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Homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord

“Our Catholic faith brings with it a responsibility to build a culture of life, where every person is worthy of the very best care and utmost tenderness; this is especially true of the most vulnerable and most defenceless persons … when we meet the Minister and his officials this week, a delegation from the Catholic Church will be making a robust and unapologetic defence of the right to life of both mothers and their terminally ill children during pregnancy” – Archbishop Martin

 

The first news of 2015 included happy stories of Ireland’s new-born children. Little Kian Anthony was born in Dublin’s Rotunda Hospital at four seconds past midnight.  About twenty minutes later, up North in Antrim Area Hospital baby Aoibheann greeted the New Year.  God bless them, their parents and families and all those who have been born so far this year, especially those who are ill or who have birth complications.

 

I welcome you all to this Mass for the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord.  A special welcome to our Baptism Preparation Team and to parents and children from the Cathedral Parish who came for the Sacrament of Baptism during the past year.  No doubt you remember well the moment you first saw and held your baby; their weight, the expression on their little face, the relief that the childbirth was over.  Today marks the end of the Christmas season, which has at its core the miraculous and mysterious birth of an infant at Bethlehem, who was the Son of God.

 

My mother once taught me this prayer for the Christmas season: “Jesus, true Son of God from all eternity, and true son of Mary in the fullness of time – who didst once repose in the hallowed crib in Bethlehem – infuse into our hearts a little of the joys and marvels that were accomplished, so well calculated to inspire.”

 

I imagine that for any mum or dad, there is no more awesome and inspiring sight than to gaze in wonder at your new-born child, this new person which God has placed into your arms to nurture and to love?  Your child is sacred.  Your child is unique.  The other day a friend told me that one of his work colleagues showed them on his mobile phone the ultrasound picture of his first child.  Perhaps you remember an ultrasound scan of your unborn child, and being able to see how your baby was developing in the womb, just as your baby now continues to grow bigger and stronger through your love and care every day.  It is amazing that the baby you saw kicking or smiling or sucking its thumb in the womb, is the very same and precious baby you hold in your arms today – Michaela, Conor, Martin, Olivia – or whatever name you chose for your child in Baptism.  God has written that name forever in the palm of his hand.

 

In deciding to have your child baptised, over the past year or so, you chose to offer your little one the beautiful gift of faith in God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  You are choosing to hand on to them a gift that was given to you by your parents and grandparents.  Please God one day these little infants will, in their turn, hand on the gift of faith to their children and grandchildren.  The gift of friendship with God is one which can inspire and give meaning to their whole lives.  What a wonderful privilege it is, as a parent, to be able to introduce your own son or daughter to your friend, Jesus; to teach a little one about how unique and special they are in God’s eyes, and about how much God loves them.  What a challenge and responsibility it is to teach and explain to your own child the values of the Gospel of Christ, especially nowadays in a world which often promotes attitudes contrary to the Gospel.

 

Of course baptism does not bring some instantaneous change whereby, as if by magic, we suddenly become committed followers of Jesus.  Being Christian involves a lifetime journey of renewing over and over again our commitment and friendship with God.  It is a voyage of discovery, during which we make many choices; we learn every day what it really means to be a follower of Christ.  As we grow older, we deepen through prayer our love and personal friendship with Jesus.  We learn right from wrong.  We become conscious of our sins and failings, but also of God’s boundless mercy and forgiveness when we repent and say sorry.  We learn to change and do better, and to live more sincerely the values of the Gospel which Jesus taught.  And, with the help of God’s grace, we find the strength “to reject Satan and all his works and all his empty promises” and instead to become God’s witnesses in our families, communities and in the world.

 

One value which we should never grow tired of witnessing to, as Catholics, is the value and sacredness of human life itself.  Life is precious from the first moment of conception through to natural death.  Our Catholic faith brings with it a responsibility to build a culture of life, where every person is worthy of the very best care and utmost tenderness; this is especially true of the most vulnerable and most defenceless persons.

