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Archbishop Eamon calebrates Mass for the Year of Consecrated Life

On Sunday 6th September, a special celebration took place in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh to honour those consecrated to Religious Life. The special Mass which was celebrated by Archbishop Eamon Martin was organised by Armagh Parish Pastoral Council to celebrate this special year. A number of religious were present for the occasion and as well as native sons and daughters of the parish, religious who have worked and served in the parish over the years were also in attendance. Orders represented included the Vincentians, Missionaries of Charity, Sacred Heart Sisters, Daughters of Charity, Presentation Sisters, Medical Missionaries of Mary, Columban Fathers, Jesuits as well as a number of Diocesan Priests

Members of the Parish Pastoral Council were involved in different ways during the ceremony which was one of praise and thanks to God for the great witness of these men and women whose lives are dedicated to the Lord. After the very rich and meaningful ceremony, parish representatives joined with the religious for some refreshments.

“Come and sing a new song!” A workshop for all choir directors

A workshop for all choir directors, organists and Church choir leaders in the Archdiocese of Armagh took place on Saturday 5 September in St Catherine’s College from 10am – 3.30pm.
 
The workshop was facilitated by Mr Colm Murphy (Director of Music, St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh) and Sr Perpetua McNulty (Director of Music, St Eugene’s Cathedral, Derry)
 
Church choirs will then gather in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh on Monday 23 November at 7pm for a Mass of Praise and Thanksgiving to honour St Cecelia and to mark the close of the Year of St Columbanus.

Archbishop Eamon Martin writes to MPs about the ‘Assisted Dying Bill’ to be debated in Westminster

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Find the letter to MP’s hereLetter to Members of Parliament from Archbishop Eamon Martin

As Catholics across the island of Ireland prepare to celebrate the annual Day for Life (4 October) on the theme of ‘Cherishing Life-Accepting Death’, I have written to Northern Ireland’s Members of Parliament, asking them to oppose the destructive and pessimistic approach to human life proposed in the ‘Assisted Dying Bill’ to be debated in the Parliament of Westminster on 11th September.

I appeal to all Catholics in Northern Ireland to become actively involved, as baptised Christians and as citizens, in promoting a culture of love, care, respect and protection for every human life. I ask Catholics to encourage their MPs to oppose this Bill.

The life of every human person is equally valuable, whatever the stage or state of that life. Every human life is worth living and worthy of our utmost care and protection to its natural end. As Pope Francis has said, “What a lie … to make people think that lives affected by grave illness are not worth living!”

In asking Catholics and others to oppose this Bill, I am asking them to state with confidence and joy that the future of humanity does not lie in a culture of death and the deliberate destruction of another, but in a culture of life and care for one another in which medicine and science are at the service of human dignity, not threats to our very existence.

The human, moral, social and medical implications of the so-called ‘Assisted Dying Bill’ are far-reaching and profound. I appeal to Catholics and all who believe in the inherent dignity and value of every human life, in all its stages, to inform themselves about the important values at stake in this debate, to pray for the progress of a culture of life and mutual care in our society and to contact their Member of Parliament to ask them to oppose the passage of this Bill in favour of a more humane and ethically sound future for humanity.

 

CLERGY APPOINTMENTS – JULY 2015

1400th anniversary of St Columbanus St Patricks Cathedral Armagh Co.Armagh 21 June 2015 Credit: LiamMcArdle.com

ARCHDIOCESE OF ARMAGH

CLERGY APPOINTMENTS – JULY 2015

 

The Archbishop of Armagh, Eamon Martin, announces the following clergy appointments, effective from the weekend of 22 August 2015.

Archbishop Eamon thanks the priests for their continued ministry and service in the Archdiocese and wishes them well in taking up these new appointments. He also thanks the people of the Archdiocese of Armagh for their ongoing prayers and support of their priests. He encourages them to welcome their new pastors in the coming weeks.

Very Rev Eugene Sweeney VG, PP Loughgall, to be VG, PP Eglish and Moderator of the Diocesan Curia.

Very Rev Brian Hackett, PE AP Ballygawley (Errigal Ciaran), to retire.

Very Rev Michael Seery, PP Ballygawley (Errigal Ciaran) to be PE AP Coalisland and to reside in Stewartstown.

