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The Archdiocese of Armagh has Two Vacancies for Youth Ministry Coordinators (Readvertisement of Positions)

St Patrick’s Archdiocesan Trust Limited

VACANCY (Re-advertisement)

Youth Ministry Coordinator x 2 Archdiocese of Armagh

[ 3 Year Fixed-Term Contract (subject to an 11 month Probationary Period)]

The Archdiocese of Armagh seeks to appoint two motivated and talented professionals, each to undertake the full-time roles of Youth Ministry Coordinator. The Youth Ministry Coordinators will work with the Diocesan Pastoral Team and be responsible for implementing the youth ministry element in the Diocesan Pastoral Plan. They will work with parishes and pastoral areas to meet the goals of the Armagh Diocesan Youth Commission’s (ADYC) Strategic Plan 2019-2024 ‘Encourage, Enable and Empower.’ The plan reaches out to all young people in the Archdiocese of Armagh to provide faith formation and to enable the development of peer ministry. This will involve developing a wide range of network communications with parishes, families, schools, and community organisations. This is an excellent opportunity and challenge for two experienced candidates to join our Diocesan Team.

The appointments will on a 3 Year Fixed-Term Contract (subject to an 11 month Probationary Period) requiring 35 hours attendance each week, generally Monday-Friday. Candidates will possess a background in theology and/or at least 5 years equivalent experience in youth catechesis. Flexibility in work pattern and hours worked will be requirements of these roles.

(Even though the Coordinators will work as part of a diocesan team, one will be based in the North and one in the South of the diocese.)

Starting salary: £24,982 (or € equivalent)

If interested in making an application for either of these posts, please download, complete and return an Application Form from the Archdiocese of Armagh website at: armagharchdiocese.org, where you will also find the accompanying Job Description.

Click Here for Job Description 

Click Here For Application and Monitoring Form

Closing date for receipt of completed applications is Friday 26 November 2021 at 5pm

St Patrick’s Archdiocesan Trust is an Equal Opportunities Employer

Death of Baron George Minne, St Patrick’s Parish, Armagh

Death of Baron George Minne, St Patrick’s Parish, Armagh

Archbishop Eamon expresses his sadness at the death on, 23 October 2021, of Baron George Minne, Armagh Parish. May he rest in peace.

Born in Belgium, George gave many years generous service to the Archdiocese of Armagh as Organist and Choirmaster at St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh, from 1959-2005.

The funeral Mass took place in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh, on Tuesday 26th October 2021 at 11.00 am.

Archbishop Eamon extends his sympathy and that of Cardinal Seán Brady, Bishop Michael Router and the clergy of the Archdiocese to George’s wife, Jeannie, children, Joris, Carine, Patrick and Sheelagh and the wider Minne family.

The Archdiocese asks that you keep George in your prayers at this time.  

Towards Peace Spiritual Support Service

Towards Peace Spiritual Support Service

 

Towards Peace is a service offering spiritual support for anybody who has been abused, physically emotionally, sexually, spiritually, in a religious/church environment. 

Towards Peace was established in October 2014 by the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference and the Association of Leaders of Missionary & Religious Leaders of Ireland. 

It is a pathway, a safe space where people who have been hurt can connect with their own spirituality, their sense of God and their own journey Towards Peace. The service is free and is also available to the families of those who have been affected. 

Towards Peace understands spirituality as a way of being in, and relating to the world, connected to God and to ones deepest self. Through one to one meetings with a trained and qualified spiritual companion, Towards Peace offers safe spaces for people to attend to their own spiritual life. 

The Towards Peace office hours are Monday and Tuesday 9am – 4pm and Wednesday 9am – 12noon.

For further information:

Phone: (01) 505 3028 or (086) 7710533

A Pastoral Message from Archbishop Eamon Martin, Bishop Michael Router and the Synodal Core Group

 

Let us Journey Together!

