Tuesday, May 13, 2025
Home Blog Page 92

Exploring Eucharist for today

EXPLORING EUCHARIST
FOR TODAY

A presentation on the development of the Eucharist with time for prayer, reflection and adoration.

Thursday, 8 March – click here for details

Thursday, 15 March – click here for details

2 Lenten evenings of Reflection and Prayer

The first night will be on Wednesday the 7th of March and the second night on Wednesday the 28th of March.

Arrival – 7.30pm for 8.00pm (refreshments available). Contribution appreciated.

Click here for poster

CROSSROADS 2012

crossroads-poster-web

IT’s FREE – Come along and enjoy the fun…(a collection will be taken up during the Celebration of the Eucharist and if you can make a small donation to help defer costs it will be greatly appreciated!)

When: Sunday 26th February 2012 – 10.00a.m. – 8.00p.m. (7.00p.m. Leaving Mass)

Where: St. Ciaran’s College, Ballygawley, County Tyrone

Who: The event is for all youth aged 14+ from Armagh, Clogher, Derry, Down & Connor, Dromore, Kilmore & Raphoe Dioceses.

There will be plenty of activities, talks and praise and worship to keep all youth entertained throughout the day.

There will be a wide range of workshops to attend, both morning and afternoon, covering a wide range of topics:

-MAGIS: How does God speak to You? In a relaxed and creative manner we’ll consider relationship with God by inviting each person to reflect on how you communicate love to the special people in your life. How do they communicate love to you?
How is love expressed in the relationship between you and God?
This workshop will give you a flavour of Ignatian spirituality which involves being in touch with your deepest desires and sensitive to how God is present to you through everyday encounters, sights, sounds & conversations! (19+)

-SERVE: Who is the other? How to act local on Global issues: SERVE will be facilitating a very engaging workshop on third world awareness. One workshop will be facilitated for those aged 15-18, and another two for 19+ years.

-Peter Sands: Adoration – Peter Sands will host this exciting workshop on Adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament with one workshop open to those aged 15-18, and another two open to 19+years.

-Breige O’Hare: Christ With You Always – We will recognise how powerfully Christ is present within us, acting through us in our ordinary daily lives. We’ll have a greater appreciation of our celebration of Eucharist as an encounter with Christ: Christ loving us so that we might become his love for others; Christ changing us so that, with him, we might change our world. (Ages 19+)

-Martin Kennedy: Living Christian Spirituality – The best way of sharing the gift of the good news is to enjoy it in the ordinary moments of our lives

The workshop will explore six elements of practical Christian spirituality in our day-to-day lives. It proposes that the heart of Christianity is expressed in the ordinary bits and pieces of life, not in separation from them. (Ages 19+)

-Jim McDowell: Discipleship in a Divided Society – Exploring how our identity is formed, how others perceive our identity and what it means for our identity to be found in Jesus Christ (19+)

-Minding Your Mental Health: Awareness will be raised about keeping your mental health in check and suicide awareness. One workshop will be facilitated for those aged 15-18, and another two for 19+ years.

-ELATION MINISTRIES: How we as Catholics can incorporate music as a form of ministry. This is open to all ages.

-Down and Connor Folk Group (DCF): How we as Catholics can incorporate music as a form of ministry. This is open to all ages.

NET Ministries: Exploring how drama can be used in living the Christian life. Suitable for ages 15-18

-Armagh Diocesan Retreat Team- Siolta: Interactive, fun and energising techniques of exploring faith using drama, music, dance and art. Suitable for ages 14-18

-Precious Life: The Pro Life Movement in Ireland – Members of Precious Life will facilitate this exciting workshop on how the pro life movement in Ireland is something which we should each engage with. Suitable for those aged 16+

-Dominic O’Reilly: Living the JOY filled life (Relationships) – Exploring how through your relationship with Jesus, your relationships with Others and relationship with Yourself you can really live out the Joy filled life!

Please bring a packed lunch!!

Further information:

Please e-mail [email protected] to get more information regarding travel arrangements and/or request a booking form.
Place your Diocese name as the email SUBJECT!!

