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Trafficking

HUMAN TRAFFICKING – MODERN DAY SLAVERY
Trafficking causes unacceptable misery and suffering to those who are dehumanized, forced to become commodities bought, sold, used and abused.  The reality is that trafficking is occurring everywhere, including all around us here in Ireland.

At every stage in the trafficking process, the victim loses power, while the trafficker gains more power over their victim. These victims are forced into compliance through physical, psychological and emotional violence exercised by others for financial gain. This form of modern day slavery is dynamic, adaptable and opportunistic, using modern technology and communications. It exploits, deceives and takes advantage of poverty, conflict, humanitarian disasters and vulnerable people in times of crisis.

Established routes for trafficking exist across Africa, Asia and Europe in particular, with more people now enslaved through trafficking than during the entire 400 years of the transatlantic slave trade. With women and children most vulnerable, UNICEF estimates that 1.2 children are trafficked annually for forced labour and sexual exploitation. The UN identifies human trafficking as the third most lucrative crime globally generating in excess of US$ 9.5 billion.

Many groups and bodies are now working actively to raise awareness of trafficking, to provide support and care for victims and to press for legislative reform to ensure that trafficking is illegal and heavily penalised. One example of such a group is Action to Prevent Trafficking. For more information about their work and to access resources see www.aptireland.org

iCatholic resources on ERB (Education about Religious Beliefs) and Ethics – Supporting Catholic Primary Schools

Two interviews have been posted on iCatholic in relation to the NCCA consultation re ERB + Ethics.

These videos have been  grouped together with some other existing videos in regard to ethos, identity, inclusion, pluralism, the new RE curriculum and the Grow in Love series.

 

They are available to view here:                          http://www.icatholic.ie/tag/primary-ethos/

iCatholic also has a Facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/iCatholic/ – on which there are clips and links re the NCCA consultation..

 

Teaching religion and inclusion in Catholic Schools: Fr Michael Drumm and Claire Clifford

Education about Religions and Beliefs in our Primary Schools: Kate Liffey and Maeve Mahon

Lent Resources – 2016

Lent 2016Some prayer services and resources for Parish, school and personal use in Lent and Easter.

Includes: Sunday Gospel Lectio pages suitable for Taize style prayer, Reflection on Lent and its meaning, Stations of the Cross, Penance Services.

 

Download:

Lectio for Sundays Lent 2016

Ash Wednesday Lenten Services including Penance Service

Ashes & Penance in Lent

Mary takes us through the Stations of the Cross

Stations of the Cross Examination of Conscience

We Have This Treasure

Youth Hour of Prayer Lent

Inter Diocesan Lectio Resources Lenten Sunday Gospels 2016

Opening of Catholic Schools Week in the Archdiocese

The Start of Catholic Schools Week took place at St John the Baptist Church Drumcree Portadown yesterday January 26th. Schools from all over the Archdiocese attended. Nearly 600 gathered for the event at 11.30 am.The Liturgy was a service that featured reflection of the theme of mercy in our lives personally and as school communities.

Archbishop Eamon led the celebration which featured art based on the seven corporal works of mercy, a dramatized retelling of Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount with the Beatitutes.  We watched a drama about the Apple tree Story and then were fortunate to be able to reflect in a prayerful way in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament.  Two original 18th Century Penal Crosses from South Armagh were used to confirm our commitment to be mercy-filled people. We each venerated the cross and offered incense to the Blessed Sacrament as a sign and pledge of our discipleship in this Jubilee Year..

The service was moving and filled with God’s Holy Spirit.  Many seeds of faith were planted in young hearts. Pupils received a personal copy of a penal cross to use in their own homes, rooms and prayerlife.

Fr Ryan our new Primary Adviser led the prayers and students and teachers took part by reading these. Fr Toner PP Portadown led the Procession of the Blessed Sacrament.  Mr Francis Hagan sacristan acted as MC.

Music and hymns were just splendid and really enhanced the whole experience for all present.  Light refreshments were provided by Drumcree College in the Pastoral Centre for those travelling.  All in all a brilliant start to our week celebrating all that is special and good in Catholic Education.

” Highlights for me were the Drama of the Beatitudes so moving and thought provoking, and the heavenly music from St Paul’s Choir,  what a joy and treat. ”

” Loved every minute, could not believe we were praying for nearly an hour and 20 minutes. Well done all concerned.”