 

Knowing how much you have already sacrificed yourselves for the little children here in Saint Patrick’s Cathedral this morning, I take this opportunity to appeal to all Catholics to witness courageously to a culture of life.  This is becoming increasingly important when we are surrounded by what Pope Francis describes as a “throwaway” culture which weighs one life up as more important and worthy of protection than another, and which would even discard the right to life of the most vulnerable.

 

I want to bring to your attention a consultation document [1] from the Minister for Justice in Northern Ireland which  proposes that totally innocent and terminally ill babies in the womb will no longer have an absolute right to life, nor the right to all the care and medical support that we would expect and wish for any child or adult who is terminally ill.

 

Notwithstanding the extraordinary and unprecedented attempt of the consultation document to exclude “pro-life” arguments from the debate, when we meet the Minister and his officials this week, a delegation from the Catholic Church will be making a robust and unapologetic defence of the right to life of both mothers and their terminally ill children during pregnancy and calling for all the love and support that we as a society can give them.  This must include, I believe, the ready availability of quality peri-natal and post-natal hospice care and of counselling for those faced with the trauma and anxiety of having a terminally ill unborn child.

 

With the support of my fellow Bishops, I encourage all those who support a culture of life to respond this week to the consultation process of the Department of Justice and to ask their politicians where they stand on these issues.

 

To conclude, I want to thank you for bringing your infant children here today and I pray God’s blessing on you and on your families as you begin to walk the journey of faith with them.  As parents you are the first teachers of your children in the ways of faith.  As the Baptism ceremony puts it: “may you be the best of teachers, bearing witness to the faith by what you say and do, in Christ Jesus, our Lord.”  Amen.

Youth Ministry vacancy

Provincial Delegate for Youth and Young Adult Ministry – Redemptorists (Ireland)

The Dublin Province of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer (Redemptorists in Ireland – www.redemptorists.ie) is seeking a highly experienced person to coordinate, lead and develop its ministry to young people, while ensuring compliance with the highest standards in Child Safeguarding Practice.

With youth ministry centres throughout Ireland in Belfast, Cork, Esker Co. Galway, St. Clement’s Redemptorist College in Limerick, as well as parishes in Dublin, Dundalk and Belfast, the Redemptorists are one of the largest providers of youth ministry in Ireland.

Reporting directly to the Provincial of the Dublin Province of the Redemptorists, the successful applicant is likely to be qualified in Youth Ministry or a related area and have a number of years experience at a senior level in a youth services area or in ministry.

The position will be based in Dublin, with travel to other Redemptorist locations across Ireland.

A Remuneration Package including benefits will be negotiated with the sucessful candidate.

For a full job description and person specification for this position please contact Fr. Noel Kehoe C.Ss.R. Email: [email protected]

Applications should include a detailed CV and Cover letter and be sent by post to Fr. Noel Kehoe C.Ss.R., Scala Retreat Centre, Castle Road, Blackrock, Cork, Ireland., or by email to [email protected].

Closing Date: Friday 30th January, 2015

Redemptorist YM Delegate – Job Description

Redemptorist Youth Delegate Advertisement

Christmas Day homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin

“This Christmas I am heartened by the news from Stormont that our politicians have made progress in removing some of the stumbling blocks obstructing the path to lasting peace” – Archbishop Martin

A few weeks ago Austrian scouts took a light from one of the oil lamps which burns at the very spot in Manger Square, Bethlehem, where Jesus was born. They passed it along from country to country, from scout troop to scout troop, until last Sunday the Armagh scouts carried the Bethlehem ‘peace light’ here into St Patrick’s Cathedral. For almost thirty years now, scouts have been networking around the world to bring the ‘Bethlehem light’ to as many people as possible. It is a powerful symbol of the gift of peace and goodwill that Christ came to bring on the first Christmas night. Their pilgrimage of hope is all the more poignant because the ‘little town of Bethlehem’ is itself a troubled place today. A huge 30 foot high wall of grey, concrete slabs divides the town; Bethlehem’s ‘dark streets shineth’ with the beam of high-powered security lights.

Long ago the prophet Isaiah wrote of the coming Messiah: ‘The people that walked in darkness has seen a great light; on those who lived in the land of deep shadow a light has shone; you have made their gladness greater, you have made their joy increase’. ‘A son has been born for us’, Isaiah continued, saying that one of the names the child shall be given is: ‘Prince of Peace’.