 

A Pastoral Message from Archbishop Eamon Martin,

Bishop Michael Router

and the Synodal Core Group for the Archdiocese of Armagh

 

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

Last Sunday in Rome, October 10th 2021, the Holy Father, Pope Francis, invited Catholics all over the world to come with him “on a journey” as a “Synodal Church”.  The word synod means “walking together”.  It indicates a way of being together as Church and “discerning” how best to spread the Gospel amidst the challenges of life in the 21stcentury.

 On Pentecost Day the Holy Spirit descended upon the disciples, giving them the guidance and courage they needed to go out and spread the Good News about Jesus Christ to all the nations of the world.  Like those in the early Christian Church, we pray together today, asking the Holy Spirit to guide us and help us to discern what God wants of the Church in our time.

We encourage you to join us as we respond to Pope Francis’ call and set out on a synodal journey in the Archdiocese of Armagh.  We want to involve as many people as possible so that we can harvest the ideas and wisdom of all the baptised and listen to the ‘sense of the faith’ that is alive in the People of God.  Our challenge is to discern together what the Holy Spirit is telling us at this critical juncture in our history.

The theme which Pope Francis has chosen for the synodal process 2021-2023 is: For a Synodal Church: Communion,Participation, Mission.  As Catholics we are spread across the world in many different communities, large and small,but God unites us all as one.  To develop greater “communion” is not to expect everyone to be the same, but toovercome divisions and to walk forward together, sharing a common path.  Even within our own diocese, stretching from Magherafelt in Co Derry to Drogheda in Co Louth, there is a wide variety of parishes, movements, and communities.  Hopefully, the forthcoming synodal process will bring us closer together and help us to recognise that we are united by our common baptism – as members of the Body of Christ.

The life of the Church will be much richer and more dynamic if all baptised Catholics can find ways to answer God’s call and bring a variety of gifts to the service of all.  Although the faith has been handed on for centuries in Ireland, we live today in a very challenging secular environment, where, sadly, many people do not know the joy of encountering, believing in, and following, Jesus Christ.  Some have lost their sense of being part of the Church and others, for various reasons, may feel they no longer wish to be involved.  It is therefore important that this synodal process will be an inclusive one where we listen to others who have many different perspectives.  No one is excluded.  All are invited and welcome to participate.

We pray that, as we walk together on this “synodal journey”, we will find a greater sense of our shared mission to announce the Good News of Jesus Christ in faith, hope and love.  How much the world today needs to encounter Christ and to understand how his Word gives ‘a reason for living’, ‘a reason for hoping’!  You, the lay women and men of our diocese, have a vital role to play in this.  Sometimes the work of spreading the Gospel and building the Kingdom of God is left to ordained priests and deacons, or to those who are consecrated as religious.  You, however, have a special mission in witnessing to the Gospel.  As baptised members of the Church, as disciples of Jesus, you are called to act in the midst of humanity to bring the Kingdom of God to life in every facet of society.

Here in the Archdiocese of Armagh over the next few months, we will be joining the worldwide synodal consultation, seeking to understand how well we are “journeying together”, and how we might, in our parishes and diocese, “journey better together”.  We will soon be inviting your responses to a number of questions.  You can choose to answer these as individuals, as families, as members of your parish community or any other group.  We hope to gather your responses via questionnaires, online and “in person” group discussion, and a variety of social media platforms.  This initial phase will lead to further opportunities for you to participate at diocesan and national level.

All the replies will be collated and sent in response to Pope Francis’ invitation to the universal Church.  As he said himself last week in Rome: “Let us listen to one another”, and “Whenever we enter into dialogue, we allow ourselves to be challenged, to advance on the journey”.

This is therefore an opportunity for us to listen to the Holy Spirit and discern what God wants from the Church around the world, in Ireland and in the Archdiocese of Armagh. Please God, it will lead us to renewal and to new life in the years ahead.

 Thank you, in anticipation of your support.  Let us journey together!

With blessings to you all,

+ Archbishop Eamon Martin

+ Bishop Michael Router

 With members of the Synodal Core Group for the Archdiocese of Armagh

Launch of the Synodal Pathway in the Archdiocese of Armagh, Sunday 17th October 2021

Launch of the Synodal Pathway in the Archdiocese of Armagh

Pope Francis has launched a new time of reflection for the whole Church based on the theme & quote; For a synodal Church:  Communion, Participation, Mission.

