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‘After the Eight and Before the World Meeting of Families conference’ Carrickdale Sat 7 July

Armagh Justice and Peace Commission

will be hosting a conversation about your thoughts on the recent Referendum
and how you feel about the upcoming World Meeting of Families.

This gathering takes place in

The Carrickdale Hotel outside Dundalk from 10 am – 1pm.

It is a free event and we look forward to meeting you and giving you a unique opportunity to express your views and to listen to other voices.

Tea and coffee will be served and everyone is most welcome.

http://armagharchdiocese.org/justice-peace/


After the Eight Referendum and Before The World Family Meeting:

Where To Now for the Catholic Church?

The referendum in the South to remove the constitutional ban on abortion except when the mother’s life is at risk seemed like a crushing blow for the Catholic Church. The people of Ireland rejected the Church’s position, and by a large majority.

But this view suggests that the Church is only the bishops. In fact the Church is all the baptised people of God. And it is clear that a very large proportion of those who define themselves as Catholics (over 78% in the 2016 census) chose to vote Yes to the removal of the Eighth amendment.

One bishop responded by saying that all those who voted Yes and intended by so doing to support abortion needed to go to confession. A priest said they would go to hell if they did not repent. But another priest, Fr Gerry O’Hanlon, S.J., said many Catholics felt torn by the referendum and did not see it as a black and white issue. Others, who voted No, were committed to a consistent ethic of life.

Certainly some voted Yes because they felt the issue was too complex to be handled in a Constitutional clause.

This conference, which will be addressed by Grainne Doherty who works freelance in pastoral ministry, lecturing and facilitation, will help Catholics to explore their feelings and thoughts both about the referendum and the World Family Meeting which will be held in Dublin in August, and which Pope Francis will attend.

Mary Vallely, a member of the Justice and Peace Commission, said `We decided to hold this conference because we found a need among ourselves on the Commission to talk through the issues. Then we asked, “How many others need the same opportunity?”’.

Fr Brian Lennon, S.J., another Commission member, said `It will be good to give people a chance to talk through not only the referendum result, but also how they feel about the World Family Meeting. Do they feel connected with it? Do they feel that some groups, such as people in second relationships or LGBT people, are not sufficiently included?’

The Conference will be a follow-up to a recent survey by the Justice and Peace Commission of a small number of estates in Armagh city and Louth. One of the main issues raised by people was that they wanted to see married priests, because they felt these would be more able to talk about issues relevant to the lives of lay people.

The conference will be free of charge, and all are welcome to attend.

For further information contact:

St. Mary’s students sweep board at National Life Advocate Awards

Two St. Mary’s students have been awarded first and third place in a national essay-writing competition for senior cycle students.
Mollie Graffin, 16, took first place in the Life Advocate Awards.
The Life Advocate Awards were set up to encourage research and critical-thinking on human rights and right to life issues.
Students were asked to discuss the words of Mother Teresa who said: “Human rights are not a privilege conferred by Government. They are every human being’s entitlement by virtue of our humanity”.
Niamh Walls, 17, won joint third place.
The winning pupils were presented with their awards by members of the LifeWorks Education schools programme who sponsor the awards.

Programme for the Pastoral Congress, and Papal schedule, for the 9th World Meeting of Families

The Holy See Press Office publishes the itinerary of the Holy Father Pope Francis for his pastoral visit to the 9th World Meeting of Families in Ireland on 25 and 26 August. Please see details of Pope Francis’ itinerary below.

Please see the homepage of www.worldmeeting2018.ie for the full Programme of the Pastoral Congress for the World Meeting of Families, and highlights from this programme are provided below.

At a press conference this morning in Saint Patrick’s College, Maynooth, details of the Programme of the Pastoral Congress for the World Meeting of Families 2018, and the itinerary of Pope Francis, were announced by Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, President and host of WMOF2018; Archbishop Eamon Martin, President of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference; Father Timothy Bartlett, Secretary General of WMOF2018; and WMOF2018 volunteers. Welcoming statements by Archbishop Diarmuid Martin and Archbishop Michael Neary, Archbishop of Tuam, can be found below. For photographs from today’s press conference, please contact John McElroy 00353 (0) 87 241 6985 and [email protected].

• Apostolic journey of His Holiness Pope Francis to Ireland on the occasion of the World Meeting of Families in Dublin 25-26 August 2018

Saturday 25 August 2018
ROMA-DUBLIN
08:15 Departure by plane from Rome/Fiumicino for Dublin
10:30 Arrival at Dublin International Airport
OFFICIAL WELCOME
10:45 Transfer to Áras an Uachtaráin
11:15 Arrival at the Presidential Residence
WELCOME CEREMONY in front of the main entrance of the Residence
11:30 COURTESY VISIT TO THE PRESIDENT in the Presidential Residence
12:00 Transfer to Dublin Castle
12:10 Arrival at Dublin Castle
MEETING WITH AUTHORITIES, CIVIL SOCIETY AND DIPLOMATIC CORPS in Dublin Castle Speech of the Holy Father
15:30 Arrival at St Mary’s Pro-Cathedral
VISIT to the CATHEDRAL Greeting of the Holy Father
16:15 Transfer to the Day Centre of the Capuchin Fathers
16:30 PRIVATE VISIT to the DAY CENTRE FOR HOMELESS FAMILIES of the CAPUCHIN FATHERS
19:30 Arrival at Croke Park Stadium
19:45 FEAST OF FAMILIES in Croke Park Stadium Speech of the Holy Father

