For further information about all our resources , please contact
Archdiocese of Armagh
Cathedral Road
Armagh
BT61 7QY
Tel: +44 (0) 28 3752 2045
Email: [email protected]
It is a fitting co-incidence that this beautiful story from the Gospel of Mark about the multiplication of the loaves and the feeding of the 5000 is read on the day of Fr Terence Kelly’s funeral – could there be any more appropriate Gospel for the Requiem Mass of a priest?
The story brings out the compassion of Jesus the High Priest, the Good Shepherd. Jesus responds to the hunger of his people – not just to the physical hunger which they were naturally experiencing at the end of a long day, but also to their spiritual hunger. They were searching for something and Jesus took pity on them because ‘they were like sheep without a shepherd’.
Jesus turned to his disciples for help. He said – ‘you give them something to eat yourselves’ – and they replied: Lord, what have we got to feed such a large crowd? And then the miracle happened. As soon as the disciples began to minister and distribute the little they had among the people, Jesus multiplied the effects of their contribution over and over again so that everyone got as much as they wanted. And there were basketfuls left over!
I have often reflected on that Gospel story as a kind of paradigm for priesthood – because priesthood is essentially a call to act in the community in the name and person of Jesus who is the Head and Shepherd of the Church. God’s people are still hungry – in many ways they remain like sheep without a shepherd, but God continues to have pity on them and he calls priests to walk among his people, to minister to them, to feed them. We priests may not think we have much to contribute – at times we might cry out: Lord, where are we going to get enough to feed all these people? But the miracle continues: God multiplies our flimsy efforts with his transforming grace – so that through us, especially through the Eucharist, the central moment of our day, God nourishes his hungry people.
Fr Terence Kelly was a faithful priest. He was actually one of eight young men from the Archdiocese of Armagh who went to study at Maynooth back in 1952. He served in seven parishes of the Archdiocese. After temporary placements at Dundalk, Ardee and Clonfeacle, he became Curate in Loup for a couple of years before spending 22 years as curate in Dungannon parish. Fr Terry’s first appointment as Parish Priest was in Tandragee at the end of the eighties, and then in 1994 he moved to Ballinderry where he ministered for 14 years as PP until his retirement in August 2008. Even after that he was happy to help out over in Ardboe- Moortown with his lifelong friend and classmate, Fr Vin Darragh. It was only a short while ago, he said to the sacristan after Mass in Ardboe – you know I don’t think I’ll be able to manage to say public Mass again: as the Book of Ecclesiastes puts it: ‘There’s time to be born, and a time to die’.
Almost 55 years of ministry! I haven’t even got half that under my belt! I can only stand back in admiration at Fr Terry’s dedication and express great gratitude to God from the people, priests and bishops of the Archdiocese for his tremendous generosity.
Fr Terry was ordained in 1959 before the start of the Second Vatican Council, and no doubt his early years as a priest must have been quite strange and challenging as so much changed in what he would have been used to as a seminarian. But somehow I get the sense that Fr Terry was a straightforward, faithful and committed priest with a sound foundation of prayer and practice set down in his family home and school in ‘The Grange’.
Over those 55 years he ministered through the darkest and most harrowing days of the troubles; he suffered generally from poor health and for medical reasons was unable to drive since October 1978; and he lived through very troublesome and shameful times for the Church. But he had three characteristics which I believe ‘anchored’ his priesthood in its solid foundations.
The first anchor for Fr Terry’s priesthood was his love for the Eucharist. His daily Mass provided him with sustenance and nourishment which in turn enabled him to feed the spiritual needs of his people. His love for the Eucharist was evident when celebrated his Golden Jubilee Mass back in 2009 and when he was presented with a beautiful chalice to mark the occasion, he chose to give it to this Church of St Colmcille in Knockaconey, the parish where he had made his first Holy Communion nearly seventy years previously. We are using that chalice for the celebration of his funeral Mass today. For Fr Terry, the Eucharist was a call to mission. You might think being unable to drive would be a handicap or an excuse even, but Fr Terry turned it into a pastoral advantage – he was always out walking, meeting people and through the kindness and support of many friends and parishioners giving him lifts everywhere, he was able to remain completely faithful to his priestly duties, including sick calls to the hospital and home visitation. That was how he earned the trust and confidence of his people – and even though I believe he could be quite sharp at times – underneath he was a deeply pastoral man with great compassion for his people.
The second anchor for Fr Terry’s priesthood was his devotion to Mary, the Mother of God. Perhaps it was his own indifferent health that naturally drew him to Mary, who stood at the foot of the Cross, but he loved going to Lourdes. He was a faithful pilgrim with the Archdiocese over many years. He became a good friend and pastor to the Lourdes helpers and he enjoyed mingling with the pilgrims down at the grotto. I’m told though that in his latter years he preferred to ‘hold court’ in the foyer of the hotel and watch all the goings on around him.