The local launch of this process will take place in every diocese and parish around the world on Sunday next,
October 17th.  At all Masses next weekend, a Pastoral Letter will be read, special Prayers of the Faithful will be offered and the prayer for the success of the Synodal Pathway will be said.

The word synod means “walking together” and it indicates a way of being
Church that has its foundations in the early Church of the Apostles.  This moment in the Church is an important one and marks a movement towards a way of being Church that will help us to make decisions together; decisions that will help us to face the challenges of life in the 21st century.  

Over the next four months the Church worldwide will be consulting all
its members on their experience of the decision-making processes within the Church and how we are working together to achieve our mission.  This will be done by means of questionnaires, online and in person discussion, and through social media. More details will be announced later. You are all invited and welcome to participate and engage in this
process and it is hoped that this process will foster open and spirit filled conversations at all levels across the Archdiocese of Armagh.  

Archbishop Eamon Martin will present a Pastoral Letter from himself and Bishop Michael Router at the Diocesan Launch which takes place in St. Patricks Cathedral Armagh on Sunday 17th October at 11am.  The text of the Pastoral Letter will be available on the Diocesan website after Sunday’s Liturgy.

All are invited to attend or to join online and the service can be accessed via the Cathedral Webcam   Click Here to access the link

Statement of the Autumn 2021 General Meeting of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference

Statement of the Autumn 2021 General Meeting of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference

 Members of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference gathered in-person this week in Saint Patrick’s College, Maynooth, for their Autumn 2021 General Meeting.   Due to public health restrictions arising from the Covid-19 pandemic, the Bishops’ Conference had hosted its previous five plenary meetings via video link.  The President of the Conference is Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh and the Vice-President is Archbishop Dermot Farrell of Dublin.  The main issues discussed by the bishops during their Autumn General Meeting included: 

 

 

  • Bishops’ pilgrimage to Knock and Mass in memory of all who died on the island during the Covid 19 pandemic
  • Housing and homelessness
  • Bishops call for climate action and support for the ‘Healthy Planet, Healthy People’ petition ahead of COP15 and COP26
  • (i) Pope Francis to open Universal Synod on 9 and 10 October (ii) Update on the Synodal Pathway in Ireland
  • Bishops call for funding for Family Addiction Support Networks
  • RTÉ to broadcast Mass for World Mission Sunday on 24 October
  • Bishops special appeal on 6 and 7 November to support Trócaire’s work to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in East Africa
  • Appointments 
  • Bishops’ pilgrimage to Knock and Mass in memory of all who died on the island during the Covid-19 pandemic

During their meeting bishops reflected on the heartbreak suffered many thousands of families throughout Ireland who experienced the death of a loved one during the Covid-19 pandemic.  In particular, bishops acknowledged the additional distress caused by the restrictions which, over the past nineteen months, limited the number of people who could mourn together and offer the customary supports at this most sensitive time for families.  Bishops commended parishes across Ireland who have been arranging liturgical ceremonies for grieving families, and thereby enabling us to gather as a community of faith to pray for the repose of the souls of our deceased. 

To pastorally support everyone who has suffered in this way, and in the context of November being the traditional time that we remember our dead, on Sunday 14 November at 3.00pm, the Bishops of Ireland will undertake a pilgrimage to the International Eucharistic and Marian Shrine in Knock, Co Mayo, in the Archdiocese of Tuam, to concelebrate Mass for all those who have died on the island, and for their families, during the pandemic.  At the Mass bishops will offer prayers of thanksgiving for all those who so selflessly sacrificed so much during the pandemic.  This Mass will be live-streamed on www.knockshrine.ie and broadcast on the RTÉ News Now digital television channel and online.   

Bishops expressed their gratitude to the faithful for their prayers, sacrifice and perseverance during this difficult period for all of society.  This commitment, along with the sterling efforts of our clergy, religious and frontline workers, has successfully served to protect human life and health.