” What a warm Church. We could see everything this year.  Great hospitality afterwards.  Thanks Drumcree College !!”

” The Apple tree drama and story was just what I needed to hear today.  God was thinking of me. Thanks. ”

” Loved the veneration of the Cross just like Good Friday.  What a lovely idea.”

” Our children were spell bound by the beauty and presence of the Holy Eucharist in the Monstrance. Real seeds of faith were planted. ”

 

51st International Eucharistic Congress Cebu.

The Irish pilgrims arrived in Cebu on Friday and on Saturday attended a ‘Table of Hope’ meal with several hundred young children from poorer backgrounds, many of whom are living on the streets. The church has set up many centres called ‘Children of Hope’, with a long term aim of helping the children through school and with religious education. Some have been orphaned as a result of the huricane some two hears ago. Five hundred of the children have been prepared by volunteers and will make their First Holy Communion during the Congress.
The Congress opens officially on Sunday, and all are looking forward to an exciting programme of events over the coming week. Please join in the recitation of the Congress Prayer during the week of Congress.

Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

At this time of year and we celebrate the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (18 – 25 January). The theme chosen for this year is: Called to proclaim the mighty acts of the Lord. (cf. 1 Peter: 2:9) Throughout the Christian world, people of different denominations come together during this special week for conferences, prayer services and social gatherings. As we celebrate the week, we recall how an Episcopalian Franciscan priest from America, Fr Paul Watson, started these gatherings in 1908 by praying for Christian Unity.

This year our Ecumenical Service took place in St Patrick’s Church of Ireland Cathedral, Armagh on Wednesday 20 January at 7.30pm. The guest preacher was  Archbishop Bernard Longley, Archbishop of Birmingham. 

P1050736
PRAYER
God our Father, we ask you to send your Holy Spirit ever more deeply into our hearts and minds that we may think thoughts of peace, speak words that build up and do the truth always in love, the truth that sets us free, the truth that gives us hope, AMEN

Resources for Catholic Schools Week 2016

Catholic Schools Week is an all-Ireland annual event which invites Catholic schools to give expression in a special way to the ethos of Catholic education.  It is a celebration of Catholic schools throughout Ireland, North and South which acknowledges the tremendous contribution that our Catholic primary and post-primary schools make not just to Irish society, but to the mission of the Church. Catholic Schools Week 2016 will take place from Sunday 31 January to Saturday 6 February 2016 on the theme “Catholic Schools: Challenged to Proclaim God’s Mercy”.  It is hoped that this theme will help contextualise the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy proclaimed by Pope Francis from 8 December 2015 to 20 November 2016.

This year, for the first time, resources will not be mailed to schools, but are available for download here.

Primary School Resources for Download

Primary School Flyer
Primary School Poster

Primary Notes for Teachers
Primary Irish Notes for Teachers

Primary – Grandparents Day
Primary – Grandparents Day Irish

Primary – Junior and Senior Infants
Primary – Junior and Senior Infants Irish

Primary – First and Second Class
Primary – First and Second Class Irish

Primary – Third and Fourth Class
Primary – Third and Fourth Class Irish

Primary – Fifth and Sixth Class
Primary – Fifth and Sixth Class Irish

Post Primary School Resources for Download

Post Primary Flyer
Poster for Post Primary Schools

Post Primary Junior Cycle Resources
Post Primary Junior Cycle Resources Irish

Post Primary Senior Cycle Resources
Post Primary Senior Cycle Resources Irish

Post Primary Board of Management Reflections
Post Primary Board of Management Reflections Irish

More resources will be added so do check back and follow the Catholic Schools Week conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #CSW2016 or find the Catholic Schools Week Facebook page.

Launch of Catholic Schools Week 2016 and Mass

The official launch of Catholic Schools Week will take place on Monday 25 January in Mount Mercy College, Model Farm Road, Bishopstown, Co Cork. This will be the first time that a school in Cork will host the national launch of Catholic Schools Week.  Representatives from twenty-five primary and secondary schools in the Cork city area will also be in attendance.  Welcoming Catholic Schools Week 2016 Ms Padraigín Ui Riordáin, the principal of Mount Mercy College, said, “We are delighted to be chosen to launch this national celebration of Catholic education.  We look forward to welcoming the wider Catholic community to our school in Cork for this special event.  The words of Pope Francis ‘Mercy is the spirit that awakens us’ will inspire the community of Mount Mercy College to participate wholeheartedly in, and celebrate, this spiritually enriching occasion at a milestone in our school tradition, having just celebrated our Golden Jubilee.”