Or contact Dermot in the Armagh Diocesan Youth Ministry Office on 028/048 3752 3084. 

crossroads-poster-web

Life in the Spirit Seminar

                                            LIFE IN THE SPIRIT SEMINAR
                                       ST NICHOLAS’ CHURCH, DUNDALK

Click here for poster and details

21st Divine Mercy Conference

                                    21ST DIVINE MERCY CONFERENCE

Click here for poster and details

400th Anniversary of the Death of Blessed Patrick O’Loughran

400TH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE DEATH OF
BLESSED PATRICK O’LOUGHRAN

Mass on Wednesday 1st February to mark the 400th Anniversary of the death of Blessed Patrick O’Loughran in Blessed Patrick O’Loughran Primary School, Castlecaulfield.
This mass is an opportunity for our pupils, staff and local community to remember the man our school is named after.
The mass will be a simple ceremony with our pupils partaking and should only last about one hour.

2012 Confirmation List – Archdiocese of Armagh

                                            2012 CONFIRMATION LIST
                                          ARCHDIOCESE OF AMRAGH

(click on image to see list)

22 November – Mass of Thanksgiving – St Mary’s High School, Newry

MASS OF THANKSGIVING
ST MARY’S HIGH SCHOOL NEWRY
22 NOVEMBER 2011
ADDRESS BY
CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH

I thank the Principal, Ms Cosgrove, and the Board of Governors for the invitation to come here tonight.  I am very pleased to be present on this important occasion in the calendar of the school, but it is a special honour to be present when St Mary’s celebrates the Golden Jubilee of its opening in 1961.  

I congratulate all who receive prizes and awards here tonight.  I know that they are testimony to the hard work which you, the students, have carried out under the excellent direction and guidance of your teachers.  I also congratulate the parents and families of all those who receive prizes and awards here tonight.  Tonight you too are entitled to rejoice and bask in the reflected glory of those receiving prizes.

In my post-primary education, I was a pupil at St Patrick’s College, Cavan.  Like St Mary’s, St Patrick’s Cavan was a single sex Catholic secondary school serving the well-being and development of the boys who were students there.  The older I become and the more I travel, the more thankful I am to my parents and my teachers who made that education possible.  Not everyone got secondary education at that time.  Of course I know that not even today does every child of your age in the world have the opportunity of getting such a wonderful education.  I am glad that so many appreciate the opportunities it provides.
I was really delighted to read, in the literature ,provided to me about St Mary’s, that ever since 1961, the year of its opening, there has been, in St Mary’s High School, a strong emphasis on the care of the pupils in the progressive stage of their spiritual, personal and social development.  

Spiritual, personal and social, that is a delightful summary for me of what every genuine education is all about.  Spiritual is, in the first place, as it should be.  We do not live on bread alone.  We are a combination of body and soul, mind and matter, physical and spiritual.  We are here on this earth, yes, to develop every one of our gifts and talents but to what purpose?  So that we may be good citizens in this life and in the next.

The Gospels these Sundays, as we move towards the end of the year, remind us time and again that death is not the end.  Christ will come again in glory at the end of time to judge the living and the dead.  What will be the acid test?  What will decide whether we will be put among the goats or the sheep?  Actually it will be something very simple.  How did we treat others?  Did we treat them as human persons?  That is why I am delighted to see the emphasis on personal development.

  • Each one of us is a unique human individual.  
  • Each one of us has our own worth and dignity.  
  • Each one of us is made in the image and likeness of God.  
  • Each one of us has been created by God and God does not make junk.

Of course what is true about me, myself, is true of each and every one present in this hall tonight.  We each have our own worth and dignity.  Certain things follow from that.  We all are worthy of respect.  To respect basically means to inspect someone carefully and to see their worth and dignity and to treat them accordingly.

Of course respect begins with oneself.  If I do not respect myself, I can hardly expect others to do so.  If I have not enough respect for myself, it will show in the way I eat and drink and dress.  It will determine my attitude to use and abuse of things like alcohol and drugs, for example.  I am delighted therefore to know that in this school great care and attention is paid to the social development of the pupils.

Last year, many classmates from my days in St Patrick’s College gathered for a celebration in Armagh.  Fellows came from as far away as Galway and Clare.  I thought it was a great tribute to the friendships we formed in those far-off days of 1952-57.  You see, we human beings were all made for friendship.  

It really does not matter how much money we have or how much power or skill we have, if we have not got the basic skills of relating to and getting on peacefully with others.  That ability to make friends is one of the basic foundations for human happiness.