The message of peace is at the very heart of the Christmas story. Christ is our light. Christ is the Prince of Peace. And in the darkest days of the year, in an often troubled world, we gather to celebrate that our Saviour is born – the Word is made flesh. He is the Light that darkness cannot overpower; he is Heavenly Peace itself.

I pray this Christmas night that the light of Christ will enlighten the homes and streets of Ireland with peace, love, joy and hope. In recent weeks the news has been full of darkness and sadness – we’ve seen the horrific slaughter of innocent children in Pakistan, killings in Australia, the spread of Ebola in Africa, and the on-going conflicts and refugee crisis in the Middle East. Nearer home we’ve heard of burglaries, poverty and homelessness on our streets.

All the more reason to bring the light and joy of Jesus into our world this Christmas Day. Like the scouts, we can be all be bearers of the light and peace of Christ to others- a simple act of kindness, a charitable gift, a visit or a word of gentle encouragement to someone who is sick or lonely; these are ways we can pass on the light of Christ. In all our lives there can be moments of tension and disagreement. Sometimes there is bitterness and separation in families, and this can appear particularly raw or painful at Christmas time. Of course Christmas cannot ‘magic’ away the problems and difficulties of the year. But it can remind us that, even in the darkest days, the light of hope and peace still shines and that, with the help of God’s grace, a brighter future is possible.

The angel said to the shepherds: ‘Do not be afraid, I bring you news of great joy. Today is born for you in the city of David a Saviour who is Christ the Lord’.

This Christmas I am heartened by the news from Stormont that our politicians have made progress in removing some of the stumbling blocks obstructing the path to lasting peace. It is good to see ‘Heads of Agreement’ rather than ‘Headlines of Disagreement’ emerging from the talks. We know there is still much work to be done, but I thank all who have been working hard to achieve and underpin these new steps towards a better future for us all.

It is important to hope and to believe that peace is possible. We all have a part to play in supporting and affirming peace. We must work to ensure that cynicism or negativity do not cause the strands of agreement to unravel. So tonight I thank God for the progress that our politicians have made and I pray that in the New Year they will continue to show courage, leadership and commitment in bringing us further forward.

In the name of Christ, the Prince of Peace, I pray that we will all have the courage to be missionaries of peace and play our part in spreading the light and peace of Christ from heart to heart, from person to person in our homes, communities and world this Christmas.

The Bethlehem Peace Light Prayer

Light of Bethlehem: burn brightly in our hearts this Christmas;
Light of Peace: heal the bitter wounds in our community; show us the path of forgiveness and love;
Light of Joy: fill our homes with happiness – cast out the darkness of conflict or worry;
Light of Comfort: strengthen the sick, the needy, prisoners and all those who cannot be at home on Christmas Day;
Light of Hope: guide our way forward as we begin a New Year;
Light of the World: teach us to love you more and more each day;
Light of Bethlehem: shine in our lives this Christmas and always.
Amen.

Happy Christmas, and may God bless you all. Amen.

Prayer for Year of Consecrated Life

November 2014 – February 2016

Loving God, continue to bless those men and women who have answered your call to serve you in Consecrated Life. You have enriched our world by these people who live the present with passion, so they can help others to realise the beauty and joy of following Christ, and who embrace the future with hope.

May your Holy Spirit breathe new life and vision into your people and may those whom you call to Consecrated Life answer with willing and generous hearts.

We pray as always through Christ our Lord, Amen

 

Diocesan Appointments

Archbishop Eamon has announced the following important appointments in the Archdiocese of Amagh with immediate effect:

 

Fr Eugene Sweeney, PP, Loughgall, has been appointed as Vicar General of the Archdiocese of Armagh;

 

Dean Colum Curry, PP, Dungannon, continues in his appointment as Vicar General of the Archdiocese of Armagh;

 

Fr Christy McElwee (IC) has been appointed as Curate in the parish of Carlingford and Omeath. Fr Christy will be accompanied by Fr Oliver Stansfield (IC) who will reside with him at the Parochial House in Omeath.