Ms Ui Riordáin continued, “The upcoming Year of Mercy for the Universal Church, and the official launch of Catholic Schools Week, is an opportunity for us to focus on our traditions and at the same time to look forward with anticipation to our future, to the challenge of proclaiming God’s mercy as we promote tolerance, respect and inclusiveness, whilst we explore the possibilities for all in our daily work and the many charities and causes which we support.”

Mount Mercy College Cork has eight-hundred students with sixty staff.  Mount Mercy College was founded in 1965 under the trusteeship of the Sisters of Mercy.  Catherine McAuley founded the Religious Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy in 1831.  Mercy education is committed to holistic development and to the achievement of the full potential of each student.  It is a process informed and influenced by the teaching and example of Jesus Christ and is conducted in an atmosphere of care, respect and joy.

A Mass will be broadcast by RTÉ on Sunday 31 January to celebrate both Catholic Schools Week and the new Grow in Love religious education programme for primary schools.  Students from Mount Mercy College, Cork, as well as pupils from Saint Pius X primary school in Templeogue, Dublin, will participate in this special liturgy to mark the beginning of Catholic Schools Week across Ireland. This Mass will be celebrated by Bishop Brendan Kelly, Bishop of Achonry and chair of the Bishops’ Council for Education.

International Eucharistic Congress 24th to 31st January in Cebu

International Eucharistic Congress

The 51st International Eucharistic Congress commences at Cebu, the Philippines on Sunday 24th January. The theme:  ‘Christ in You, Our Hope of Glory’ will give the Congress a focus on mission.  Here in Ireland, we recall the many blessings and signs of hope which were experienced by so many people who attended the 50th International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin in 2012. Please join spiritually with the Irish pilgrims attending the Congress in Cebu by reciting the Congress Prayer during the week of Congress 24th to 31st January.

Prayer for the 51st International Eucharistic Congress.

Sunday 24th – Sunday 31st January 2016

Lord Jesus Christ, our hope of glory, You are the fulfillment of the Father’s plan to save all humanity. You are the mystery hidden from the ages and from generations past now manifested to us. You abide in your Church in the most holy sacrament of the Eucharist. As we celebrate the Holy Eucharist and receive your Body and Blood, grant us the awareness that your presence in us urges us to continue your saving mission in the world. Send us your Holy Spirit, that he may lead us to walk humbly with the poor and the marginalized, in the company of Mary, your most holy mother and ours. O Lord in the Most Blessed Sacrament, to you be all honour and glory and praise in the unity of the Father and the Holy Spirit. One God, forever and ever. Amen.