Sunday 26 August 2018
DUBLINO-KNOCK-DUBLINO-ROMA
08:40 Departure by plane for Knock
09:20 Arrival at the Airport in Knock
Immediate transfer to the Shrine
09:45 Arrival at Knock Shrine
VISIT to the CHAPEL of Knock Shrine
ANGELUS on the square in front of the Shrine Angelus of the Holy Father
10:45 Transfer to the airport in Knock
11:10 Arrival at the airport in Knock
11:15 Departure by plane for Dublin
11:50 Arrival at Dublin International Airport
Lunch with the Papal Delegation
14:30 Arrival at Phoenix Park
15:00 HOLY MASS in Phoenix Park Homily of the Holy Father
MEETING WITH THE BISHOPS in the Convent of the Dominican Sisters Speech of the Holy Father
18:30 Arrival at Dublin International Airport
FAREWELL CEREMONY
18:45 Departure by plane for Roma/Ciampino
23:00 Arrival at the Airport of Roma/Ciampino

• Highlights from the Pastoral Programme for the 9th World Meeting of Families in Dublin from 21 to 24 August 2018

– Of the 200 announced speakers, 91 are lay women, 65 are lay men and 44 are Clergy/Religious.
– The largest group are couples. This a lay-led, couples-led programme.
– It is an international programme, with speakers from all five main continents of the world.
– Amoris Laetitia is the guiding theme of all three days of the Pastoral Congress and of all the topics chosen.
– This is the first WMOF to have a specific workshop on Safeguarding.
– Other themes include:
o The future of marriage preparation in Parishes.
o Finding new ways of the joy of commitment and sacramental marriage in today’s culture.
o The challenges of handing on faith in the home today.
o Finding new language to affirm the joy, beauty and goodness of sexual love within marriage.
o The importance of solidarity between the generations in family.
o Exploring the impact of technology on the family.
o Exploring the key role of the family in caring for ‘our common home’, the earth.
o Looking at the relationship between business and the family.
o Exploring the relationship between sport and the family.
o What does Pope Francis mean by the ‘Throwaway Culture?’ (Address by Cardinal Tagle).
o The link between the family and the forthcoming Synod on Vocational Discernment.
o Looking at key challenges faced by many families today, including:
 Homelessness
 Addiction
 Domestic Violence
 Displacement as Migrants and Refugees.
 Disability.
 Separation and Divorce.
o Exploring how Parishes can support those families with members who identify as LGBTI+ (presentation by James Martin SJ)
o The joy of belonging to a family reflect in contemporary interest in our genealogies.
o The vocation of fatherhood in today’s world.
o There will be fun cookery demonstrations with faith and family themes.

Some additional speakers/panellists will be announced over coming weeks, particularly in the area of technology and the family and the family and sport.

– Registrations are going extremely well with almost 30,000 already registered. This is the largest of any WMOF.
– Of these almost 6,000 are 18 years old and under. The largest of any WMOF and the reason for an enhanced Teen & Children’s programme.
– More than a quarter are couples aged from 29-40. Young families are clearly registering for the event.
– Over 11,000 of those registered are international. The largest of any WMOF. 103 countries are represented.
– People need to register soon, if they wish to attend the RDS. Organisers may have to close registration in advance of the event because of demand.
– There are already 5,500 volunteers with one day volunteers still needed for the Mass in Phoenix Park.

• Comments of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin on the launch of the programme of the visit of Pope Francis to Ireland on the occasion of the World Meeting of Families

We are here to officially announce the programme of the visit of Pope Francis to Ireland on the occasion of the World Meeting of Families together with the details of the Programme for the Family Pastoral Congress that will be held at the RDS in Dublin on the days before the visit of the Pope.

Today we launch the programme of the final stage of a process that has been underway for over two years here in Ireland and has reached out to parishes throughout the country through the Amoris pastoral programmes,

My hope is that now the World Meeting of Families – the pastoral preparation, the Pastoral Congress in the RDS and the visit of Pope Francis – will open out for families renewed inspiration, hope and healing.

The visit of Pope Francis to the World Meeting of Families in Dublin must not be just a once off event. It comes as the Church in Ireland struggles to find a new place in Irish society and culture – a very different one from the dominant one it held in the past.

Pope Francis is above all a free man. He shows us we can live in a world where faith seems marginal and yet manage to touch hearts and challenge them to reflect on and discern those fundamental values vital for society. What he does is to find ways in which he can win hearts for what the teaching of Jesus involves, not through imposing and judging, but through winning and attracting.

Pope Francis said to me that he considers the World Meeting of Families as a gift to the Irish Church. His idea, however, is not that we will receive a gift to be placed in a glass-case for ourselves. He looks on the World Meeting of Families as a gift that the Irish Church can then share with others.

Family is about love, no matter how imperfect and failing: it is about a love that enriches lives. I am thinking about the love of spouses, the love of parents for children, the goodness with which families enrich communities. We have great families who would never think of themselves as great: they simply do their best. Where would any of us be without the love and generosity we received from our parents?

I wish to sincerely thank all those in the Church in Ireland and the public authorities all of whom, in their own areas of competence, have made an enormous contribution to ensure that as many people who wish to can take part in the events.

I encourage families to take part in the global event that is World Meeting of Families. I encourage families to take this unique opportunity to see Pope Francis where they can. All are welcome.

