and violence, distrust or relationship breakdown.
And, as we gaze in wonder and awe at God’s presence in the newborn infant Jesus, let us bring to mind children who bring so much joy and happiness into our lives. We pray that all children – born and unborn – will be protected from violence, trafficking, abuse, abortion, neglect or exploitation.
As Pope Francis prays in his 2015 encyclical letter Laudato Si on care for our common home:
All powerful God, you are present in the whole universe and in the smallest of your creatures.
You embrace with your tenderness all that exists.
Pour out upon us the power of your love, That we may protect life and beauty.
Fill us with peace, that we may live
as brothers and sisters, harming no one.
With that beautiful prayer, I wish you, and your families every blessing for Christmas and for the New Year. Beannachtaí na Nollag oraibh go leir. Amen.
28 November 2018
Mass celebrated at 7.30pm in Saint Malachy’s Church, in the Cathedral Parish of Armagh
◦Next year it is my hope to erect a Shrine in the Cathedral to former Archbishop of Armagh, Saint Oliver Plunkett and all those who, like him, were persecuted and martyred for the faith in this diocese
◦We should not be afraid to hold and teach our sincerely held Christian convictions about, for example, the dignity of the person and the sacredness of all human life from the first moment of conception. In post-referendum Ireland, it remains as important as ever to affirm the sanctity of all human life
All over the world this week, cathedrals, churches and other public buildings have been lit up in red in solidarity with persecuted Christians, and with other faith minorities who suffer because of their religious beliefs.
Sadly their suffering often goes unnoticed – most of us go on about our business, unaware of the injustice and discrimination which affects our brothers and sisters throughout the world. By lighting our churches up in red or by wearing something red, we have been reminding ourselves that too many Christians and other religious minorities are victims of insult, violence, torture and even death because of their beliefs. Today, especially, they are in our thoughts and prayers.
The powerful words of Jesus in this evening’s Gospel Reading could have been written for the persecuted Christians today in China, India, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Eritrea – or in any of the 38 countries identified this year as places where persecution is serious and ongoing:
‘Men will seize you and persecute you; …You will be hated by all men on account of my name, but not a hair of your head will be lost. Your endurance will win you your lives (Luke 21:12 ff)’.
Article 18 of the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights states: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom… to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship or observance”. However the Report on “Religious Freedom in the World 2018” published last week by Aid to the Church in Need, shockingly illustrates how countless numbers of people around the world have been killed, “disappeared” or indefinitely imprisoned simply for belonging to the wrong religion.
The Report found significant religious freedom violations in almost one fifth of all countries examined. Among its most troubling findings for me was the observation that “Aggressive nationalism, hostile to religious minorities, has worsened” together with “increasing evidence of a curtain of indifference behind which vulnerable faith communities suffer” and that “in the eyes of Western governments and the media, religious freedom is slipping down the human rights priority rankings, being eclipsed by issues of gender, sexuality and race”.
This is why it is important for us to gather like this on #RedWednesday to raise awareness of these matters, to express our solidarity in prayer with the persecuted, and to pledge our charity and support for organisations like Aid to the Church in Need who are working to promote religious freedom and highlight abuses.
Of course Ireland has historically been no stranger to persecution and martyrdom for the faith. This evening in Armagh I bring to mind and prayer the Franciscan friars, Rodger McConvill, Conor McWard and Fergal Ward who were flogged and dragged to death here on the streets of Armagh in the 16th century, Father James O’Fallegan, Parish Priest of Armagh who was tortured to death in the 17th century because he would not recant the faith, and Dean Brian McGurk who in the early 18th century was imprisoned and chained to his death for his faith. Next year it is my hope to erect a Shrine in the Cathedral to former Archbishop of Armagh, Saint Oliver Plunkett and all those who, like him, were persecuted and martyred for the faith in this diocese.
Jesus said in the Gospel of John: “If the world hates you, remember that it hated me before you… if they persecuted me, they will persecute you too”. But he also promised in the Beatitudes: “Happy those who are persecuted in the cause of right: theirs is the kingdom of heaven”.
The fact that persecution and martyrdom of our fellow Christians continues today in many parts of the world invites us to consider how we ourselves witness to our faith in Irish society. We are all called to be prophetic in shining the light and truth of the Gospel into the world, even when it brings ridicule, insult, criticism or leads to our being ostracised in public discourse.