I get the impression that St Mary’s High School is a very welcoming kind of school.  You welcome people with different backgrounds and different abilities.  I noticed the growing number of pupils with English as a foreign language.  It reminded me of the words of last Sunday’s Gospel where the Lord says that when He comes again to judge, He will say, “Come you blessed – for I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”

I read, with great interest and happiness, your Mission Statement.  You work in collaborating with other educational institutions……  This is essential at all times but really important in a time like this of economic recession.  I am convinced that it is by cooperation and only by working together that we can cope with the sacrifices and cut-backs which the recession is bringing.

The Irish Word “Meitheil” means a group of people coming together to do special work like saving of hay, cutting the turf or reaping the corn.  It has a long and noble history this is no longer the way things are done on the farm.  But the idea of working together to face a big challenge is valid and valuable, especially in a time of recession.

Your Mission Statement also speaks of the partnership between the pupils, teachers, and parents to achieve the best.  Long may that partnership flourish.  I congratulate you being designated a Specialist School in Mathematics and Business and on receiving the Investors in People Awards in 2010.

After I was ordained a priest in 1964, I was appointed to teach in my old school, St Pat’s, Cavan.  What did I teach?  I usually answered, Latin, French and football.  Despite the many humiliating defeats we suffered at the hands of teams from the Abbey and Violet Hill, down through the 13 years I was there, I still regard those years as among the happiest of my life.  They were happy because I knew I was involved in a noble enterprise, the enterprise of preparing people for life, life in this world and in the next world.

I am delighted to be here tonight in St Mary’s High School where I believe that the same noble enterprise is being continued, where pupils are taught to have values and to acquire virtues where you are taught many things but especially you are taught above all the Golden Rule, to treat others as you would wish them to treat you.  I know that happens here because of the important role that Religious education plays here in St Mary’s.  You will always be great if you keep in mind what Mary said to the newly-wed couple in Cana.  “Do what Jesus tells you.”  They did and they did not regret it.

I was in Dublin last Saturday for the Annual Mass organised by the Legion of Mary – in memory of their founder, Frank Duff.  The Legion of Mary is the largest lay organisation in the Catholic Church.  It too has played a big part in the development and happiness of many people in the world and it has helped millions of people in the process.  I know that there are plenty of people here tonight who would get a great fulfilment and happiness in the Legion – if they had the courage to join.  

After the Mass the Palestrina Choir were getting ready for their practice.  They are a group of young singers who sing in the Choir.  The Organist who accompanied them was a young man from Newry.  I certainly got the impression that all of those people were very happy.  It showed me that the possibility for developing your spiritual, personal and social skills does not end when you leave school.

I hope you all find the opportunities that suit you and that you will always be great ambassadors for St Mary’s High School.

24 November – Message on the occasion of the acceptance by Pope Benedict XVI of the Resignation of Bishop Seamus Hegarty

MESSAGE ON THE OCCASION OF
THE ACCEPTANCE BY POPE BENEDICT XVI
OF THE RESIGNATION OF BISHOP SEAMUS HEGARTY

I have heard the sad news of the medical condition of Bishop Séamus Hegarty which has necessitated him offering his resignation to the Holy Father and that resignation being accepted today.

I thank Bishop Hegarty for his faithful and generous service as bishop, first, of the diocese of Raphoe and more recently of Derry, for almost thirty years during what has been a very challenging period in the history of the Church.

I wish to acknowledge the contribution made by Bishop Hegarty to the work of the Bishops’ Conference and especially in the pastoral leadership which he has shown over the years to the personal, social and economic challenges facing Irish emigrants and their families – difficult conditions which again apply to Irish society – North and South.  In addition, I thank Bishop Hegarty for his work with the Irish Council for Prisoners Overseas, and especially for his unwavering commitment to the welfare of prisoners and assistance to their families.

I wish Bishop Hegarty the blessing of better health to enjoy a long and happy retirement.

20 November – Feast of Christ the King – Mass of Thanksgiving – St Cronan’s Church, Roscrea

FEAST OF CHRIST THE KING
MASS OF THANKSGIVING
ST CRONAN’S CHURCH, ROSCREA
20 NOVEMBER 2011
HOMILY BY
CARINDAL SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH

I feel very much at home here.  Your Parish Priest, Father Tom Corbett and I went to Maynooth on the same day in September 1957.  We have remained friends ever since.  I thank him for the invitation to be here with you on this special occasion.