I think the third anchor for Fr Terry’s priesthood was his own dear family and their support for him. He was born near here in ‘The Grange’ on 30 August 1934 – and, in a way, he never left it. He loved to come home on a Sunday even after his parents and brothers Brian and James died, he developed a great affection for Patsy and his nieces and nephews – as they did for him. Fr Terry would go for walks and tell them stories and listen to them as they grew up. In return for his kindness and affection, his family were a great support to him as he became more dependant in recent years –as of course was Mary O’Neill, his faithful housekeeper. Fr Terry was also a caring mentor to many young priests who worked with him. His friends and family will miss him, with his stories and chat. He enjoyed a simple life with his family, friends, dogs and favourite TV programmes. I believe he was a great man for Sport – it’s not that common that someone could enjoy a great football game and still be a fan of the cricket. Although a faithful Armagh supporter – he cried tears of joy when Armagh beat Kerry – he had no problem following and encouraging his parish clubs – on one occasion he demanded premium seats at Croke Park as the Parish Priest of Ballinderry!
Last Easter when speaking to the priests in Rome, Pope Francis said a priest should be like a shepherd amongst his flock, getting to know ‘the smell of his sheep’. Well, I think that characterised Fr Terry’s priestly ministry, in among his people, getting to know them by name, knowing their joys, their struggles, and feeding their spiritual hunger for God – all the time in a hardworking, no-nonsense, unassuming way.
St Paul says to Timothy in today’s second reading: ‘I have fought the good fight to the end; I have run the good race. All there is to come now is the crown of righteousness reserved for me’. These are words which I trust that Fr Terry could use as he appears before the Good Shepherd to give an account of his life and his ministry as a priest. And I hope and pray that God the merciful judge shall call him forward and say ‘Well done good and faithful servant, come and inherit the kingdom prepared for you since the foundation of the world’.
Months Mind Mass for Very Rev. Terence Kelly PE. Will take place in St. Colmcille’s Church, Knockaconey on Thursday 6 February 2014 at 7.30pm.
The Archdiocese of Armagh is sad to announce the death on 6 January 2014 of Fr Terence Kelly, PE, former Parish Priest of Ballinderry. Fr Kelly died peacefully in Collegelands Nursing Home. May he rest in peace. Our sympathies are with his sisters, Sr Joanne MMM and May Doherty, sister-in-law, Patsy Kelly, nieces and nephews and family circle and brother priests.
Funeral arrangements are as follows:
Tuesday, 7 January 2014 at 7.00 pm remains leaving his sister-in-law’s home to arrive at St Colmcille’s Church, Knockaconey for Mass at 7.30 pm.
Requiem Mass will take place on Wednesday, 8 January 2014 at 12.00 noon in St Colmcille’s Church, Knockaconey. Burial immediately afterwards in the adjoining cemetery.
Biography
Born 30 August 1934, Parish of Armagh
Studied
St Patrick’s College, Armagh
St Patrick’s College, Maynooth
Ordained 21 June 1959 in St Patrick’s College, Maynooth
– Effective policies are needed to secure for people, who are equal in dignity and rights, access to health, education and what they need to realise their potential and develop fully as a person.
– May the paternity of God and the maternity of Mary, make the world so aware of its fraternity as to make war, at some stage in the future, unthinkable.
The shepherds went back to work but they went back with joy in their hearts. They were singing praises to God for all they had seen and heard. They had seen that their Saviour was born – Christ the Lord. They had heard the angel singing: ‘Glory to God in the Highest Heaven and peace on earth to those with whom He is pleased’
But I am sure that they may have wondered how the peace on earth was going to be achieved. Life was sometimes rough for them and anything but peaceful. They did not yet know that the New Born Saviour would, one day, say to his learners: ‘You have only one Father, who is God, and you are all brothers and sisters”. Jesus went much further and matched His fwords with deed. He gave Himself up to death for love of the Father.
We are all called to see ourselves as brothers and sisters in Him in as much as we are all children of the same Father. In His person, we are reconciled with God and with one another as brothers and sisters.
Jesus Christ is peace. His death on The Cross brings an end to the separation between peoples. Jesus broke down the wall of separation which divided people. He broke down the hostility between them. All who accept the life of Christ see God as the Father of all.
In Christ the other person is welcomed and loved as a son or daughter of God, regardless of their race, or the colour of their skin, or their religion. In Christ the other person is accepted and welcomed as a brother and sister, not as a stranger, much less as a rival or even an enemy.
