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Fatima 2019

ADYC are heading to Fatima again this year and taking young people aged 16-18.  The Pilgrimage will be from 27 June – 2 July and costs £550.  This full board pilgrimage is an amazing opportunity to journey in the story of the children of Fatima.

 

Located north of Lisbon, in central Portugal, the shrine is site of the events of 1917 in which three shepherd children, Lúcia Santos and her cousins, Jacinta Marto and Francisco Marto, witnessed apparitions of the Virgin Mary on 13 May 1917 and on the 13th day of the five following months. The sanctuary built to commemorate these events is dominated by the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary, a magnificent church that overlooks a large open plaza where millions of pilgrims gather throughout the year. A typical Fatima Pilgrimage package includes: » Direct flight to Lisbon Airport and return » Return airport transfers in with guide assistance » Hotel accommodation for the selected number of nights » Daily breakfast, lunch and dinner » Full programme of religious ceremonies and special masses »  Full assistance of Joe Walsh Tours guides and representatives

Click here for online booking

 

Camp LifeTeen Form 2019

Create your own user feedback survey

To confirm your place, please forward a £100.00 deposit. Electronic payment to; Sort code: 90-20-47 Account number: 23801038. Please use your full name followed by LifeTeen as your payment reference. Cheques should be made payable to ‘ADYC’ and posted to ADYC, Archdiocese of Armagh, Cathedral Road, Armagh, BT61 7QY. All deposits are non refundable.

Camp LifeTeen 2019

Camp LifeTeen is a Summer Camp held in Alton Castle in England.  Young people aged 14 and 15 are invited to sign up for this summer Camp held on 10 – 15th Aug 2019.

Click here for our online form

 

Archbishop Eamon Martin expresses sadness at the sudden death of Father Phelim McKeown

Archbishop Eamon Martin was saddened to learn of the sudden death of Father Phelim McKeown, Priest in Residence, Caledon, Co Tyrone, on Saturday, 16 February 2019.

Father Phelim was ordained on 7 July 1996 in Mullaghbawn and served in parishes both North and South of the border including Saint Patrick’s Parish, Dundalk, Saint Peter’s Parish, Drogheda and Bessbrook. He became Parish Priest of Kilsaran in August 2014 but unfortunately had to take leave due to ill health from 2016.

Archbishop Eamon said “In recent months, Father Phelim had begun a gradual return to his pastoral duties, all the more reason why his death has come as such a shock to all of us. Father Phelim will be remembered as a very caring and pastoral priest who had a particular empathy for those who were suffering and struggling in anyway. He was very fondly thought of within his wide family circle and by those in the parishes where he ministered. I extend my sympathies to his brother, John, his extended family, his brother priests, and all who knew and loved him.”

Father Phelim’s funeral will take place in his home parish of Mullaghbawn at 12.00 noon on Wednesday, 20 February 2019.

Archbishop Eamon Martin
Archbishop of Armagh

For media contact: Catholic Communications Office Maynooth: 00353 (0) 1 505 3017

Candles of Atonement to be lit in Cathedrals and parishes to mark the Day of Prayer for Victims and Survivors of abuse

“The Candles are a reminder to pray for all those who carry lifelong suffering following abuse – they symbolise repentance, light in the darkness and hope.”- Archbishop Eamon Martin

The annual Day of Prayer for Survivors and Victims of Sexual Abuse will take place on Friday 15 February, a week before Pope Francis’ gathering in Rome with senior bishops and major religious superiors to discuss child safeguarding throughout the universal Church.

During their recent retreat in Knock, the bishops of Ireland blessed and dedicated candles of atonement for use in their Cathedrals and parishes throughout the country on 15 February and thereafter during the celebration of Mass and other liturgies.

Archbishop Eamon Martin said, “I welcome the candles of atonement initiative, and the accompanying prayer which was written by a survivor of abuse. In lighting these candles we will bring to mind our brothers and sisters, and their families, who have been left with a lifelong suffering as a result of abuse, whose trust was so deeply betrayed and whose faith has been so cruelly tested within the sanctity of the Church by perpetrators of abuse.