Secondly, this majestic St Cronan’s Church was designed by the distinguished architect, J J McCarthy.  He also designed St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh. The great famine of 1846-47 interrupted the building of our Cathedral and your Church as well but both projects were resumed in the 1850s.  The stained glass windows came from Munich in Germany for both Churches.  Today we can only gaze in wonder at their beauty and splendour – build by a generous and faith-filled people in hard times.  

I congratulate you all on the wonderful work of restoration and refurbishment.  It tells me that the spirit of St Cronan is alive and well in the Isle of the Living and surrounding territory.  

I sincerely hope the restoration of your majestic St Cronan’s Church will greatly help to promote your mission of creating an atmosphere where you can truly worship God and build the living Church.  
I am well aware from Father Corbett that this community recognises clearly the value of ministering to each other.  At the same time, I know that you do not neglect, for one minute, to foster your own spiritual growth.  How pleasing to find a parish totally committed to social justice which, at the same time, is intent on sharing its faith and its gifts with the world.

I have heard great reports of the Ecumenical Friendship Walks in the footsteps of St Cronan which you celebrated last year in the month of April  and I am, of course, looking forward to meeting, this afternoon, the Cistercian monks of St Joseph’s, who faithfully preserve the monastic tradition of St Cronan and Monaincha.

I believe the present time of recession is going to prove a decisive time of testing and of judging – a testing of our beliefs and of our practice.  It will test our belief that all we have is a Gift of God and a sign of God’s love for us.

It will test our sense of standing shoulder to shoulder with our brothers and sisters – especially our brothers and sisters in need.  It will, in other words, test our sense of solidarity.  We can rise to the challenge but only if we dig deep into our belief in the dignity and worth of very human being and match our attitudes and our behaviour to our values and beliefs.

It is often said that Christ came to disturb the comfortable and to comfort the disturbed and distressed.  The Feast of Christ the King does both of those in a very powerful way.
Hail Redeemer, King Divine!
Priest and lamb the Throne is thine,
King whose reign shall never cease,
Prince of everlasting peace.
There is mighty comfort in the words of that beautiful hymn, especially when it goes on to sing,

King most Holy King, King of Truth,
guide the lonely, guide the youth,
Christ thou King of Glory bright,
be to us eternal light.

Here in the Western world we do not have many Kings or Queens and none with much real power.  In the time of Jesus Kings were leaders of their communities.  They were judges, in the sense that they set moral standards for their community.  Today’s Gospel celebrates the Kingship of Christ as an act of judgement.  He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead.  But Jesus is a special kind of King.  When He came in the flesh, 2000 years ago, His throne was the Cross.  He reigns from the Cross.  His way of judgement is very difference from what happens in the world.  The world considers certain people, the poor for example, as not important.  For Christ they are sacred, divine.  What we do to them, we do to Him.

This Gospel is really disturbing; we don’t like to think of someone coming from outside, an external examiner.  We prefer to write our own references, to be our own judge of ourselves and of our conduct.  There is an old legal saying; No one can be a judge in their own case.  So, Christ will come and He will place the sheep on His right and the goat on His left.  To those on His right, He wall say, “Come, you whom my Father has blessed” and to the other, “Take your heritage.  Go away from me, will your curse upon you, to the eternal fire.”

As always the judgement causes two reactions.  Wonderful relief at knowing we were right.  Good actions which perhaps we saw as trivial were in fact truly great and seen as such in the sight of God.  It is like coming home.  You have done your finals and you have passed, congratulations, great stuff, but as tomorrow’s Gospel tells us very powerfully, our present judgements are never final.  The real final will occur only when the son of man comes in his glory, escorted by all his angels.   That is the future final judgement.

For now all we can be certain of is that God’s final judgement will surprise us.  There is absolutely no room for complacency.  To the extent that we are in any way smug or complacent or self-satisfied is a sure sign that we are not ready for God’s judgement.  When we finally read the heritage, the Kingdom prepared for us since the foundation of the world.

The other reaction is one of terrible sadness, “Go away from me.”  They have missed the boat.  They go away to their fate, eternal punishment, prepared for the devil and his angels.

Today’s Gospel invites us to recall the judgement moments we have met in life.  We became seriously ill, we lost our job.

The country fell into huge recession.  These experiences are real encounters with God, real moments of truth.