In the Family of God we are all sons and daughters of the same Father. All are loved by God. All enjoy the same dignity. All have been saved by the blood of Christ, who died on The Cross and rose for all. All of us have been given Mary to be our mother, by Christ, as He hung, dying on The Crossh. That is why none of us can remain indifferent when we hear and see, on our TV screens, the massacres that are taking place in Syria or Sudan; Iraq or Democratic Republic of Congo. None of us can remain indifferent when the Philippines are devastated by storms.
None of us can remain indifferent when talks, aimed at resolving the issues of flags, parades and the past break down. Our brothers and sisters are involved. We are grateful for the work of the negotiators. We owe it to them, and to ourselves, to consider carefully their proposals and work to secure a lasting solution. It is because they appreciate the value of peace, that so much hard work has been done.
In his first Message for the World Day of Peace – Pope Francis reminds us of these things when he describes fraternity as the foundation and pathway to peace. He describes fraternity as a lively awareness of the fact that we are all related. We are, therefore, expected to see one another and to treat one another as brothers and sisters. This lively awareness is generally first learned in the family – which is meant to spread its love to the world around it.
Pope Francis reminds us that there is a longing for fraternity in the heart of each one of us. This longing has been placed there by God our Father. Unfortunately, there are many obstacles that prevent us from fully responding to that longing. Pope Francis speaks of the jealousy that provoked Cain to kill his brother Abel – simply because Abel was different and his offering was preferred by God to that of Cain. Earlier this week on the radio I heard a man explain why his house was wrecked over Christmas. “It was due to jealousy” he said.
Pope Francis asks the question: ‘Will the men and women of the world even manage, by their power alone, to overcome indifference, egoism and hatred. Will they ever manage to accept the legitimate differences, typical of brothers and sisters?’
The story of Cain and Abel shows that we are called to fraternity – to this awareness of being really brothers and sisters. Unfortunately, we all have the tragic capacity to betray this calling with our daily acts of selfishness. Acts of selfishness are at the root of so many wars – national – international – even domestic.
The basis of our fraternity – of our all being brothers and sisters, is found in God’s love – God is love – God is the Father of All. It is found in the concrete, personal love which God has for every man and woman, young and old, weak and strong, rich or poor. That love of God – once it is welcomed into our hearts – gives us the power to change our lives and relationships with others.
Pope Francis sees fraternity as a prerequisite for fighting poverty and putting an end to wars. Effective policies are needed to secure for people, who are equal in dignity and rights, access to health, education and what they need to realise their potential and develop fully as a person.
In addition to policies there is a need for people to choose to live a more modest lifestyle so that all may have the basics. Similarly, while international agencies and national laws are important, and greatly to be desired, they are not, in themselves, enough to protect us from the risk of armed conflict.
A conversion of heart is needed to see the other person as a brother or sister to care for and work together with. ‘To those who sow violence and death by force of arms’, Pope Francis makes this appeal, ‘In the person you see today simply as an enemy to be beaten, discover your brother or sister and hold beneath your heart.’
The Pope asks Mary, the Mother of Jesus to help us to understand and love every day the fraternity that springs up from the heart of her Son so as to bring peace to all on this, our beloved earth.
This the first day of the year concentrates on Mary and her maternity. It is already an announcement of peace. Every maternity reveals the desire and the presence of life. It shows the holiness of life. War is always aimed at killing. It is the destruction of life conceived. May the paternity of God and the maternity of Mary, make the world so aware of its fraternity as to make war, at some stage in the future, unthinkable.
“I invite all of you, but especially public representatives and all who believe in a more just and compassionate world,
to support the call of Pope Francis for an all-out concerted action to end world hunger by the year 2025″ – Cardinal Brady
The celebration of Christmas recalling, as it does, the coming into the world of the Son of God, His birth at Bethlehem and His first appearances to people, always brings fresh and joyful hope. These are my hopes this year.
My first hope is that all who come home for Christmas may really feel welcome and appreciate the love of relatives, families and friends, and find the Lord in their loved ones. As those who have come for Christmas from afar know well, the love we experience in our families is precious. For it is a reflection of the love which God has for each one of us – the same love which inspired the Father to send his beloved Son to be our Saviour on that first Christmas night.
I also hope that the great activities of preparing for, and celebrating, Christmas will not overshadow Christ and the many gifts that He wants to bring, especially the gifts of love, peace and pardon. A seventeenth century hymn puts it more poetically thus:
Daughter of Sion, rise
to greet thine infant king
Nor let thy stubborn heart despise
the pardon he doth bring.
My next hope is for those without company, without food and warmth at this season. May they be sustained by the concern of fellow human beings. Of course, I am thinking of people in need here at home but also of people in the Philippines, Syria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
I am thinking also especially of the many people throughout the world who have no peace. Through the work of wise and compassionate negotiators, may they too experience the salvation brought by Christ.