Rev John McGoldrick, retiring from the staff of St Patrick’s Grammar School, Armagh will take a period of sabbatical leave (October to June) before taking up a new appointment in the diocese.

Very Rev Michael O’Dwyer, PP Portadown (Drumcree), to be PP Ballygawley (Errigal Ciaran).

Very Rev Michael Toner, PP Eglish, Diocesan Secretary and Chancellor, to be PP Portadown (Drumcree), remaining as Chancellor of the diocese.

Rev Garett Campbell, CC St Patrick’s, Dundalk, to be PP Loughgall.

Rev John McKeever, CC Keady and Derrynoose, to be Assistant Chancellor of the diocese.

Rev Ryan McAleer, CC Dungannon, to be a Diocesan Advisor for Religious Education (Primary).

Rev Aidan McCann, newly ordained, to be CC Dungannon.

Rev Brian Slater, newly ordained, to be CC St Patrick’s, Dundalk.

31 July 2015

Job Advert – Manager (part-time) Armagh Diocesan Pastoral Centre

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Manager (part-time) Armagh Diocesan Pastoral Centre

The Armagh Diocesan Pastoral Centre offers a range of spiritual, pastoral, diocesan and community programmes across a range of interests for the benefit of the people of the Archdiocese of Armagh.

The Centre is undergoing a period of transition as it seeks to implement the objectives of the new Diocesan Plan.

The Archdiocese of Armagh is seeking to engage a Manager (part-time) of the Pastoral Centre, Dundalk, for the period of transition (September 2015 – August 2016). This is a part time position (25 hours per week). Remuneration   €20,000 – €22,000

The Manager will report to the Director of the Pastoral Centre and will require the experience and pastoral disposition to manage the Centre in a manner that is consistent with the ‘Diocesan aim’.

The successful applicant will be responsible for the day to day running of the Centre in conjunction with the other staff and with those engaged under a Community Employment Scheme.

Manager: Armagh Diocesan Pastoral Centre

Essential Requirements

: Management experience at an appropriate level

: Garda Vetting clearance

: Excellent interpersonal skills

 

Desirable Requirements

: High level of IT skills and knowledge and use of social media

: Excellent written and verbal skills

: Willingness to work irregular hours

: Flexible in approach

: Full driver’s licence and own transport.

 

Manager(part-time) applic. form

Manager (part-time) job spec.

Annual Novena at Knock Shrine

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Click below to access the Novena Poster with full details of all the services

Novena Poster

www.knockshrine.ie

 

Youth 2000 Summer Festival, Cistercian College, Roscrea

Youth 2000 Summer Festival, Cistercian College, Roscrea, Co. Tipperary from Thursday 13th – Sunday 16th August 2015.   This is a four day celebration of faith for young people aged 16-35. There is an action packed programme of inspiring talks, workshops, testimonies, prayer, music,  drama and much more.   The festival is donation only.  Free buses available from all around Ireland.  For more info and to book online, see www.youth2000.ie

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Ordinations to Priesthood

Fr Aidan McCann and Fr Brian Slater with Archbishop Eamon Martin after their ordination in St Patrick's Cathedral Armagh Ordination to the Preisthood of Brian Slater and Aidan McCann St Patrick's Cathedral Armagh 5 July 2015 Credit: LiamMcArdle.com

Congratulations to Fr Aidan McCann and Fr Brian Slater who were ordained to the Priesthood in St Patrick’s Cathedral on Sunday 5 July. Fr Aidan is from the parish of Cookstown and Fr Brian is from the parish of Coalisland and we wish both of them many years of happiness and fulfilment in their ministries. As we thank God for their vocations, we continue to pray for more vocations to priesthood and religious life at this time.

Homily of Archbishop Eamon Martin for Mass on the occasion of his investiture with the pallium

Investiture with the Pallium of Archbishop Eamon Martin St Patrick's Cathedral Armagh 4 July 2015 Credit: LiamMcArdle.com

Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh, Saturday 4 July 2015 

  • The pallium reminds me that God expects a lot from me, but He gives me all the grace I need to do His will, and to be prepared to sacrifice my own will and desires in order to follow His way.
  • But we will need to find a language of faith and truth which can speak in fresh and powerful ways about the depth of the love of Christ to those who are finding life increasingly shallow or despairingly empty of meaning and purpose. 
  • We should not be altogether surprised if, like Jesus Himself, our message is completely rejected by some, even in our own country.