Confirmation list for 2016

PARISH DAY DATE MONTH TIME
Ardboe Sunday

13

Mar 11.00 am
Ardee Sunday

24

Apr 2.00 pm
Armagh I Saturday

21

May 2.00 pm
Armagh II Sunday

22

May 2.00 pm
Aughnacloy Friday

6

May 5.00 pm
Ballinderry Thursday

11

Feb 5.00 pm
Ballygawley Sunday

10

Apr 11.30 am
Beragh Friday

11

Mar 5.00 pm
Bessbrook Saturday

16

Apr 11.00 am
Carlingford & Omeath Monday

7

Mar 11.00 am
Clogherhead Sunday

28

Feb 11.30 am
Cloghogue Saturday

9

Apr 11.00 am
Clonoe Saturday

13

Feb 3.00 pm
Coagh Friday

12

Feb 5.00 pm
Coalisland Thursday

7

Apr 5.00 pm
Cookstown Saturday

28

May 3.00 pm
Cooley Tuesday

15

Mar 11.00 am
Crossmaglen Saturday

20

Feb 11.00 am
Cullyhanna Tuesday

12

Apr 11.00 am
Darver & Dromiskin Thursday

26

May 11.00 am
Donaghmore Thursday

3

Mar 5.00 pm
Drogheda I Wednesday

20

Apr 11.00 am
Drogheda II Thursday

21

Apr 11.00 am
Dromintee Tuesday

5

Apr 11.00 am
Dundalk, Holy Family (Bay Estate) Wednesday

25

May 11.00 am
Dundalk, Holy Family (St Joseph’s) Wednesday

4

May 11.00 am
Dundalk, Holy Redeemer Sunday

17

Apr 11.30 am
Dundalk, St Patrick’s I Saturday

27

Feb 11.00 am
Dundalk, St Patrick’s II Saturday

5

Mar 11.00 am
Dundalk, St Patrick’s III (St Nicholas’) Saturday

12

Mar 11.00 am
Dungannon I Saturday

7

May 3.00 pm
Dungannon II Sunday

8

May 3.00 pm
Dunleer Wednesday

11

May 11.00 am
Eglish Friday

29

Apr 5.00 pm
Faughart Saturday

9

Apr 2.00 pm
Haggardstown & Blackrock Tuesday

8

Mar 11.00 am
Keady & Derrynoose Sunday

6

Mar 3.00 pm
Kildress Monday

18

Apr 5.00 pm
Kilkerley Friday

26

Feb 11.00 am
Killcluney Wednesday

2

Mar 5.00 pm
Killeeshil Wednesday

13

Apr 5.00 pm
Kilmore Friday

20

May 5.00 pm
Kilsaran Tuesday

31

May 11.00 am
Knockbridge Friday

15

Apr 11.00 am
Lissan Friday

10

June 5.00 pm
Lordship Friday

8

Apr 11.00 am
Loughgall Thursday

14

Apr 5.00 pm
Louth Friday

27

May 11.00 am
Magherafelt Sunday

5

June 3.00 pm
Mell Monday

25

Apr 11.00 am
Mellifont Friday

4

Mar 11.00 am
Middle Killeavy Thursday

2

June 5.00 pm
Middle Killeavy (Rathore School) Saturday

4

June 11.00 am
Middletown Sunday

21

Feb 11.30 am
Monasterboice Monday

29

Feb 11.00 am
Moneymore Monday

11

Apr 5.00 pm
Moy Friday

22

Apr 5.00 pm
Mullaghbawn Thursday

19

May 5.00 pm
Newbridge Tuesday

19

Apr 5.00 pm
Pomeroy Thursday

25

Feb 5.00 pm
Portadown Saturday

19

Mar 3.00 pm
Tallanstown Tuesday

10

May 11.00 am
Termonfechin Saturday

30

Apr 11.00 am
Termonmaguirc Sunday

12

June 3.00 pm
Togher Tuesday

1

Mar 11.00 am
Whitecross Wednesday

27

Apr 5.00 pm
Gaeilge (Ard Mhacha) Monday

14

Mar 5.00 pm
Gaeilge (Dún Dealgan) Thursday

28

Apr 11.00 am

Archbishop Eamon Martin Christmas Homily 2015 Midnight Mass St Patrick’s Cathedral Armagh: I wish you a “Mercy” Christmas!

I wish you a “Mercy” Christmas!

Twelve days ago I had the joy of opening two ‘Holy Doors’ for the Jubilee Year of Mercy in the Archdiocese of Armagh – one at St Peter’s Church in Drogheda, the other, here, at St Patrick’s Cathedral. It is my prayer tonight that during the Holy Year you and your families will have a profound personal experience of God’s love and mercy in your lives. Pope Francis has described the Holy Year of Mercy as an ‘extraordinary moment of grace and spiritual renewal’. That is why, this year, I am wishing you all a “Mercy” Christmas.

Of course every Christmas is a “Mercy” Christmas, because it was God’s merciful and overwhelming love for us that led, on the first Christmas night, to God sending His Only Son to be our Saviour. The mystery at the heart of Christmas is the mystery of the Incarnation which is in turn, the mystery of Mercy. Notice how the Creed sums up the meaning of Christmas:

‘For us men and for our salvation, He came down from heaven, and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and became man’.

That is why on this Holy Night, to honour the deep significance of these words, we genuflect at that point in the Creed.

The first Christmas was the moment which connected God and man. At Bethlehem God came to meet us as never before. Christmas therefore was, and is, a ‘Mercy’ moment. In wishing you all a “Mercy” Christmas, it is my hope that, after all the rushing around and frantic preparations of recent weeks, you will experience in your lives the power of God’s mercy.

