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Holy Week Liturgy

Next week, Palm Sunday marks the beginning of Holy Week, the centre of the Church’s year. We are grateful to Fr Ray O’Shea for his continued help, enabling us to sustain our usual liturgy. Here are the times of services. Please note the change of day of the Chrism Mass to Wednesday. This is to facilitate those who travel distances such as from Herefordshire.

All evening liturgies will be at 8.00pm on the Thursday and Saturday. :

Palm Sunday Mass times as usual

Monday/Tuesday As normal

Wednesday  11.30am Chrism Mass at the Cathedral

Maundy Thursday   8.00pm Mass of the Lord’s Supper and Watching at Christ the King and St Brigid’s

Good Friday  3.00pm Commemoration of the Passion at St Paul’s and Christ the King

Easter Vigil  8.00pm First Mass of Easter at Christ the King and St Brigid’s (no evening Mass at St Paul’s)

Easter Sunday  Mass times as usual

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We use this prayer at Mass this Sunday. You could use it during the week too…

Lord Jesus Christ,
your birth, life and death remind me that to all things there is a season.
Your death became the seed that brought forth
a new and abundant life for all humanity.
Show me the seeds that you wish me to sow
and the things that I need to let go of.
Inspire me to put aside my own selfish ambitions, dreams and goals
and help me to see Your vision - a vision of a new view of life –
a life of meaning and glory,
of dying to self, and living for You in love and service of others. Amen

For God so loved the world…

There was once a bridge across a canal. Most of the day it stayed parallel to the river, allowing ships to pass through, but when a train would come along, the bridge would be turned sideways across the river, allowing the train to cross it. A switchman sat in a hut on one side of the river where he operated the controls to turn the bridge and lock it into place as the train crossed.

One evening as the switchman was waiting for the last train of the day to come, he caught sight of the train lights. He turned the bridge into position, but, to his horror, he found the locking control did not work. If the bridge was not securely in position, it would cause the train full of passengers to jump the track and go crashing into the river. He left the bridge turned across the river and hurried across the bridge to the other side, where there was a lever switch he could hold to operate the lock manually. He took hold and leaned backward to apply his weight to it, locking the bridge.

Then, coming across the bridge from the direction of his control shack, he heard a voice, “Daddy, where are you?” His four-year-old son was crossing the bridge to look for him. His first impulse was to cry out, “Run! Run!” But the train was too close; the tiny legs would never make it across the bridge in time. The man realized that he could not get back to the lever in time if he saved his son. Either many people on the train or his own son – must die.

The train sped safely and swiftly on its way, and no one aboard was even aware of the tiny broken body thrown mercilessly into the river by the on rushing train.

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We use this prayer at Mass this Sunday. You could use it during the week too…

Lord Jesus Christ,
 you came into the world - and you left it -
 in simplicity and vulnerability.
 You came not to condemn the world but to save it.
 Speak deeply to me today of your profound and eternal love for all humanity. Let me allow your love to come into my life so that I can be changed.
 Let it penetrate all my thoughts, words, deeds and attitudes.
And may your Spirit help me to respond to your love;
 to be prepared to reflect your light and love in my everyday life; and to serve others, today and every day.
 Amen

Dementia Prayer Week

Bishop David McGough Auxiliary Bishop of Birmingham and Lead Bishop to the Bishops of Wales and England Pastoral Care Project writes:

“Dear Friends, I warmly recommend to you Dementia – Prayer Week 12 – 19th March 2015. Dementia is a degenerative disease which tends to isolate both the sufferer and the families that surround them. Confronted with this condition we naturally feel inadequate.

Prayer is one very powerful way of connecting with all concerned. Let us pray for and with those whose lives have been touched by dementia. In this way we unite ourselves with them, forging a link with the Lord that words alone cannot express.

One of my own lasting links with my mother in her final months was to share with her the Hail Mary. Dementia had robbed her of many links with the past, but prayer endured as a living link to the end. Let this Dementia – Prayer Week become your link to the many families struggling with dementia.” www.pastoralcareproject.org.uk

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We use this prayer at Mass this Sunday. You could use it during the week too…

Lord Jesus Christ,
your anger in the face of the abuse of money and trade reminds us of your thirst for justice
and for the dignity of every human being to be recognised.

May the Spirit’s gifts of right judgement and courage enable us to see, and to name, what is wrong with the world and to act in your name
to work for what is right and just.
Amen