• Archbishop Michael Neary welcomes the announcement that His Holiness, Pope Francis will visit the Shrine of Our Lady of Knock during the World Meeting of Families 2018

Pope Francis has gifted the World Meeting of Families 2018 to Dublin. From the moment of the announcement of the Holy Father’s decision, the work of preparation began, and, thank God, it continues to gain momentum day by day, not only in Dublin but in every part of Ireland, and I welcome the official announcement from the Holy See this morning

The Church in Ireland is delighted and honoured that Pope Francis will attend the World Meeting of Families in person.

When accompanying the Irish Bishops in their visit to the Holy Father in January 2017, I availed of the opportunity to invite the Pope, in the event of his being able to visit Ireland for the World Meeting of Families, to also make a pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Knock, Queen of Ireland which is located within the territory of the Archdiocese of Tuam.

I warmly welcome the announcement this morning of a papal visit to Knock which is a very appropriate link with the World Meeting of Families which takes place in Dublin on 25 and 26 August.

Pope Francis will arrive at Knock Shrine at 9.45am on Sunday, August 26 where he will circuit in the pope mobile and pray the Angelus at the Apparition Chapel before departing from Knock Shrine at 11.15am.

One of the most beautiful sights at Knock is to see families, sometimes the three generations praying and enjoying the peace and tranquillity of the Shrine. The Apparition at Knock was family apparition incorporating Our Lady, Saint Joseph, Jesus as the Lamb of God, and John as representing the extended family.

The Holy Father’s personal devotion to Mary, the Mother of God, is well known, and his visits to the Basilica of Saint Mary Major before and after his various apostolic journeys are powerfully inspirational. It seems to me that an opportunity to visit Knock is something the Holy Father personally desires. It will be the second time a Pope visits Knock Shrine following the historic visit of Saint Pope John Paul II on 30 September 1979 to mark centenary of the Apparition.

Knock was considered to be a most suitable venue for the official launch, on 21 August 2017, of the unveiling of the World Meeting of Families icon, and the one-year countdown to the beginning of the World Meeting in Dublin in August 2018.

Knock Shrine has the capacity to continue the momentum generated by the World Meeting of Families, and it is a place where the fruits of the World Meeting will be nourished and blossom long after the World Meeting has concluded.
ENDS
Notes for Editors

• Archbishop Michael Neary, Archbishop of Tuam, is the custodian of the Marian Shrine at Knock. The story of Knock began on the 21 August 1879 when Our Lady, Saint Joseph and Saint John the Evangelist appeared at the south gable of Knock Parish Church. This miraculous apparition was witnessed by fifteen people, young and old. Knock is an internationally recognised Marian Shrine and was visited by Saint Pope John Paul II as part of his 1979 apostolic pilgrimage to Ireland. Please see: knockshrine.ie.

For media contact
– Brenda Drumm, Media and Communications Manager, World Meeting of Families +353 (0) 87 310 4444. See also www.worldmeeting2018.ie
– Annette O’Donnell, Director of Communications, Archdiocese of Dublin +353 (0) 87 814 3462
– Catholic Communications Office, Maynooth: Martin Long +353 (0) 86 172 7678 and Katie Crosby +353 (0) 86 862 3298

“Being Missionary Disciples” Homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin for the Armagh diocesan pilgrimage to the National Marian Shrine in Knock on 27 May 2018

Homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin for the Armagh diocesan pilgrimage to the National Marian Shrine in Knock on 27 May 2018.

Everyone has their favourite Gospel passages, and the Gospel story we have just heard for Trinity Sunday is one of mine.

It’s the big ‘finale’ to Matthews Gospel: Go make disciples; I am with you always! You almost expect to see the credits rolling and hear the orchestra crescendo to THE END, but, of course it is not the end; it is just the beginning of the life of the Church. Jesus did not say: it is all over now, you can go back to your fishing, or farming or whatever. The disciples were given a mandate – a missionary mandate – to go out to the whole world and proclaim the joy of the Gospel. Go make disciples of all nations! To them it must have seemed a ‘mission impossible’! Acts of the Apostles tells us they just stood there, staring transfixed, as a cloud took him from their sight. But then, two men in white appeared and said to them: Men of Galilee why are you standing there gazing into the sky? – as if to say: ‘This is your time, get on with it! There is work to be done!’

And so, they courageously went out – confidently witnessing to the Risen Lord. Some of them would be welcomed; others would be ridiculed, rejected and persecuted for the faith. But everywhere they went, they carried a beacon of hope, the promise of mercy and forgiveness, and the conviction that friendship with Jesus, the Risen Lord can transform your life and give you a reason for living and a reason for hoping in the midst of so much darkness and despair.

Two thousand years later, the missionary mandate given by Jesus to His followers remains just as important. As baptised Christians we too are called to be witnesses; we are strengthened by the Holy Spirit to spread the Gospel of Christ – in season and out of season – and to renew the face of the earth.

For us too, it can sometimes seem a ‘mission impossible’. Increasingly nowadays, faithful believers find themselves ‘swimming against the tide’, their voices often drowned out, or contradicted by the noise and distractions of popular culture.

Look more closely at the Great Commission of Jesus to His disciples:

Firstly, notice that Jesus was speaking with “all the authority of heaven and of earth”- and he was commissioning his closest friends to continue his work on earth.