“In recent weeks I have been privileged to meet with victims and survivors of abuse and members of their families in the four provinces of Ireland. Many have spoken to me about the importance of prayer for survivors, and for the need for the Church to be open to justice, to atone and never forget them. I have been humbled by their courage and overwhelmed by their generosity of spirit. It is my intention to relay the lived experience and insights of Irish survivors, both personally to Pope Francis, and more widely to the safeguarding meeting in Rome later this month.

“I encourage dioceses and parishes to undertake this new prayer initiative and to light the ‘Candle of Atonement’ in Cathedrals and churches across Ireland. It would mean a lot to survivors if the ‘Candle of Atonement’ was a permanent feature in our Cathedrals and parish churches. People visiting the church for quiet prayer might light the ‘Candle of Atonement’, pray the prayer, and bring to mind someone they know who has been directly impacted or affected by abuse. It would mean a lot if the Candle was lit at all Masses on the 15-17 February, and also on the weekend of 23-24 February while the safeguarding meeting is taking place with Pope Francis in Rome. Divine Mercy Sunday is another significant date, because I am convinced that prayer and outreach to survivors of abuse is a modern-day corporal and spiritual work of mercy.”

Archbishop Eamon continued, “The simple prayer ritual for the dedication and lighting of the ‘Candle of Atonement’ in Cathedrals and parish churches is based on the very moving Penitential Rite composed and prayed by Pope Francis at the final Mass of the World Meeting of Families 2018 in Phoenix Park last August when he implored the Lord’s mercy for the crimes of abuse and asked for forgiveness.

“The ‘Candle of Atonement’ and accompanying prayer are offered as a reminder to all of the need for us to atone, to ask forgiveness as a Church for the suffering caused by abuse. My hope is that these candles will be lit in Cathedrals and parishes across the country as a reminder of the need for atonement and that they will symbolise repentance, light in the darkness and hope.”

Candle of Atonement Prayer
Lord, forgive us our many sins.
We grieve and repent with all our hearts for having offended you, for our great failings and neglect of the young and vulnerable.
We place all of those who have been hurt by the Church in any way into your loving hands and under the protection of Our Blessed Mother.
Lord, bring peace to their broken lives and show us all the way out of darkness and into the light of your Word.
May we as the people of God be more fully human, more fully Christ-like and more fully your people, that we may see the errors of the past and go forward with renewed hope and faith in Christ and in our Church.
Amen.

Seinn Catholic Schools Week 2019 – Church of the Holy Redeemer, Dundalk

About 900 students, teachers, school staff and parents gathered in the Church of the Holy Redeemer, Dundalk on January 24th to launch Catholic Schools Week 2019 in the southern part of the diocese. Archbishop Eamon Martin led a Songs of Praise service, which displayed all the joy and energy of young people relishing a chance to celebrate their faith together. Taking a lunchtime break from their studies, students sang, danced, prayed and listened to an inspiring homily from Archbishop Eamon on the theme of the service – “You too can be holy, like the saints”. Relics of Saints Patrick, Brigid, Oliver, Dominic and Martin de Porres were both venerated and used in a blessing of all present. The highpoint of the service was the beautiful and reverential singing of the Litany of the Saints, using many local and Irish saints names. Videos and photos of this event can be viewed on our YouTube channel “Seinn CSW”.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfkwWYDqMIs

PRAYERFEST 2019

1. Franciscan Missionary Community Mount Oliver
Saturday March 23th 2019
Mount Oliver, Ballymascanlon , Co Louth.

2. Kilmore Parish Pastoral Centre
Saturday April 6th 2019
Battlehill Road, Stonebridge, Richhill, Co Armagh, BT61 8QJ

The Prayer & Spirituality Commission will lead a day of prayer for all.
Come and try different styles of prayer.

Starts at 10.00 am with a Morning Prayer.

Bring a packed lunch – Tea and Coffee will be available.

Exploring Christian Pilgrimage – an exhibition for Secondary schools within the Archdiocese

The Prayer and Spirituality Commission are delighted to let you know about their new exhibition on Pilgrimage. It was designed to be available to secondary schools who look at this topic as part of Junior Cert and GCSE Religious Studies. It may also be suited to parish groups. To have it for display you will need a large room with tables around the walls so that the posters and materials can be viewed comfortably.