Statement by the Catholic Bishops of Northern Ireland on the future of Adoption Services with the Catholic Church

“It is unreasonable for legislators to oblige faith based organisations to act against their fundamental and reasonable religious beliefs in the provision of services that contribute to the common good.”

The Catholic Bishops of Northern Ireland announce, with regret, that the long established relationship between the Catholic Church and the adoption services provider The Family Care Society (NI) will come to an endThe agency has offices in Belfast and Derry:

Our announcement follows the outcome of a judicial review of adoption law in Northern Ireland initiated by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission in 2011. Ruling on the case in October 2012 the High Court determined that couples in Northern Ireland who are not married, those in civil partnerships, and same-sex couples could, for the first time, apply to adopt. This judgement was subsequently upheld by the Court of Appeal in June 2013. An application by the Department of Health to the UK Supreme Court seeking leave to appeal the Court of Appeal judgement was turned down in December 2013. As a result the Family Care Society is now legally obliged to receive and process applications in accordance with the new and wider interpretation of adoption law established by the High Court decision.

Regrettably, this development leaves us in the same position as that faced by the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales some years ago when, given the legal obligation to apply policies that are contrary to Catholic teaching and ethos, they were left with no option but to disengage from the adoption agencies they had founded and with which they had a long and cherished link. Since the provision of adoption services in Northern Ireland now also involves acting against the Church’s teaching and ethos, we too have no option but to end the long established relationship between the Church and The Family Care Society (NI).

We believe equality would be best served by support for a diversity of adoption providers, with reasonable accommodation in law for those adoptive parents who value the support of an agency with a particular religious ethos. We lament the fact that the Family Care Society (NI)is no longer free to provide adoption services consistent with a Catholic ethos, valued by so many adoptive parents over the years. The law now makes it impossible for this agency to continue with the support it has enjoyed up to now from the Church.

We are concerned that many Christians and others will see this development as a further erosion of their fundamental right to exercise freedom of conscience and religion in the public square. Reasonable accommodation of religious conscience in public policy and legislation ought to be the very hallmark of an authentically diverse, equal and pluralist society. It is unreasonable for legislators to oblige faith based organisations to act against their fundamental and reasonable religious beliefs in the provision of services that contribute to the common good. Religious freedom cannot be restricted to matters of private thought or worship. Pope Francis has spoken about a “false concept of tolerance” that “ends in persecuting those who defend the truth… and its ethical consequences”(1).  Many Christians and others believe the pendulum has swung too far, and that a calm, rational debate about rebalancing the rights of citizens in terms of greater respect for freedom of conscience and religion is urgently needed. We support the call for such a debate.

In conclusion, we wish to commend the professionalism and dedication of the staff of The Family Care Society and to thank them for their immense contribution to the good of children and society as the largest specialist adoption agency in Northern Ireland. We will continue to support the Family Care Society over the coming months as its Board decides how to respond to the new legal situation, on the understanding that Church funds will be used only for purposes consistent with the Church’s doctrine and ethos.

  • Address of Pope Francis to the Conference on ‘International Religious Freedom and the Global Clash of Values’, 20 June 2014.

Notes to Editors

  • The Family Care Society (NI) was formed in 1998 from The Catholic Family Care Society (NI)  established in 1989 by the Northern Catholic Bishops to provide Adoption and Child Care Services formerly carried out by the Sisters of Nazareth Adoption Society, Derry and the Down and Connor Family Welfare Society, Belfast, both of which operated in Northern Ireland since 1921.
  • The Society has offices in the Derry Diocesan Pastoral Centre, Bishop Street, Derry and the Down and Connor Good Shepherd Centre, Ormeau Road, Belfast. The Society regularly promotes its services through Catholic parishes across Northern Ireland.                                                

For media contact: Catholic Communications Office Maynooth: Martin Long 00353 (0) 86 172 7678 and Brenda Drumm 00353 (0) 87 310 4444

The meaning of Marriage

At a media conference on 3 December 2014 at Columba Centre, Saint Patrick’s College, Maynooth, Bishop Liam MacDaid, chairman of the Council for Marriage and Family, along with Bishop Kevin Doran, Bishop of Elphin, officially launched the pastoral statement The Meaning of Marriage on behalf of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference. Click below for audio from the media conference. Click here for the remarks of Bishop Liam MacDaid and Bishop Kevin Doran at the media conference.