Secondly, the task Jesus set before His missionary disciples was to reach beyond the comfort zones of their own friends, families, neighbourhoods, and those who simply agreed with them. Go out to the whole world; bring the Good News to all the nations.

Thirdly, they were asked to baptise in the name of the Holy Trinity, and under the Sign of the Cross – Father, Son and Holy Spirit. They could expect suffering to overshadow their ministry, but they would not be alone; he would be with them always.

Fourthly, they were to teach people to observe all the commands He had given them – not to pick and choose. At times this would mean saying No to the world, turning away from sin and evil, and committing fully to the Gospel. As Jesus had previously said: if you love me, keep my commandments.

Pope Francis is convinced that Christians today are living in a new time of mission for the Church. He challenges us to put everything we do, as Church, into a new key – a ‘missionary key’.

‘I dream of a missionary option, that is, a missionary impulse capable of transforming everything, so that the Church’s customs, ways of doing things … can be suitably channelled for the evangelisation of today’s world rather than for her self-preservation’ (Pope Francis’ first Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium The Joy of the Gospel, 27). And again the Holy Father writes:

‘Pastoral ministry in a missionary key seeks to abandon the complacent attitude that says: ‘We have always done it this way’. It invites everyone to be bold and creative in the task of evangelisation (Evangelii Gaudium, 33).

The result of Friday’s referendum on the Eighth Amendment confirms that we are living in a new time and a changed culture for Ireland. For the Church it is indeed a missionary time, a time for new evangelisation.

During the referendum campaign the Church sought to proclaim the Gospel of Life – that every human life is a precious gift from God – including the lives of all mothers and their unborn children. Choose Life, we said. Every human life is beautiful, every human life is sacred, every human life is precious. This remains true after the referendum result. The right to life is not given to us by the Constitution of Ireland or by any law. All human beings have it ‘as of right’, whether we are wealthy or poor, healthy or sick.

Like many others who advocated a NO vote in the referendum, I am deeply saddened that we appear to have obliterated the right to life of all unborn children from our constitution and that this country is now on the brink of legislating for a liberal abortion regime.

I am very concerned about the implications for society of interfering with the fundamental principle that the value of all human life is equal and that all human beings, born and unborn, have inherent worth and dignity. At a time when scientific and medical evidence is clearer than ever about the beginning of life, we have effectively decided that some human lives – in this case the lives of the unborn – are less significant and deserving of protection than others.

We have elevated the right to personal choice above the fundamental right to life itself.

In January I called upon Catholics to be “missionaries for life” in their families and communities. As a bishop I have been overwhelmed by the witness of so many people who made such a huge effort to remind us that in pregnancy we are dealing with two lives – both in need of love, respect and protection. In particular I have been humbled by the witness of lay women and men, many of them mothers and fathers themselves, who became the voice for voiceless unborn children. The pro-life cause in Ireland is now more important than ever as we endeavour to touch the hearts of women who will continue to face crisis in their pregnancy and find new ways of supporting them and their unborn children. The increased prevalence of violent death on our streets reminds us that striving to build a culture of life in Ireland is more relevant and pressing than ever.

We are told that people voted Yes for many reasons. Like many others I too found myself challenged by the personal stories of so many women in Ireland both on the Yes and the No sides. I have realised how little I know personally about the pressures these women can be under and how so many of them feel isolated, neglected and alone in their distress. Tragic, and sometimes desperate, situations like these will not go away just because, as is now expected, abortion is made widely available in Ireland. The question remains: How can we channel the obvious care and concern of so many good people in Ireland to genuinely and practically help vulnerable women who feel that the only way out of crisis is to end the life of their unborn child? How can we together show genuine “compassion” in the literal sense of “suffering with” women in their vulnerability? What new supports, apart from the option of abortion, will be in place for mothers and fathers at the point of crisis? And will our compassion extend to the life of the unborn child? These questions remain for the whole of Irish society, including the Church.

At a time like this it is easy for faithful Catholics to become despondent. However there is no point in standing transfixed, like the early apostles gazing into the sky, hoping this will all go away. This is our time for living. This is our time for believing. This is our time for mission and teaching the truth of the Gospel.

In the midst of so much disappointment for those who voted No to repealing the Eighth, it remains as important as ever to affirm the sanctity of all human life, and that the direct and intentional taking of the life of any innocent human being is always gravely wrong. Sadly in many countries of the world the Church must proclaim this Gospel of Life in the context of abortion being widely available, and where people are increasingly becoming desensitised to the value of every human life.

To continue to proclaim this truth, in love, may sometimes seem like a ‘mission impossible’, but Pope Francis makes it clear in his Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et Exsultate – published in April, on holiness in today’s world – that this is not optional for Catholics: “Our defence of the innocent unborn … needs to be clear, firm and passionate, for at stake is the dignity of a human life, which is always sacred and demanding of love for each person, regardless of his or her stage of development”.

Thankfully we are not alone. In today’s Gospel story the Lord Jesus Himself assured His missionary disciples: Know that I am with you always, yes to the end of time. Amen.

ENDS

For media contact: Catholic Communications Office Maynooth: Martin Long 00353 (0) 86 172 7678
◦Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. This homily was delivered in Our Lady’s Basilica, Knock, Co Mayo in the Archdiocese of Tuam, at 3.00pm Mass to celebrate the annual pilgrimage of the Archdiocese of Armagh to the National Marian Shrine.

