Download issue 6/16 of our 3 churches newsletter for the 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time below.
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3 churches newsletter, 31 January 2016
Download our 3 churches newsletter for the 4th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C):
Three in a row
… No, not our 3 Churches this time. This week we celebrate 3 interesting feast days in a row, with a sort of connection running through them.
Monday is the Feast of St Brigid, one of our patrons. Leader of a religious community of men and women in Kildare, Ireland, she is now second patron of that land, after St Patrick himself. There are many traditions about her, one of which is the Cross named after her that she is said to have put together from reeds. You can see a stylised version of it on all the sanctuary furniture in St Brigid’s. But she also had an eternal flame kept in a so-called “fire-house” in the abbey, which lasted until the Reformation.
It’s that flame that provides the link to Tuesday’s feast, the Presentation of the Lord. When the baby Jesus was taken by Mary and Joseph a first son to be presented in the Temple at Jerusalem, he was proclaimed to be the light of the nations by that lovely elderly gentleman Simeon. We commemorate that by blessing candles on this feast, known therefore in the English speaking world as “Candlemas”.
Then those candles lead us on to Wednesday, when we uphold the traditional Blessing of Throats on the Feast of St Blaise. Tradition tells of his healing a child by removing a bone stuck in their throat. Two candles previously blessed are held in the form of a cross and the words said: “Through the intercession of Saint Blase, bishop and martyr, may God deliver you from every disease of the throat and from every other illness: In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
If you can, why not attend Mass on any or all of these interesting 3 days, all of them at 9.30am
Monday , St Brigid at St Brigid’s (naturally)
Tuesday, The Presentation/Candlemas at Christ the King
Wednesday, St Blaise at St Paul’s
Christ the King bidding prayers, 24 January 2016
The Celebrant will introduce and also conclude the prayer. The reader should pause for several moments between the intercession and its response. Leave about 20 seconds for the quiet prayer. There is no response after this – move straight to the Hail Mary.
CELEBRANT: Sisters and brothers, we are gathered as Christ’s body knowing that He is here with us. Let us share with Him our needs
READER: (The response is): Hear our prayer.
READER: Let us pray for the church. May we show mercy to others, remembering that we are sinners as well as saints. We also pray for the unity of all Christians.
…….. (PAUSE)……….. In Your mercy, Lord ……. Hear our prayer.
READER: We pray for the leaders gathered in Davos at the World Economic Forum. May they set pathways to a more just distribution of the world’s wealth.
…. (PAUSE)…… In Your mercy, Lord …. Hear our prayer.
READER: Let us pray for racial justice within our parish, our city and our country. May we face the prejudice in our hearts that prevents us from being one body.
….(PAUSE)…… In Your mercy, Lord …. Hear our prayer.
READER: We pray for Megan Bowgen, who died recently. May she enjoy eternal rest and may her family be comforted that she is at peace
…… (PAUSE)…… In Your mercy, Lord ……. Hear our prayer.
READER: Let us remember the sick, the suffering and the lonely in our parish and ask for the grace to help them.
…… (PAUSE)…… In Your mercy, Lord ……. Hear our prayer.
READER: Let us silently ask for our personal needs or the needs of others (Long Pause)…. Let us ask the intercession of Mary, mother of the Lord: Hail Mary, etc.
After a short pause the Celebrant will conclude the prayer.
CELEBRANT: May our spoken words win favour in your sight, O Lord, and our needs be granted through Your Son, Jesus Christ, in union with the Holy Spirit, for ever and ever. Amen.
3 churches newsletter, 24 January 2016
Download our 3 churches newsletter for the 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C) below.
1916-2016
Wales has a long history of Christianity. The martyrdom of Sts Julius and Aaron probably took place in 257-9 in Caerleon. Christianity spread, but while eastern Britain eventually became England through the Anglo-Saxon invasion, Wales remained steadfastly Christian, producing many great Christian leaders, including Sts Illtyd, Dyfrig, David and Teilo, in the “age of the saints”.
The re-organisation of the Church by the Normans saw the confirmation of four Welsh dioceses: Llandaff, St. David’s, Bangor and St. Asaphs. Religious houses were founded by the Cistercians, Benedictines, Franciscans, Dominicans and others, but under Henry VIII, all these were suppressed. Except for a brief period under Mary, the Catholic Church in Wales and England entered a two hundred year period of deprivation and persecution. The “Old Faith” barely survived in many parts of Wales. Large numbers of the Catholic gentry faced penury and imprisonment. Missionary priests educated abroad were hunted down when they returned and ministered to pockets of Catholics in secret, facing the penalty of being hanged, drawn and quartered. Gradually the penal laws against Catholics were eased and in 1829 this culminated in Catholic Emancipation when many of the restrictions on Catholics were swept away.
From 1688 Rome had appointed Vicars Apostolic to areas of Britain. Wales and Herefordshire were part of the Western District, but in 1840 this was divided in two, and Wales plus Herefordshire became the Welsh District. The full restoration of the Catholic hierarchy in 1850 saw the foundation of the diocese of Newport and Menevia with Bishop Brown in charge, followed by Bishop Hedley. In 1895 the reduced diocese of Newport was redefined as the counties of Glamorgan, Monmouth and Hereford.
It was largely Bishop Hedley who planned the event we commemorate this year. In 1916 the Cardiff Province was established, comprising the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Cardiff and the diocese of Menevia. Belmont Abbey was our first cathedral. To commemorate this, there are two events on the weekend of 6-7 February. On Saturday 6th the monks of Belmont sing Solemn Vespers at St David’s Cathedral at 3pm. On the Sunday there is a Pontifical High Mass at Belmont itself, also at 3pm, for which tickets are needed. I have six available, so if you would like to be considered please let me know, preferably by email by this Wednesday.
Fr Matthew