 

 

The pastoral statement advises the faithful that “to redefine the nature of marriage would be to undermine it as the fundamental building block of our society.  The Church seeks with others to reaffirm … that marriage should be reserved for the unique and complementary relationship between a woman and a man from which the generation and upbringing of children is uniquely possible.”

Bishops encourage everyone to read The Meaning of Marriage which is currently being distributed to over 1,300 parishes throughout the island.

Below please find links to a pdf version of The Meaning of Marriage in English and Irish, a word version and prayers for marriage and the family:

Prayers for Marriage and Family

God’s Plan for Our Marriage and Family

As we answer God’s call
in our vocation
in the Sacrament of Marriage
to follow Christ and to serve
the kingdom of God in our married life,
we ask, in and through the concreteness of
events, problems, difficulties and circumstances
of everyday life, that God will come to us,
guiding us and enlightening us as we share
Christ’s love with one another, in our family life,
at work, in our neighbourhood, in our
contributions to society
and in the life and worship of our parish.

AMEN

Inspired by John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio (51),
from The Family Prayer Book

Pope Francis’ Prayer to the Holy Family 

Jesus, Mary and Joseph,
in you we contemplate
the splendor of true love,
to you we turn with trust.

Holy Family of Nazareth,
grant that our families too
may be places of communion and prayer,
authentic schools of the Gospel
and small domestic Churches.

Holy Family of Nazareth,
may families never again
experience violence, rejection and division:
may all who have been hurt or scandalized
find ready comfort and healing.

Holy Family of Nazareth,
may the approaching Synod of Bishops
make us once more mindful
of the sacredness and inviolability of the family,
and its beauty in God’s plan.

Jesus, Mary and Joseph,
graciously hear our prayer.

AMEN

Pope Francis provided the prayer for the Synod of Bishops on the Family in his Angelus address on the Feast of the Holy Family 29 December 2013.

ADYC celebrates successful young adult event

On Friday 28th November, over 50 young adults from across the diocese gathered in Newry Conference and Banqueting Centre hosted by ADYC and accompanied by Archbishop Eamon.  The idea was born from an ADYC meeting with Archbishop Eamon, there was discussion around the development of young adults and how the commission would gather 20 – 35 years olds to have a listening exercise.  The evening was a sharing element to see what young Catholics want from their faith, and as a youth commission try to make these ideas a reality.

Archbishop Eamon opened the evening sharing his vision for young adults and the importance they can play in our Church.  The evening continued with a series of workshops that was designed by the youth commission to actually see the vision of the young adults and how this may be developed.

The evening ended with Archbishop Eamon sharing his thoughts from the workshops.  later he tweeted that he found the whole experience “Stimulating”. He encouraged all young adults that they all have a role to play and our Church needs them. There was an opportunity for the young adults to ask the Archbishop some questions they may have and we concluded together with prayer.

Advent & Christmas Resources

Find below a selection of Advent prayer resources that you may find useful in your parish, school or local community.

Advent Slide for WEB (PDF)

Advent slide (powerpoint)

 

Also our diocese websites have great resources too:

http://www.prayerandspirituality.com/viewnews.php?id=84

http://www.prayerandspirituality.com/viewnews.php?id=85

ADVENT & CHRISTMAS 2014

 

Advent slide

Homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin at Mass to mark the beginning of Prisons Week in Northern Ireland

  • The Stocktake Report is an opportunity to make further progress in resolving the outstanding issues – and to cooperate in addressing the concerns of prisoners, families and staff – that have led to tension in recent years
  •  Prisons cannot be seen by society as mere “dumping grounds” for those who deserve no better.  Ideally our prisons should be places of redemption, renewal, and hope
  • The legacy of crime, especially any type of sexual or violent crime, can have long-lasting consequences for the person concerned and for their families

 

Last year it emerged that at some of his morning Masses at the Vatican, Pope Francis was using Communion hosts made by a thirty-eight year old woman prisoner at the San Martin Penitentiary outside Buenos Aires.  Pope Francis seems to have a special place in his heart for prisoners.  During his time as Archbishop of Buenos Aires he regularly visited the prisons to say Mass.  We all remember those touching scenes from his first Holy Thursday when he visited a juvenile detention centre in Rome and bent down to wash the feet of the young offenders of all faiths and none.  Pope Francis reminds us not to forget about prisoners and to pray that the Lord will help them overcome this difficult period in their lives.