Love Them Both – a pastoral message from Archbishop Eamon Martin as the 25 May Referendum approaches

19. May, 2018

Dear brothers and sisters,

When I wrote to you in January about protecting the Eighth Amendment, I invited you to spread the word about the precious gift of life from the first moment of conception until the moment of natural death. I encouraged you to be “missionaries for the cause of life”.

Since then the Supreme Court has clarified that if the Eighth Amendment is repealed, unborn children in Ireland will have absolutely no constitutional rights. A vote to repeal the Eighth Amendment on 25 May would therefore pave the way for a very liberal abortion regime in Ireland, including completely unrestricted access to abortion during the first three months of pregnancy.

What a departure this is from the Eighth Amendment where the equality of life of a mother and her unborn baby is written into our Constitution. Women’s lives are precious, to be loved, valued and protected. Their babies’ lives are precious, to be loved, valued and protected. Both lives deserve protection from the tragedy and irreversible decision of abortion.

To be against abortion is not simply “a Catholic thing”. The innate dignity of every human life is a value for the whole of society – for people of all faiths and none. It is rooted in reason as well as in faith. To take away an innocent human life can never be simply a matter of personal choice.

In recent months we have been reminded about the miracle of life in the womb – how your heart started beating from around week five, or your unique fingerprint began to form only ten to twelve weeks after conception. That little unborn child who moves her fingers or kicks around in the ultrasound scan is the same baby that will be born and grow further through infancy to adolescence to adulthood to old age – all that is needed for that life to grow, is time, nourishment, love, and a chance to survive.

When you go inside the voting booth on 25 May, pause and think of two lives – the life of the mother and the life of her baby – two hearts beating; two lives which are both precious and deserving of compassion and protection. Love them both. Pray for both. Choose Life for them both. Say NO to repealing the Eighth Amendment and then do everything you can to ensure that our country will always provide the best possible care and support for all mothers and their unborn children.

ENDS
◦Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland.

For media contact: Catholic Communications Office Maynooth: Martin Long 00353 (0) 86 172 7678 and Katie Crosby 00353 (0) 86 862 3298

Annual Day for Religious Education Teachers

This year our annual Religious Education Teacher Community will meet on Tuesday 19th June in St John the Baptist College, Drumcree, Portadown.  This Gathering has proved to be very successful in helping to meet the personal, spiritual and professional needs of teachers of Religious Education in our Archdiocese.  It is also invaluable as it provides an opportunity for RE teachers to build networks of support and exchange ideas and resources.  Being part of a community helps build a strong sense of support, belonging and identity.  Find below programme and booking form. 

RE Community Day Poster 2018

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The Pope John Paul II Award

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Communicating the Family – towards the World Meeting of Families 2018 in Dublin, Ireland

Address by Archbishop Eamon Martin at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, Rome

 

“Any strategy for communicating the family ought to begin with the conviction that it is primarily families who minister to other families, married couples who minister to other married couples” – Archbishop Martin

Introduction
Irish eyes were smiling on the 26 September 2015 when Pope Francis announced that Dublin would host the ninth World Meeting of the Families in 2018.  They smiled all over again, last month, when it was confirmed that Pope Francis himself will attend the event.  My brother Archbishop, Diarmuid Martin of Dublin, tells us that it was Pope Francis himself who chose to bring this great gathering of the universal church to Ireland.  Despite challenging times for the Church in Ireland in recent years, family remains very important in the psyche of the Irish people.  Family in Ireland is all about ‘connection’– family connects us to a home, to ‘ár muintir féin’ (as we say in the Irish language) – to the people who are our flesh and blood.  Family also links us to a community, a parish, a county, to a history and culture, a language and tradition, our past, present and future.  For many people in Ireland family also connects them to faith and values, to baptism and the community of believers.

The huge Irish diaspora across the world from the United States, to Australia, Britain and beyond, has been sharing our joy at hosting WMOF2018.  Irish connections, of course, extend also to other distant continents where the Irish missionary movements carried the joy of the Gospel.  The organising team of WMOF2018 is already delighted at the many thousands of people from overseas who have registered to join us in Dublin next August – we hope to offer you all, as we say in Ireland ‘céad míle fáilte’ – one hundred thousand welcomes.

The theme for the ninth World Meeting of the Families in Dublin is: The Gospel of the Family – Joy for the World!  The communication of this joy-filled message about family has its roots in Amoris Laetitia.  This is the first World Meeting of the Families since the conclusion of the 2014-2015 Synodal process and the publication of Pope Francis’ exhortation on ‘The Joy of Love’.  The World Meeting will therefore be an invaluable opportunity for families of the world to come together to reflect on key aspects of Amoris Laetitia.  They will do so with the conviction that the Church’s teaching on the family is not a ‘problem to be solved’, but is a gift for the world – a message that is positive, liberating, and humanising!

Communicating a Clear, Positive and Challenging Vision of Family

The ‘Gospel of the Family’
The World Meeting will seek to communicate and distil for our times the beautiful and prophetic vision of God’s plan for marriage and the family which was celebrated at the Synods and enunciated so positively in Amoris Laetitia.  This so-called ‘Gospel of the Family’ has its origins in ‘the creation of humanity in the image of God who is love and who calls man and woman to love according to his own likeness’ (Relatio Synodi, 35).

Amoris Laetitia traces the Gospel of the Family from Sacred Scripture to Church tradition and the teachings of the magisterium.  I particularly like the way Pope Francis reminds us how God chose to save us by sending his Son into the world in a human family which was open to receive him in love.