Please see below the text of Archbishop Eamon Martin’s homily which will be delivered this evening at Mass in Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh on the occasion of Archbishop Martin’s investiture with the pallium. The pallium symbolises the bond and union between an archbishop and the Pope. His Excellency Archbishop Charles Brown, Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland, will conduct the investiture which will take place in the presence of representatives of the nine dioceses of the ecclesiastical province, as well as priests and people from the diocese.

Homily: 

Just over five months ago on the 21st January, the feast of the young martyr Saint Agnes, two little lambs were carried in baskets up to Pope Francis for his blessing.  They were a gift from the Trappist monks of Tre Fontane in Rome to the Benedictine sisters of Saint Cecilia in Trastevere. The lambs had been specially chosen to provide their first wool for the pallium given to the new archbishops of the world by the Holy Father on Monday last.

The pallium is a simple white woollen stole decorated with crosses and edged in black so that when it drapes over the shoulders of the new archbishop it invokes the image of a lamb being carried fondly by its shepherd.  When Pope Francis blessed the pallium last Monday on the Feast of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, he reminded us that it is a symbol of the pastoral care which we, as bishops, are called to give in imitation of Christ, the Good Shepherd, who laid down His life for His sheep.

By calling us all to the Basilica of Saint Peter  for the blessing, the Holy Father was reminding us always to exercise our ministry as archbishops in unity with each other and in communion with the Pope and the Church in Rome.  Until the moment of blessing the pallia rested beneath the altar at the tomb of Saint Peter. I couldn’t help thinking of that line from the creed: I believe in one, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church.

This evening back home  in Armagh I recall my predecessor Saint Malachy who, nine hundred years ago, travelled twice to Rome to seek the pallium – at first for Armagh and then for Armagh and Cashel. As you know he was unsuccessful and he died on the journey at Clairvaux  in the arms of his beloved friend Saint Bernard.  But only a few years later, following the Synod of Kells, four pallia were indeed sent by the Pope to Ireland symbolising the recognition from the Holy See for the four new ecclesiastical provinces of Ireland: Armagh, Cashel, Dublin and Tuam.

Once more I am humbled at the honour that God has bestowed on me by calling me to serve Him in this way.  The pallium reminds me that God expects a lot from me, but He gives me all the grace I need to do His will, and to be prepared to sacrifice my own will and desires in order to follow His way. Pope Francis, in his homily on Monday, challenged us new archbishops to be masters of prayer, and of faith, and to be courageous witnesses in the world.  ‘No Christian community’, he said, ‘can go forward without being supported by persistent prayer’.  ‘Be ever faithful to the deposit of faith’, he went on, and be courageous witnesses, ‘who are not ashamed of the Name of Christ and of His Cross’.  I know that if I am to meet these challenges, if I am to be true to God’s calling in my life, then I must try to conquer my sinfulness and selfishness and instead to offer my life for my sheep.

To be honest, I sometimes feel daunted by this challenge.  On Wednesday in Rome I visited the catacombs where the early Christian martyrs were buried. On the way I had the privilege of celebrating Mass in the little Church of Domine Quo Vadis, where it is said Saint Peter, who was running away from the dangers of persecution in Rome, met Jesus going the other way into the city to be with his flock.  It was all the more poignant for me because it was the Feast of Saint Oliver Plunkett who I know was not afraid to die for his people and his beliefs.  In my room at the Irish College in Rome this week there was a striking painting of Saint Oliver Plunkett, Archbishop of Armagh, kneeling before the gallows just before his martyrdom.  In the painting his pallium lies discarded on the ground where his executioners have hurled it; in its place over his head and shoulders is wrapped the hangman’s noose.

I also read recently about Primate Edmund O’Reilly another great hero of the penal times (he was the archbishop who ordained the future Dean Bryan McGurk to the priesthood). Primate O’Reilly had to travel in secret around the country hiding in caves and in the woods. Apparently his pallium was once hidden for safekeeping in the hollow of a great oak tree, but it was stolen. When the archbishop got it back it was cut to pieces – we know all this because he wrote to ask His Holiness at the time if he could still use it, or should he seek another!