  • Housing and homelessness

Bishops reflected on how the crisis of housing and homelessness is a key social justice challenge for this generation.  Catholic social teaching recognises that housing is a universal human right, with corresponding responsibilities on society to honour that right.  Bishops discussed the recent correspondence from Mr Darragh O’Brien TD, Minister for Housing, Local Government and Heritage, on this issue.  It is the bishops’ intention to respond to the Minister’s letter over the coming days. 

  • Bishops call for climate action and support for the ‘Healthy Planet, Healthy People’ petition ahead of COP15 and COP26

Bishops encourage the public to support a global campaign ‘Healthy Planet, Healthy People’, which seeks to encourage political leaders to take strong action on climate change at COP 15 on Biodiversity from 11 – 24 October and at COP26 on Climate Change in Glasgow from 31 October to 12 November.  The ‘Healthy Planet, Healthy People’ petition, which has been endorsed by the Vatican, calls for a joined up, just response to the COVID 19, climate and biodiversity crises, see www.healthyplanetandpeople.org.  Guidelines for completion of the petition are available by contacting Brenda Drumm on [email protected] or [email protected] 

  • (i) Pope Francis to open Universal Synod on 9 and 10 October (ii) Update on the Synodal Pathway in Ireland

During their 2020 Winter General Meeting, bishops decided to proceed along a Synodal Pathway and, following their Spring General Meeting, announced that anew Synodal Pathway for the Catholic Church in Ireland is to take place with a view to holding a national synodal assembly, or assemblies, within the next five years.  Over 550 submissions have been received from the public as part of the initial phase of the Synodal Pathway.  Dr Nicola Brady has been appointed as chair of the Synodal Steering Committee and the vice-chairs are Mr Andrew O’Callaghan and Bishop Brendan Leahy of Limerick.

By a happy coincidence, these first two years of the Synodal Pathway in Ireland will complement the Church’s worldwide journey towards the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of Bishops, entitled: For a synodal Church: communion, participation and mission.  This weekend (9 and 10 October), Pope Francis will officially open the Universal Synod.  The Holy Father has asked that the whole Church prepare for this Synod which is scheduled to take place in October 2023 in Rome. 

In this regard, bishops welcomed the publication on 7 September, by the General Secretariat for the Synod in Rome, of the Preparatory Documentwhich indicates the guiding principles of the Synod on Synodality.  Bishops agreed that, as the Church in Ireland embarks on its own Synodal Pathway, we can also look forward to letting ourselves be inspired by these guiding principles.

Bishops discussed this Preparatory Document, sharing in the goal of its listening process, namely, “not to produce documents, but to plant dreams, prophecies, and hopes.”  For the initial preparatory phase of the Universal Synod, the fundamental questions put before us are:

  • how does this ‘journeying together’ take place today on different levels (from the local level to the universal one), allowing the Church to proclaim the Gospel?  and,
  • what steps is the Spirit inviting us to take in order to grow as a synodal Church?

These global questions neatly complement the guiding question facing the Irish Synodal Pathway over the next five years, which is: “What does God want from the Church in Ireland at this time?”

The full membership of the Steering Committee and the Synodal Task Group for the Synodal Pathway will be published as part of the official launch in the coming weeks.

  • Bishops call for funding for Family Addiction Support Networks

Bishop Michael Router, liaison bishop with the Irish Bishops’ Drugs Initiative, updated the Bishops’ Conference on his recent meeting with the Minister of State at the Department of Health, Mr Frank Feighan TD.  Conference was advised that a commitment was sought from the Minister to end delays in funding to the regional Family Addiction Support Networks.  FASN provides counselling, respite, education and an intimidation reporting service for families of addicts.  In last year’s State budget €70,000 was promised to each of the regions for FASN, however, to date, this money has not been received by the organisation on the ground.  The Minister has confirmed that the money has now been released to the Health Service Executive and that FASN were invited to apply for a share.  Bishop Router will hold a further meeting in the coming weeks with Minister Feighan to seek to copper-fasten future funding for FASN in order “to help tackle the silent pandemic in Ireland that is drug abuse.”