As part of their celebration of Catholic Schools Week, St Killian’s Community School in Ardee is currently hosting the display for their students and staff members to visit. See attached photos. Other schools are invited to apply to Fr Declan O’Loughlin, 028 3088 9609, to make a booking. You can download the attached poster and small brochure on Pilgrimage prepared by the commission.

EXPLORING CHRISTIAN PILGRIMAGE Poster

The Irish Pilgrim

St Pius Xth College in Magherafelt March 21st welcomed the exhibition and feedback from students attending was very positive.
This week the exhibition is in St Mary’s College Dundalk for a FULL 9 DAY exhibition. So far teachers report good interest and feedback. They have developed a worksheet for students to complete and we are delighted at suggestions coming back from students and staff members.
 

Download Pilgrimage worksheet here: Pilgrimage Exhibition

Archbishop Eamon Martin on Brexit and the Border

“We need to get our act together…” Archbishop Martin responds  to Taoiseach Leo Varadkar’s remarks about the possible return to a hard border due to Brexit

This interview was recorded in the iCatholic studio on 26th January 2019.

 

CSW 2019 Launch at St John the Baptist Parish Drumcree

The theme this year was about celebrating the work that takes place in each of our Catholic schools. Catholic schools are much more than building made of blocks and concrete. The procession today had pictures of the Mourne Lace Walls which have stood for hundreds of years high up in the Mourne countryside, where the wind and the rain and all the storms of the Winter have not managed to topple or damage these walls. The walls themselves are made from rocks of different sizes usually the large rocks are at the base and smaller rocks are gradually used to give it height, but what keeps the stones from falling is the gaps that are left to allow the wind and the rain to blow through the stones rather than topple the wall. Our schools have to withstand enormous pressure from outside. The values that we hold so dear are often challenged by the world in which we live. It is important for us to take steps to ensure that our faith communities can withstand the attacks and erosion that is part of modern living. Ten Students assembled a wall with those values written on the face of the building blocks and like the Mourne walls will leave spaces to symbolise how strong and determined we need to be in defending what is ours. These values include; Faith, Community, Prayer, Wonder, Outreach, Family, Others, Vocation, Diversity, Health. We are called to be Living stones and we have written on the Mourne Wall pictures ‘ Be Living Stones’
Students from St Marys PS Mullaghban led the singing for us joined by students from St Joseph’s PS Dundalk. We were treated to a drama exploring the Gospel Story of the wise and foolish builders by Students from St John the Baptist College Drumcree. Our bidding prayers were led by school principals, students and members of staff from schools throughout the Archdiocese. Symbolic stones representing each school faith community were placed in a cairn in front of a penal Cross. Archbishop Eamon led the prayer and spoke enthusiastically to all present encouraging us all to be real living stones, drawing on those special teachers that had shaped his own faith journey growing up in Derry. Line and Irish dancers from St Josephs College Crossmaglen and St John’s Drumcree greatly added mush to a truly festive celebration. Those present were urged to bring home a renewed enthusiasm to live these values and to make CSW a living reality in their own school faith community next week.

Messages from Teachers present.

Thank you for a lovely ceremony this morning. It was just fantastic, you all deserve so much praise.
The kids loved it too, one boy (who is generally a rogue) said, ‘that was class Miss’. High praise indeed!!

All went well yesterday – thank God.

A massive well done today – this was my very first time at CSW launch in my teaching career. I found it most impressive as did the group of students I brought.

Many thanks for today. It was absolutely beautiful. Lovely to see a full Church. A real reflection of Catholic Education.

Absolutely perfect. Enjoyed every minute.

Best ever !!

It was a real joy to be present and to see the children so involved and focussed on all that happened.

The led reflection and meditation was just spot on. Can we have a copy to use here in our own celebrations?

Just what we needed. Going home re-energised and filled with new hope.

Congrats to all the team, to all the schools who helped and participated. We loved it.