My final hope is that all of us come to see that the Birth of Christ means little or nothing if He has not been born in our hearts. This means that the work of Christmas really begins when we console the broken-hearted, feed the hungry, welcome the strangers, release the prisoners and bring peace among people.
For that reason I invite all of you, but especially public representatives and all who believe in a more just and compassionate world, to support the call of Pope Francis for an all-out concerted action to end world hunger by the year 2025. The initiative is called: ‘One Human Family. Food for All’. For far too long we have allowed global hunger and local poverty to be seen as tolerable. The fact is this; we can solve the problem of hunger and poverty, if we decide to do so. Let us recall once more: the work of Christmas begins when we feed the hungry and may God speed that work in 2014.
The people, who made Christmas for me and mine, when I was a child, are long since dead but they are not dead in my heart or in my memory. However, the fact that they live on in my memory will not make them last forever. What will make them last forever is that they are alive in the heart of God. A Saviour has been born for us; he has saved us from everlasting death. Because of Christmas Day, we can all live forever.
Christmas is indeed a special day. May it be very special day for everyone of you this year and may the peace of Jesus triumph in your hearts every day in 2014.
The Prayer and Spirituality Commission in conjunction with the Parish of Drumcree (Portadown) are delighted to present an Exhibition on Prayer and Spirituality at the Drumcree Pastoral Centre, Portadown for this weekend and the Third Week of Advent, after Masses and by arrangement with the parish.
Click the following links for the Review Report and Recommendations of Safeguarding Practice in the Archdiocese of Armagh by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland and Statement by Cardinal Seán Brady.
To mark the beginning of Advent yesterday, Archbishop Eamon Martin launched a specially commissioned Advent calendar. The first day of Advent heralds the beginning of the Catholic Church’s new year.
Archbishop Eamon said, “I am delighted to launch our new Advent calendar which each day up to Christmas Eve will reveal Advent information and prayer resources by clicking on a virtual numerical door in our online calendar. For many years we have provided online resources to assist with our Advent preparations, but this year we offer the faithful our novel online calendar for this purpose.
“Why is the Advent calendar useful? Preparation does not happen at once but over time. The season of Advent is a time of spiritual preparation for the Lord’s coming at Christmas. Advent also prepares us for the second coming of Christ at the end of time. As Christians, we must always be prepared for the coming of the Lord as reflected in today’s Gospel reading at Mass, ‘You must stand ready because the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do no not expect’ [Mt 24:37-44]. Taken together then, each day of Advent amounts to a period of time which allows us to journey and reflect on ‘the joy of the Gospel’.
Archbishop Eamon continued, “As we begin our Catholic new year, I invite everyone during the Advent season to visit and to enjoy the information provided on our online calendar, which will provide details on:
– Mass readings of the day;
– Pope Francis’s new Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium (The Joy of the Gospel), published on 26 November last, will be promoted using excerpts from it;
– Advent videos: blessing of the crib in the home, blessing of the advent wreath in the home, prayer when lighting the lights on the Christmas tree, family table prayer;
– Advent music;
– information on saints during the Advent such as Saint Nicholas on 6 December;
– video and text reflections from Pope Francis and Irish bishops (The Creed, The Liturgy etc)
– family prayers (mother and child, children, grandparents, parents and godparents);
– prayers for the season: for families in need, for those suffering neglect and violence, for Irish emigrants, for those in prison, for those who are sick, for those in difficulty;
– Tweets from individuals, parishes, Irish Church agencies and from the Vatican;
– resources for Advent and Christmas from Veritas;
– Trócaire Global Gifts for 2013 information campaign;
– Crosscare’s Dublin Food Bank appeal;
– work of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul; and
– Christmas messages from Irish bishops in preparation for the Nativity of our Lord.
Archbishop Eamon concluded, “As Advent is the season of preparation for the coming of our Lord, I encourage the faithful, notwithstanding our hectic schedule over the coming weeks, to make time to pray – alone and with loved ones – and by so doing to draw nearer to Christ.”
Pope Francis has called for an Extraordinary Synod to take place at the Vatican between 5-19 October 2014.
Around 150 Synod Fathers will take part in the meeting to discuss the “pastoral challenges of the family in the context of evangelization” and how best to re-propose the centrality of matrimony and the transmission of faith in the home within the proclamation of the Gospel in our contemporary society.
Please see on the link below, a paper from the Synod of Bishops, regarding the meeting of the Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops due to be held in Rome, 5th-19th October 2014 on the theme Pastoral Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelisation.
The Secretariat has asked that the Document be shared immediately as widely as possible to deaneries and parishes so that input from local sources can be received regarding the themes and responses to the questionnaire, as well as any helpful statistics, for the preparation of the Instrumentum laboris.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkRead more
You must be logged in to post a comment.