Bishops called for appropriate funding for the Family Addiction Support Network and agreed to raise awareness about the devastating problems caused to individuals and families by all types of substance abuse as part of next year’s ‘Day of Prayer for Temperance’ on Sunday, 27 February 2022.

  • RTÉ to broadcast Mass for World Mission Sunday on 24 October

As October is mission month, bishops remembered in prayer the work of our missionaries throughout the world.  The official launch of the new name for the World Missions Ireland charity, Missio Ireland – which is Pope Francis’ official charity for overseas mission in Ireland – will take place at the Veritas Offices, Dublin, on 18 October next. 

The theme for World Mission Sunday 2021 on 24 October is: ‘We Cannot Remain Silent – We cannot but speak about what we have seen and heard (Acts 4:20).’   On World Mission Sunday collections will take place at Masses throughout the Universal Church so that Catholics might give what they can to help support struggling dioceses in the developing world.  The Mission Sunday collection promotes the work of missionaries in poor and remote communities.  The funds raised will help build vital infrastructure, including churches, medical clinics, nurseries and schools.

Bishops commended Missio Ireland for its mission month pack for parishes and congregations and on its new website for donors and supporters. Father Michael O’Sullivan, M.Afr was thanked for his contribution to the National Mission Council as he shortly will leave his role of National Director of Missio Ireland.  RTÉ will televise the celebration of Mass from its Donnybrook studios in Dublin at 11.00am for World Mission Sunday on 24 October, as well as broadcast on LW 252 and on RTÉ Radio 1 Extra.  The celebrant will be Spiritan Missionary Father Brendan Carr and the Mass will bring together those involved in the overseas missionary outreach in the Catholic Church in Ireland: Misean Cara, the Association of Leaders of Missionaries and Religious of Ireland, and Missio Ireland.

  • Bishops special appeal on 6 and 7 November to support Trócaire’s work to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in East Africa

Bishops noted with deep concern the increase in the number of people worldwide threatened by humanitarian crises, which are driven by the triple threat of the Covid-19 pandemic, conflict and climate change.  Bishops expressed particular support for the people of East Africa, where up to 30 million people in Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo are currently face life-threatening food shortages.  Trócaire, as the overseas development agency of the Bishops’ Conference, is currently addressing this and many other crises worldwide.  Bishops will ask parishes throughout Ireland to undertake a special Church collection on 6 and 7 November to invite the public to support Trócaire in its work to alleviate this humanitarian crisis in East Africa.

Bishops also discussed that in the countries where Trócaire works, less than 5% of the population have been vaccinated for Covid and infection rates are up to 50%.  An additional 200 million people have fallen into poverty globally as a result of the Covid crisis.  Bishops highlighted that wealthier countries, while protecting their most vulnerable citizens, also have a moral responsibility to ensure that the populations of developing countries have equal, rapid and effective access to Covid vaccine coverage.

  • Appointments

Bishops welcomed the newest member of the Bishops’ Conference, Bishop Ger Nash, following his appointment by Pope Francis on 11 June as Bishop of Ferns.  Bishops offered prayers for Bishop Denis Brennan, Bishop Emeritus of Ferns, so that he may enjoy a healthy and peaceful retirement.

Bishops also welcomed the appointments of Dr Alexander O’Hara as the new National Director for Catechetics, and of Father Paul Clayton-Lea as the new editor of Intercom magazine, the pastoral and liturgical resource of the Bishops’ Conference for people in ministry.  Bishops thanked the outgoing editor Father John Cullen for this work and especially for maintaining the publication of Intercom during the pandemic.

ARCHBISHOP CELEBRATES ST VINCENT DE PAUL MASS

ARCHBISHOP CELEBRATES ST VINCENT DE PAUL MASS

Archbishop Eamon Martin, Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of all Ireland, celebrated a special St Vincent de Paul Mass on St Vincent de Paul Day for members of SVP in the Armagh and Craigavon area, at St Therese’s Church in Banbridge.

He described the response of SVP members in the area to COVID-19 as ‘amazing’ saying that he had witnessed how they were filled with the spirit and willingness to help others. He said: “I want to thank you the members of St Vincent de Paul for providing a lifeline during the pandemic. The work you do is truly the work of God.”