Facing Cultural Challenges
We believe that the Church’s proclamation of the family – founded on a faithful loving relationship between a man and a woman which is open to the gift of children who are the fruit of that love – is Good News for society and the world.  There is no getting away, however, from the fact that communicating the family in this way can appear increasingly counter-cultural in many parts of the world, including Ireland.  This has been accelerated by the departure in public discourse from the philosophical and anthropological underpinning of marriage and the family in natural law and the erosion of social supports for traditional marriage in the form of constitutional guarantee and positive legislation.

How difficult it must be for young people preparing for marriage to hear the still, small voice of faith amidst all the contradictory messages presented to them by the secular world.  They are easily drawn towards an overly emotional and romantic concept of love and marriage that, ‘can be constructed and modified at will’ (Evangelii Gaudium, The Joy of the Gospel, 66).

There is also considerable pressure on young people to resist becoming ‘tied down’ by commitments, relationships or attachments – to delay or avoid lifelong commitments, including marriage and having children for as long as possible.  Employers will often expect them to be flexible, movable, able to travel and work long, unsocial hours.  On the one hand they are surrounded by a contraceptive, anti-birth mentality with its increasing indifference to abortion, whilst on the other they are offered a technocratic, commodification of child-bearing which, if necessary, can be accessed independently of any sexual relationship.

Good News for Today
Into this ‘soul-less world’ we have the joy and challenge of communicating a clear and positive vision of family and marriage: the Good News that human life is sacred, that each human being comes from God, who created us, male and female; that we are willed by God who loves each and every one of us; that self-giving love and commitment in the marriage of a man and a woman open to life is not only possible, but is a beautiful and fulfilling gift with the power of God’s grace; that chastity is achievable, healthy and good for our young people; that the giving of oneself to another in marriage for life is special, rewarding and a wonderful symbol of Christ’s forgiving, faithful love for his Church.

For Catholics, the expression: ‘What God joins together’ rings out as an exclamation of hope in the midst of a sometimes shallow and fickle world.  We proclaim the Gospel of the Family because we believe in it, and we also believe that, with the help of God, it is attainable.

Pope Francis put it powerfully when he said: ‘The Church, with a renewed sense of responsibility, continues to propose marriage in its essentials – offspring, good of the couple, unity, indissolubility, sacramentality – not as ideal only for a few – notwithstanding modern models centred on the ephemeral and the transient – but as a reality that, in the grace of Christ, can be experienced by all the baptized faithful’ (to Roman Rota Tribunal, 22 January 2016).

Connecting with the Vocation and Mission of Family

It is one thing to have a joyful message to proclaim and propose – it is another to find effective ways of communicating this message.  If no one is listening, it is difficult to communicate!  For a while I thought that the task of proclaiming the Gospel of the Family in the Church was primarily up to me as a bishop or as a priest, but I have become more and more convinced that the Church’s vision of the family is best communicated by families, and in families, to families.

Evangelisation
At the 2015 Synod on the Family; I learned that the family is not simply the object of ministry and evangelisation, but it is a powerful agent of evangelisation.

As the ‘school of humanity’ and the ‘domestic Church’, it is in the family that values are transmitted, the wisdom of generations is passed on, the choices between right and wrong are evaluated, connections with the past are made, links with other families are made and upheld. It is in the family that we first are loved and where we first learn how to love.  It is in the family that we discover who we are, where we have come from, our inter-generational relationships, our links with a place, with the land and a worshipping community, our rootedness in culture and language.

At the Synod we heard of movements, associations, basic Christian communities and many other networks which guide and nourish the marriage and family ‘vocation’.  The World Meeting in Dublin will give us another opportunity to celebrate, communicate and share these initiatives with others.  Any strategy for communicating the family ought to begin with the conviction that it is primarily families who minister to other families, married couples who minister to other married couples.

Take for example the importance of prayer in, and for, the family.  In seeking to provide prayer guidance and support for families the best place to look is to other families!  Family spirituality is best facilitated by family associations, groups and movements which have been established by and for families.  As a priest and bishop I have come to know and admire the wonderful work of new evangelisation that is carried out in Ireland by, for example, communities of families who are following the neo-catechumenal way of renewal and catechesis, the witness of the Syro-Malabar community to the importance of family catechesis of children and young people, the enthusiasm of the Catholic Grandparents Association, Retrouvaille, ACCORD, Marriage Encounter, Couples for Christ, and many others.

Points of Contact and Communication Resources
It is very helpful for the Church to consider what are her points of contact with the daily reality of family life, to consider where and when we connect with families – in addition, of course, to the many contacts we have with individuals as members of families.  I recently asked the priests and pastoral workers of my diocese to identify some of the points of contact or interaction between the Church and families.

Preparation and celebration of the sacraments of baptism, First Holy Communion, First Confession and Confirmation were all mentioned as providing opportunities for contact with families, and times to affirm, celebrate and teach the Church’s vision about the family – Marriage preparation and the ceremony of marriage are other obvious examples.  In Ireland customs and rituals surrounding death remain strong in most communities, including the traditional ‘wake’ where the body of a loved one is brought home before the funeral.  These times, and the funeral Mass itself, are powerful opportunities for the Church to accompany families in grief, touching their lives with the love and mercy of God.  

 

One of the most moving Church gatherings in Ireland is the annual blessing of the graves ceremony, where families gather at the grave of their loved ones for Mass or a blessing service – often with family members travelling long distances home for the occasion.  This is another grace-filled opportunity for the Church to teach and communicate the vision of love in family life.