Last week Pope Francis remarked that, in addition to the bloody “red martyrdom” suffered by Christians throughout the world who die for their faith, many others, in democratic countries, experience “white martyrdom” because their freedom of religion is restricted.
We should not be afraid to hold and teach our sincerely held Christian convictions about, for example, the dignity of the person and the sacredness of all human life from the first moment of conception. In post-referendum Ireland, it remains as important as ever to affirm the sanctity of all human life, and to remind people that the direct and intentional taking of the life of any innocent human being is always gravely wrong. Sadly we must now do this in a context where we might be shouted down, told to “go away”, or even have our right to freedom of conscience and religion questioned because they do not “fit in” with the prevailing attitudes and opinions around us.
The Book of Wisdom (chapter 3) promises that no torment shall touch the souls of the virtuous… they are in the hands of God, their hope is rich with immortality. And Saint Paul says “we prove we are the servants of God by great fortitude in times of suffering: in times of hardship and distress; when we are flogged, or sent to prison, or mobbed… we prove we are God’s servants by being armed with the weapons of righteousness… prepared for honour or disgrace, for blame or praise (1 Cor 6:4-10)”.
On this #RedWednesday, I invite you to pray for the gift of courage, the grace of witness and loyalty to Christ for Christians here in Ireland and all over the world, and especially for those who continue to be challenged, attacked, displaced or even murdered for what they believe in.
11 November 2018
◦Service to be broadcast from 3:45pm by BBC1 NI and on BBC Radio Ulster
Earlier this year I was honoured to lay a wreath during the Last Post ceremony at the Menin Gate in Ypres with my friend Archbishop Richard Clarke and some of our young people. It was deeply moving for all of us, but still, it is difficult for any of us to imagine the thoughts and feelings of the young men on the battlefields of the First World War who heard the haunting tones of the Last Post each evening at sunset and, in the darkness, prayed for home, for family, for peace.
On our previous visit to Ypres back in 2016 I found the spot about five miles outside the town where my great uncle Edward is buried in Canada Farm cemetery. Because he was tall and strong from working on the farm in Donegal, they put him to operate the heavy guns of war. Today he lies, in Flanders fields, another young man among the half a million who perished in the infamous battle of Passchendaele, in the ‘flower of youth’.
At that time the chaplain wrote to my great granny to reassure her that her son Edward had received a Catholic burial “in a blessed grave with a proper cross”.
Last month in Rome I launched a new film about Father Willie Doyle SJ Chaplain to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who also died at Passchendaele. He was struck by a shell as he crawled out to minister to two wounded men on ‘no man’s land’. By all accounts Father Doyle was a saintly priest who knew no fear and was greatly respected by the men, of all traditions. Somehow, despite the deafening bombardment and sickening stench of battle, Father Doyle was able to bring the gentle and comforting presence of Jesus into that hellish place. He once wrote in his personal diary: “I long to go and shed my blood for Jesus and, if he wills it, to die a martyr for charity … To do something great and heroic may never come, but I can make my life heroic by faithfully and daily putting my best effort into each duty as it comes round”.
Father Doyle’s body was never found. His name is inscribed at Tyne Cot with so many other brave and heroic people from north, south, east and west. As we remember them today I am comforted by the words of Saint Paul:
“Brothers and sisters we want you to be quite certain about those who have fallen asleep, to make sure that you do not grieve for them, as others do who have no hope. We believe that Jesus died and rose again, and that in the same way God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus… At the signal given by the voice of the Archangel and the trumpet of God… we shall be with the Lord for ever (1 Thess 4)”.
My visits in recent years to the Somme and to Flanders, with Archbishop Richard and the other Church leaders, have really opened my eyes to the grief and suffering that was shared by families of all traditions and from every part of Ireland. Three granite blocks at the Peace Park in Messines remind visitors of those from across the island of Ireland who were killed, wounded or missing during the war: 32 thousand from the 36th Ulster division; 28 thousand from the 16thIrish division; 9 thousand from the 10th Irish division.