Following the mass, he congratulated new SVP Conference Presidents who have been elected to represent their area and presented certificates to local members who had completed training in Mental Health First Aid.

Brendan McKernan, SVP Armagh Area President, addressed the assembled congregation and said: “I just want to use the opportunity this evening to say thank you to you, the members of SVP for the tireless work that you do to support those in need.

“Especially since the start of the pandemic, I can sum up what SVP have done in this area of Armagh in one sentence, “we did as we have always done”. We continued to provide help to those in need, quietly, in the background. We supported people while maintaining their dignity and respect.

“As our founder Frederic Ozanam said “Charity must never look to the past but always to the future, because the number of its past works is still very small and the present and future miseries that it must alleviate are infinite”.”

The Society of St Vincent de Paul (SVP) is an international charity and the largest voluntary charity in Ireland. SVP members in Northern Ireland work in all communities to support people whatever their background, who are experiencing poverty and social exclusion, promoting self-sufficiency and working for social justice. 

Every year SVP spends approximately £3 million to help those experiencing poverty in Northern Ireland. Last year, SVP responded to tens of thousands of calls for assistance from members of the public. 

If you would like more information about becoming a member of SVP, becoming a volunteer in your local Vincent’s shop or if you would like the Society’s help, please visit www.svpni.co.uk, email [email protected] or tel 028 9035 1561.

Prisons Week: 10th – 16th October – A Week of Prayer

Prisons Week: 10th – 16th October – A Week of Prayer

“Respair” is an Old English word which fell out of use many centuries ago but means “the return of hope after a period of despair”. The prayer tradition of lament helps us to make that journey from a dark place of pain, suffering, fear or sorrow to somewhere that the light can get in. Maybe only through a tiny crack to begin with but bringing a gradual dawning of hope and sense of God’s promise, that we are loved and will never be abandoned or alone. No matter how messy and difficult life becomes, God is never distant and longs for us to let him in.

Please pray with us each day during Prisons Week, these prayers offered by chaplains, serving prisoners, police officers, victims of crime, prison leavers, family members and communities – crying out to God, asking for help, responding in faith, giving thanks for his unending love, grace and mercy.

Let us walk together through the week in prayer and grow in our understanding of the value God places on each one of his children, so that like the ravens we may soar, free at last, trusting in the knowledge of his provision and love for us.

Click Here to find more information and resources

 

Ordination to the Diaconate of Stefano Colleluori, Redemptoris Mater Seminary, Thursday, 14th October 2021 at 5PM.  St Patrick’s Cathedral Armagh.

Ordination to the Diaconate of Stefano Colleluori, Redemptoris Mater Seminary, 


On Thursday, 14th October 2021 at 5PM, His Excellency Archbishop Eamon Martin will ordain Stefano Colleluori deacon for the Archdiocese of Armagh in St. Patrick’s Cathedral Armagh. 

Stefano Colleluori was born 1993. He comes from Pescara (Italy). He is the third child of Donato and Teresa. He has other six brothers and two sisters. He started his formation to the priesthood in the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Dundalk in the year 2013.

He completed his studies for the priesthood at St Patrick’s Pontifical University, Maynooth. Stefano has done pastoral placement in the parish of Crossmaglen.

As part of his missionary formation, he spent time in mission in Mozambique, Holy Land and South Africa.

 

Archbishop Eamon Martin celebrates Mass for the centenary of the Legion of Mary

Archbishop Eamon Martin’s Homily at the Mass for the centenary of the Legion of Mary

Dear brothers and sisters, you will remember the day you first made your legionary promise, praying to the Holy Spirit, with the legionary standard in your hand.  On that occasion you declared your entire dependence on Mary as the mother of your soul.  You undertook to be her soldier and her child.

“Most Holy Spirit, I, desiring to be enrolled this day as a legionary of Mary, yet knowing that of myself I cannot render worthy service, do ask of you to come upon me and fill me with yourself, so that my poor acts may be sustained by your power, and become an instrument of your mighty purposes…

So, taking in my hand the legionary Standard…

I stand before you as her soldier and her child, and I so declare my entire dependence on her. She is the mother of my soul”.