The team working on World Meeting of Families has been preparing resources to support these moments of grace, including an especially composed prayer and hymn which is being used extensively throughout the parishes of Ireland and elsewhere.

A menu of practical parish initiatives is offered for popular moments like New Year’s Day, Saint Patrick’s Day and even on Saint Valentine’s Day to help communicate key messages from The Joy of Love.  These are supported by a range of online resources including animations, studio discussions and interviews.

Last Christmas tens of thousands of copies of the commissioned Icon of the Holy Family were distributed to all parishes for display in their homes and church buildings. The icon-card includes the official WMOF prayer.

A commemorative card is also available for each child baptised and each couple getting married in the year leading up to the World Meeting of Families 2018.

The Amoris cube is a flat-packed toy with the six sides of the foam cube displaying simple messages from The Joy of Love to provoke conversation and practice in families.

All our Confirmation candidates are being challenged this year to show acts of kindness to their family, friends and community.  Young people are encouraged to log their acts of kindness online as we are aiming to meet the target of one hundred thousand acts of kindness to present to the Holy Father when he visits in August.

Our development agency, Trócaire, is calling upon parishes to take on the Romero Award as part of their preparations for the World Meeting of Families.  Inspired by Blessed Óscar Romero and his concern for the poor and oppressed, the Romero Award is awarded to those families and others who can show how they have highlighted some form of injustice in our world, thereby inspiring families and communities to live more justly.

This Easter time we are encouraging families to rekindle the practice of blessing their homes.  I remember well as a young boy bringing home the ‘Easter water’ from a big barrel outside our parish Church.  This water, in which the Paschal Candle had been dipped at the Easter Vigil, was sprinkled by our parents and grandparents to ask God’s protection and ward off evil, and so to bless family members and homes, outbuildings, cars and tractors, and of course the graves of our loved ones.

During May we will be promoting the age-old custom of the ‘May Altar’ to Our Lady in the homes and schools of Ireland and at Pentecost we are encouraging parishes to conduct a parish audit of how the parish is engaging with the diversity of family life in its midst.  It invites the parish to come up with ideas on how to be more welcoming, supportive and inclusive of families in different situations.

In Amoris Laetia Pope Francis expresses his hope that the faithful will study his exhortation carefully and patiently.  The Amoris: Let’s Talk Family! Let’s Be Family! programme includes a six-session Parish Conversation exploring some of the key messages in the papal publications of Amoris Laetitia, Evangelii Gaudium, and Laudato Si in an accessible and practical way using ICT, video and audio messages and testimonies.  Local volunteers have been trained to deliver the Amoris programme and all these resources are available online at www.amoris.ie<http://www.amoris.ie> or www.worldmeeting2018.ie<http://www.worldmeeting2018.ie>.

Pastoral Challenges – Discernment and Accompaniment
At the Synod on the Family in 2015 it was moving for me to hear the bishops as shepherds of the Church describing the hopes and anxieties that face their flocks – the families of the world.  We heard passionate, first-hand accounts of forced migration, persecution and war; we were shocked by the extent of human trafficking and the exploitation and commodification of women and children.  We heard about ‘wombs for hire’, child soldiers, forced prostitution and the exploitation of street children in large cities.  We shuddered at the prevalence of abuse and domestic violence.  We considered the challenges presented in some cultures by polygamy, arranged marriages, mixed and inter-faith marriages.  We spoke about the pressures on family life from individualism and isolation and the spread of abortion, euthanasia and gender ideology.  We faced the reality that in many countries the majority of marriages take place without any reference to faith or to God.  At the same time, however, we shared our tremendous admiration and gratitude for the many families who do their best in complex situations to persevere, to grow in love and to generously witness to commitment, forgiveness, and lifelong faithfulness.

The overwhelming sense among the bishops at the Synods was a desire to be with all families, and especially with those whose homes are visited by tragedy or violence and those who, for whatever reason, have experienced breakdown in their relationships and may feel excluded from the Church.  The Synods and Amoris Laetitia were clear that we need to be mindful of those who have begun new relationships and unions, and find sincere and truthful ways of welcoming and including them in the life and worshipping community of the Church.

What do we do in these situations?  Do we sit outside and judge?  Or do we accompany all our people, presenting the truth and joy of the Gospel of the Family in a loving, charitable way?  The World Meeting of Families will provide another opportunity for us to propose forms of pastoral discernment and accompaniment in these and other difficult situations, and a ministry of care to those whose marriage relationships have broken down, conscious that the Christian message of truth and mercy converges in Christ.

As the Bishops at the 2015 Synod concluded: “we have a responsibility to help all God’s people find God’s plan for them, knowing that no one is excluded from God’s love and that all are included in the Church’s pastoral activity” (see Relatio Synodi, 34).

WMOF2018 in Ireland – a Changed Context

Almost forty years on from the last papal visit to Ireland in 1979, the Church now seeks to communicate its vision of family in an entirely different context.  The role of religion and faith in Irish society, north and south, has been hugely impacted by secularisation and is evidenced by a steady decline in Church attendance and in vocations to the priesthood and religious life.  Like other parts of Europe and the Western world, more people in Ireland are now living their lives without reference to God or to religious belief.