Sadly, because of the cruel twists and tensions of our history of conflict, the fact that Irish Catholics and Protestants fought and died, side by side, was neglected for too long – and perhaps conveniently – by all sides, both north and south of the border. People preferred to cling on to a history of difference and separation, rather than recognise and embrace our shared story of common suffering. That is why it was very moving for me to stand in Messines with the other Church leaders and to read with them these words from the Peace Pledge there:
“From the crest of this ridge … as Protestants and Catholics, we apologise for the terrible deeds we have done to each other and ask forgiveness … we appeal to all people in Ireland to help build a peaceful and tolerant society … we affirm that a fitting tribute to the principles for which men and women from the Island of Ireland died in both World Wars would be permanent peace.”
Gathered here this afternoon, in Belfast, let us renew that peace pledge, together, in our hearts. The brave people we are remembering are calling us to recognise their shared suffering by building a better future where difference is accepted and respected.
Although standing at war memorials, wearing poppies, laying wreaths and the Last Post may not have been part of my tradition or upbringing, to remember the dead, to honour and pray for them – especially during the month of November – is important to the practice of my faith. In recent years I have grown to understand more fully that, whilst we may remember in different ways, and whilst our forebears had differing and often conflicting approaches to the war, what unites us now in their memory is so much greater than anything that is talked up to divide us.
Can we learn from their shared sacrifice, a full century after the so-called “war to end all wars”? They have bequeathed us a shared responsibility for healing the past and building lasting trust and peace. Peace is not merely ‘ceasefire’ or the absence of violence and war. Peace is an ongoing work of reconciliation, justice and hope: it means coming out of our own trenches; building bridges, not parapets; “beating swords into ploughshares, spears into pruning hooks (Isaiah 2)”.
Jesus said, “Love one another as I have loved you (John 15)”. Peace is the fruit of that love which urges us to uphold the value and dignity of every human life and to be passionate about respecting others, especially those who are poor or marginalised. Our hope remains for a lasting peace on the island of Ireland. May Christ, the Prince of Peace, help us make that hope a reality for the youth of today and tomorrow. Amen.
On Sunday March 24th, a campaign inviting prayer and asking for donations was launched in the Archdiocese in preparation for the unveiling of a new statue of Saint Oliver Plunkett, bishop and Martyr, in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh. This statue will be unveiled by the Archbishop on July 9th 2019 to mark the350th anniversary of the Appointment of his 23rd predecessor St Oliver to the See of Armagh on July 9th 1669.
In the prayer leaflet available in all the Churches of the Archdiocese, Archbishop Eamon Martin writes “Last November, during the annual Mass for Red Wednesday to remember Christians around the world who suffer for their faith, I announced my hope to erect a Shrine in St Patrick’s Cathedral to our former Archbishop, Saint Oliver Plunkett, and to all those, who like him are persecuted or martyred for the faith.
Saint Oliver was appointed Archbishop of Armagh on 9th July 1669, 350 years ago this year. Since my arrival in Armagh, people have encouraged me to establish a fitting monument in the Cathedral to the memory of this man of courage and ardent faith who shed his blood for Christ. We are, of course, most grateful to the faithful of Drogheda and the surrounding area who continue to honour his relics there. In this significant year I believe it is time to acknowledge St Oliver Plunkett in a special way at St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh. I ask for your prayers and invite your financial support to help bring this project to fruition.”
It will also honour the Martyrs of Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Martyrs such as Fr Ragheed Ganni of Iraq, who like Saint Oliver studied in Rome and resided as a Seminarian in the Irish College. Fr Ganni was shot to death in his native Iraq in June 2007. Martyrs like the 21 Coptic Christians beheaded in February 2015 or again the 20 people killed and 80 injured, some with life changing injuries as a result of a bomb explosion in the Cathedral on the island of Jolo in the Philippines on January 21st this year yes the list is long and shows no sign of abating. Yet whenever there is persecution there is hope; Saint Pope VI who canonised Saint Oliver was wont to quote the 2nd century Church Father, Terullian, “The blood of the Martyrs is the seed of the Church.”
Donations can be forwarded to Rev Canon B Fee P.P. Secretary of the Organising committee3 Cloghog Rd, Clonoe, Co –Tyrone BT71 5EF
Cheques/money orders should be made payable to Archdiocese of Armagh (St Oliver Plunkett Appeal)
Prayer leaflets, envelopes etc are also available from Rev Canon B Fee.
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