Please God my ministry will be less hazardous. But I can’t help thinking that all of us, as Catholics and Christians are entering a time when we will need the gift of courage to stay faithful to the teachings of the Gospel. We are living in the midst of a more insistently secular culture which expects conformity and compromise with the thinking of the day, and which sometimes tends to ridicule and even reject those who witness to timeless or absolute truths.

The world of today still yearns for the Good News of Jesus Christ. But we will need to find a language of faith and truth which can speak in fresh and powerful ways about the depth of the love of Christ to those who are finding life increasingly shallow or despairingly empty of meaning and purpose. We should not be altogether surprised if, like Jesus Himself, our message is completely rejected by some, even in our own country.  We will need the fortitude of the prophet Ezekiel who in this evening’s First Reading heard the Lord calling him to stand up and teach those who had turned against Him, whether they listen or not.  Likewise we will need the humility and endurance of St Paul in Corinth who, whilst being constantly aware of his own weaknesses, was able to withstand insults, hardships and persecutions for Christ’s sake, knowing that when he was weak, he was truly strong.

I am certain that I have no chance of being God’s brave witness without the support and warmth of your prayers, for I am weak and my need for your prayers is great.  I am so grateful for the power of prayer which has already sustained me until today.  Pope Francis asked me on Monday with the other archbishops to “Teach prayer by praying, to announce the faith by believing; to offer witness by living!” What gives me hope in responding to this challenge is the knowledge that you are supporting me by your prayers; you are strengthening me by your faith; you encourage  me by your witness every day.  And so, this evening I place my hope and trust in the efficacy of a beautiful prayer which the Holy Father himself prayed for me and the other new archbishops in Saint Peter’s on Monday. He prayed to God the eternal shepherd, that we may take up the yoke of the Gospel placed on our shoulders, and may we find it so light and easy that, as we guide others by our example and fidelity in the way of God’s commandments, we may one day merit a place in God’s eternal pastures.  Amen.

+Eamon Martin

  • Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland.
  • The Archdiocese of Armagh includes almost all of Counties Armagh and Louth, approximately half of County Tyrone and parts of Counties Derry and Meath.

For media contact: Catholic Communications Office Maynooth: Brenda Drumm 00353 (0) 87 310 4444

 

 

Parish of Cooley, Our Lady Star of the Sea, Boher, 150th Anniversary Celebrations

Boher 150 Years Program – download the full programme of events here

 

‘Rekindle in us the fire of God’s Love’.

Friday 24th July

6.00pm Opening of Flower Festival

8.00pm Mass – Main Celebrant: Fr. Michael O’Dwyer P.P. Portadown, speaker, Mr Francis Campbell, Vice Chancellor of St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London and Former UK Ambassador to the Vatican. Pope mobile used by Pope St John Paul and built by British Leyland in 1982 for the Pope’s visit to Britain, the six-wheeled converted truck has since been used by the late Pontiff during his visits to Zimbabwe and Botswana in 1988 and Zambia in 1989.  The ‘pope mobile’ will be on display throughout the celebrations.

10.00pm Youth Liturgy in Festival Marquee. Celebrating faith with young people – an evening of song, dance, poetry

and prayer – featuring a new faith based group ‘The Rise of the Roses’.

 

Saturday 25th July

3.00pm Procession from St James’ Well 4.00pm Healing Mass – Main Celebrant: Fr.

Tommy McNulty.

Speaker: Mr Eddie Stone with the Sacrament of the Annointing of
the Sick, followed by refreshments in the Festival Marquee.

7.00pm Set Dancing Workshop 9.00pm Ceíli

 

Sunday 26th July

11.00am Mass with Blessing of Graves,

Archbishop Eamon Martin

(There will only be one celebration of Eucharist in the Parish this weekend)

12.30pm Parish Barbeque – a family day of fun and entertainment.

9.00pm Our celebrations conclude with an evening of entertainment with internationally renowned Nathan Carter. Tickets E20. Available from 042 93 76105.
In aid of The Maria Gorretti Foundation.