We are steadily moving from a society in which it was virtually impossible not to believe in God, to one in which faith is considered by many to be simply one human possibility among others.  There are ongoing calls from some quarters for the removal of the Church’s perceived remaining influence in schools, healthcare and public policy making.

In the aftermath of child abuse scandals and other shameful episodes of the past, we have to be aware, in communicating the family, that there are those who feel they can no longer trust our message, because they have been hurt and betrayed in their families by their experience of Church.  The sins and crimes of sexual abuse in the Church have not only had tragic consequences in the lives of victims and their families, but have also, as Pope Benedict XVI put it in his Pastoral Letter to the Faithful of Irelandin 2010, ‘obscured the light of the gospel’.

In this complex and often negative environment we are challenged to learn new ways of communicating our sincerely held perspectives about family and other matters.  We realise that we must do so now alongside those of other faiths and none, and thereby continue to encourage conversations at a national level on the challenges and opportunities in family life.

The Report of the President of Ireland’s ‘Ethics Initiative’, issued in February 2016, identified that what Irish society needs is a debate on what ethical values and principles we want to uphold and strengthen; we need to have a conversation(s) on our understanding of what constitutes a ‘good life’ or a ‘flourishing life’ not just for individuals but also for communities (On the Importance of Ethics, A Report on the President of Ireland’s Ethics Initiative, Section 4, ‘Broader Challenges for Society’, Aras an Uachtaráin, February 2016)

In entering this kind of dialogue, we in the Church must be cautious about thinking that people who disagree with us are necessarily hostile.  Bishop Donal Murray writes:  “Civilised discussion should begin from the presumption that all concerned are honestly seeking the truth … We should remain open to recognising the elements of truth that are present in the convictions of someone we disagree with … Honest convictions are the fruit of a search for truth and for God, the search in which those on both sides of the argument are involved” (Donal Murray, In a Landscape Redrawn pp 65-66, Veritas 2017).

The French bishops recently raised similar points: “Many of our fellow citizens, some out of confusion, wonder: who am I really?  What do I believe in?  What are the values which made me and matter to me?  Where do they come from?”  (Dans un monde qui change retrouver le sens politique, Bishops Conference of France (CEF) October 2016, translation international.la-croix.com<http://international.la-croix.com).

What is interesting about the French bishops’ statement is that they speak not only as people of faith, but also as fellow French citizens, pastorally accompanying their troubled people with empathy and concern.  The bishops caution against any aspiring to be a “Church of the pure, a counterculture removed from society, posing as a judge from above”.

The engagement of people of faith together with all people of goodwill in conversations about family, marriage and other critical life matters is to be encouraged and welcomed.  Drawing upon its rich tradition of social teaching, the Catholic Church will sometimes bring uncomfortable questions into such a dialogue.  However, in an atmosphere of respectful encounter, it is possible for two-way, critical interaction and conversations to take place between religious traditions and the broader culture, including constructive critiques of social, political, legal, and economic practices.

For example, taking inspiration from the powerful 1983 Charter of the Rights of the Family, we might ask: To what extent does public policy support Family and Life, freedom of education and conscience, a proper work-life balance, which respects the role of mothers and fathers?  What do our economic and social policies say to poorer families, particularly those policies which impact directly on family: the needs of children and the elderly; tackling the proliferation of drugs, alcohol, gambling and other addictive behaviours which can destroy home and family life?  How do welfare policies and benefit programmes support families who are most in need and who are so easily targeted and exploited by loan sharks and other criminal elements?  How can we better assist young people who wish to establish a family, mortgage a home, take out insurance, but who may sometimes be convinced by economic policy to remain single?

Towards a Culture and Language of Engagement
I am convinced that a constructive culture of engagement, rather than a pointless culture war, is the best way to ensure that the voice of faith, communicating the Family, can be heard.  It begins with our conviction that, among the many types of family that are out there, the Catholic Church’s vision of the uniqueness of a faithful and exclusive union between a married man and a woman and their children, is not simply for the privacy of our homes and churches.  The Gospel of the Family is meant for mission.  It is not to be cloistered away from the cut and thrust of public discourse.

Pope Francis has said, “The family deserves special attention by those responsible for the common good, because it is the basic unit of society, which brings strong links of union that underpin human coexistence and, with the generation and education of children, ensure the renewal and the future of society.”  As the Synod final report put it: “A society that neglects the family has lost its access to the future.”

The World Meeting of the Families gives us a privileged opportunity to communicate the Gospel of the Family ad intra, and ad extra, as good for society and good for the Church; in short, a message of Joy for the world!

 

Thank you for listening.

Credo Young Adults Conference

The theme of the conference is “I want you to be happy, always happy in the Lord” (Phil 4:4).  This event will be an opportunity for young adults, aged 20-35, to grow in confidence knowing that they are enough, that God loves them and that their role within the Church is valued. It is our hope that participants will leave the conference enriched, empowered and ready to face the challenges of life with Christ by their side. 

Throughout the day there will be an opportunity to participate in workshops, receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, attend Adoration and explore the grounds. The day will finish with the celebration of Mass followed by social time after.

How to book:

To book your place please visit this link: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/credo-tickets-44095795712. We encourage you to invite your friends to attend the conference with you!

Date: Saturday, 28th April 2018
Time: 10am – 7pm  (Vigil Mass 6:00 p.m.)
Venue: Dromantine Retreat & Conference Centre, Newry
Cost: £10.00 per person (including lunch and refreshments)
Guest Speakers: Irish Dominican Friars