One of the wonders of Christmas is the manner in which God came among us. The All-powerful God, Creator of heaven and earth, did not choose for his birth the might and splendour of a royal palace. Instead he became small and was born in the poverty and simplicity of a stable. He was wrapped by Mary, the Mother of Mercy, in swaddling clothes and laid in a wooden manger where animals normally fed. God humbled himself to share in our humanity, so that we might share in His divinity. Years later that same Jesus, out of mercy for us, would humble himself still further to be stretched out on the wood of the cross, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.

How might we make this a “Mercy” Christmas for ourselves and for others? How might we respond to God’s mercy in the coming Jubilee Year?

Firstly, I invite you to be reconciled personally with God and with anyone from whom you might be alienated. No-one is excluded from the mercy of God. As Pope Francis has said:

“In this Jubilee Year, let us allow God to surprise us! He never tires of casting open the doors of his heart and of repeating that he loves us and wants to share his love with us… From the heart of the Trinity, from the depths of the mystery of God, the great river of mercy wells up and overflows unceasingly. It is a spring that will never run dry, no matter how many people draw from it. Every time someone is in need, he or she can approach it, because the mercy of God never ends” (Misericordiae Vultus n25).

Consider, therefore, receiving the Sacrament of Reconciliation during this Year of Mercy, even if it has been a very long time since you were last at Confession. Your life will be transformed when you draw from the wellspring of God’s mercy. Let go this coming year of whatever selfish or sinful habits are preventing you from being the very best person you can be.

The theme of the Year of Mercy is ‘Merciful like the Father’. We are all called upon to show mercy because mercy has, first of all, been shown to us. Reach out, therefore, this Christmas and New Year to someone who may have offended you in the past. Be prepared to humble yourself. Become small. Offer the hand of friendship and make the first move in reconciliation – whether it be with someone in your family, your school, workplace or community. Of course wounds are sometimes deep and difficult to heal, but with the help of God’s grace, this Year of Mercy may be just the moment for a new beginning.

Secondly, we can make this a “Mercy” Christmas by helping others through ‘works of mercy’. ‘The corporal works of mercy consist especially in feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned and burying the dead’ (CCC 2447).The spiritual works of mercy include advising the doubtful and comforting the sorrowful, teaching the faith to our children and others, pointing out what is right and wrong, forgiving, patiently bearing with those who are in error and praying for the living and the dead.

As individuals and as society a “Mercy” Christmas challenges us to ask whether we have done enough to make peace, to help relieve poverty, hunger, homelessness and the plight of refugees; whether or not we have reached out to those around us who are experiencing isolation, persecution and loneliness, despair or hopelessness; whether or not we have accompanied those who have drifted away from God and gently sought to bring them back and dispel their doubts; whether or not we are playing our part in defending the life and human dignity of every person, bringing the joy of the Gospel into our world and inviting those who are rejecting God to come to know His love and mercy in their lives.

Finally, I invite you to make this a “Mercy” Christmas by turning to Jesus in prayer. I offer you a spiritual garland of two powerful prayers to make your own this Christmas and during the Jubilee Year. The first is known as the “Jesus” prayer – it is very short and you can recite it hundreds of times a day, at home, on your way to work, in school, in the shops, anywhere. “Jesus, Son of God, have mercy on me a sinner”. This “Jesus” prayer sums up so much about the meaning of Christmas, Easter, the whole mystery of our faith. It is a simple humble, prayer which opens us up to the mercy of God in our lives. “Jesus, Son of God, have mercy on me a sinner”

The second prayer is similar, and it is often associated with the ‘Divine Mercy’ devotion. Once more, it is a prayer that can be repeated with every breath at any moment of the day, especially when you are worried or troubled about anything. The prayer is: “Jesus, I trust in you”. You may have noticed that, for the Year of Mercy we have displayed in the Cathedral a large representation of St Faustina’s ‘Divine Mercy’ image with the words, ‘Jesus, I trust in you’ written in Irish: ‘A Íosa, tá muinín agam asat’.

My brothers and sisters, when Pope Francis recently launched the Jubilee Year someone asked me: is every year not a year of mercy? Of course it is, and so is every day, every hour, every minute even. It’s just that we sometimes forget what the gift of mercy means in our own lives, and how much it can make a difference in the lives of others. That is why I have chosen to offer these thoughts on this Holy Night and have no hesitation in wishing you a “Mercy” Christmas, and a Happy Jubilee Year!

God bless you all.