In today’s Gospel (Mk 9:30-37), Jesus speaks about spiritual childhood – teaching how true greatness in God’s eyes is to be as innocent and humble as a little child.  It reminds us of course also of the “little way” of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, and of the childhood of Jesus and Mary that is described in the “true devotion” of Saint Louis Marie de Montfort, which was central to the spiritual thinking of the great Frank Duff, founder of the Legion of Mary, 100 years ago.

Lest anyone underestimate the power of “spiritual childhood”, one only has to observe its fruits: from humble beginnings of only 15 people gathered around a small altar of the Immaculate Conception in Dublin’s Francis Street 100 years ago, the Legion of Mary has touched the lives of millions of people in almost every country of the world.  Today it has over four million active members, more than seventy million auxiliary members, – a great army of spiritual children of Mary engaged in an outpouring of apostolic work: door to door evangelisation; parish and hospital visitation; reaching out to the marginalised in prison and on the streets; gently teaching and explaining the Catholic faith; and all this, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit and under the protection of Mary.

My dear brothers and sisters in the Legion of Mary here in the Archdiocese of Armagh I congratulate you, thank you and bless you on your 100th anniversary.  Your praesidiums throughout our diocese have overseen amazing prayerful and apostolic works throughout this diocese.  Your members, both alive, and those who had gone to their rest, have made a real difference in the lives of so many.  You have helped to save souls for Christ, ‘bringing Christ to the world and the souls who need him’, and helping, through the power of the Holy Spirit, ‘to renew the face of the earth’.

Spiritual childhood of Jesus, and of Mary, does not of course mean spiritual weakness.  As your promise puts it, you are not only Mary’s children; you are also her soldiers, and, under the Holy Spirit, you are soldiers for Christ. You are a Legion, equipped for battle against evil, godlessness, selfishness, and all the sin and despair that Satan sows in the world.

It is interesting that in today’s Gospel passage, Jesus spoke His words about spiritual childhood immediately after predicting and instructing His disciples that: “the Son of Man will be delivered into the hands of men; they will put him to death; and three days after he has been put to death he will rise again (Mk 9:30ff)”.  Jesus was under no illusions that the Good News will face many obstacles, much opposition, persecution, ridicule even death.

Today’s first reading from the Book of Wisdom (2:12,17-20), is equally clear that the “godless” lie in wait for the virtuous, since they annoy them and oppose their way of life:

‘Let us test him with cruelty and with torture,
and thus explore this gentleness of his
and put his endurance to the proof’.

The great Frank Duff, and inspirational legionaries like Eden Quinn and Alfie Lambe, shared this conviction and emphasised time and again that you are a “Legion”, armed for battle.  You wear armour of Christ; you are guided by the grace of the Holy Spirit and you proceed under the standard of Mary.

The legionary, according to the handbook, must therefore “clothe himself or herself in the armour of God”, and must have loyalty, courage, discipline, endurance.  But, equally, he or she must also walk with love and sympathy, be ready to finish the course, and be prepared to serve without limitations. 

The Legion of Mary therefore seeks to blend humble childhood of Mary with the determination and zeal of being her soldiers.  This powerful combination of qualities has enabled your legionaries to make such a lasting impact on the world.  Just as Jesus sent out His disciples to be “wise as serpents” and “harmless  as doves”, so also you are sent out to “conquer the world”, while walking in the “Way of Peace”.

These characteristics are needed more than ever today as we endeavour to keep the faith alive here in Ireland and beyond.  The challenge, of course, is to attract new members and to encourage, in particular, more young people to discover the Legion.  This may mean re-examining the way we recruit, form and retain junior members.  Perhaps a way towards this is to emphasise the qualities which I have spoken about today – to be both a child of Mary and a soldier of Mary.

Therein lies the power of the Gospel and the power of the Legion of Mary which, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, has sustained your Legion for the past one hundred years.

May God continue to bless you and grant success to your valuable endeavours.  Happy Anniversary

+Archbishop Eamon Martin