“No cell is so isolated that it can keep the Lord out,” Pope Francis says.

Today marks the beginning of Prisons Week and I invite you to think in a special way about those who are in our own prisons here in Ireland.  A woman said to me over the summer: “Archbishop Eamon, why do you not pray more often at Mass for prisoners?”  It is true.  As followers of Jesus who came to bring Good News to the poor and to proclaim liberty to captives, we could all do more to think about those who must live their lives without the freedom that we all enjoy.  I know that prison is society’s way of punishing people for serious wrong doing, and we ought never to forget the many victims of crime who have suffered, or give the impression that we excuse these crimes.  Still, caring for our prisoners – and about the conditions in which they are being held – is a Christ-like thing to do.

Not long ago, and just before taking up my responsibilities as Archbishop, I visited Maghaberry prison, just twenty-five miles from where we are in Armagh.  When I visit a prison I always leave with a sense of sadness for those who must spend time there, and with regret at the waste of talent and opportunity that prisons represent.  In some ways our prisons reflect back to us the problems of society and the shadow side of life which we might prefer to keep out of sight and out of mind.  The problems experienced in society are often experienced even more intensely in prisons, like bullying, intimidation, addiction, isolation and hopelessness.  Sometimes we forget that prisoners themselves are women and men with families and children who care about them and who miss them.

It is vital that our prisons are sufficiently well resourced in terms of expertise and services to respond to the many needs that are there.  Prisons cannot be seen by society as mere “dumping grounds” for those who deserve no better.  Ideally our prisons should be places of redemption, renewal, and hope, where lives can be changed and turned around for the better.

Here in Northern Ireland there are aspects of our prison system which still reflect the legacy of our troubled and divided past.  Just this week the Stocktake Report into the prison regime in Maghaberry was published, and I believe it offers space and hope for an end to the long running tensions within the prison.  I encourage all those involved to see the Stocktake Report and its recommendations as an opportunity to make further progress in resolving the outstanding issues – and to cooperate in addressing the concerns of prisoners, families and staff – that have led to tension in recent years.

As a society we owe a debt of gratitude to those who work in prisons in all sorts of different roles.  An essential aspect of their work is to ensure that the dignity of prisoners is respected at all times.  In turn, they must be able to do their work safely and without threat to themselves and their families.

During my recent visit I witnessed at first hand the vital work of the prison chaplains, who are dedicated to providing for the spiritual, pastoral and practical needs of prisoners, their families and the staff.  Please give thanks to God and pray this week for our prison chaplains. Our chaplains work every day to bring the warmth of hope to all those associated with prison life.

We all need encouragement and hope from time to time and this is especially true for our prisoners and their families who can be feeling fine one day, but very down the next.  Saint Paul wrote to the Thessalonians: “So speak encouraging words to one another.  Build up hope so you’ll all be together in this, no one left out, no one left behind” (1 Thessalonians 5:11).

Of course we should not forget this week those who have been the victims of crime in our society.  The legacy of crime, especially any type of sexual or violent crime, can have long-lasting consequences for the person concerned and for their families.  Survivors of such dreadful crimes need reasons for hope.  They too need help, expertise and resources to help them to make the journey to hope.  I invite you to pray with me The Prisons Week Prayer:

Lord, you offer freedom to all people.
We pray for those in prison.
Break the bonds of fear and isolation that exist.
Support with your love prisoners and their families and friends, prison staff and all who care.
Heal those who have been wounded by the actions of others, especially the victims of crime.
Help us to forgive one another, to act justly, love mercy and walk humbly together with Christ in his strength and in his Spirit, now and every day.
Amen