Download the 3 churches newsletter for 23 February 2014.
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Passing it on
Our pastoral project to develop our 3 Churches as communities that reach out moves into its next phase this week. On Monday we hold the first of five sessions called “Pass It On”.
As we read and hear the Gospels, we cannot but sense the dynamic way in which Jesus inspires the disciples. He invites them to journey with him, to watch and learn. Then he sends them out for practical experience of what they have learned. He was always on the move, developing in them the conviction that his message and the power of his ministry were to be all for all peoples. After three years of this ministry Jesus would bring them to the extraordinary series of events that begin with the Last Supper, that we call the Passion. They would be asked by him to absorb even the Cross and Resurrection into their “formation”.
The Gospels tell us that after these astonishing events, and before he ascended into heaven, he formally sends them out into the whole world, to teach what they have been taught, and to baptise people into his family, even into his body. This is what we call the Great Commission.
Finally, with God the Father, he pours out his Holy Spirit upon them at Pentecost, so that filled with that same Spirit which drove him through his ministry, they might continue that same ministry to the ends of the earth. Now began the great project to pass it on…
We are the successors of those same early Christians. We are still charged with passing it on, with sharing and proclaiming the message of Jesus with the world. No pressure, as they say! It can seem such a big ask, can’t it? But that is no reason to give up on our great task. This Monday at 7.30pm in St Brigid’s we have the opportunity to equip ourselves a little more in a friendly way. We will be helped by members of the Evangelisation Team attached to the Cornerstone at St David’s Cathedral. All are welcome.
Fr Matthew
3 churches newsletter, 16 February 2014
Download the 3 churches newsletter for Sunday 16 February 2014.
Confirmation meeting, Christ the King Parish Centre: Tonight 7.30pm
There will be a meeting to discuss the Confirmation programme for candidates and their parents in the Christ the King Parish Centre this evening (Sunday 9 February), 7.30pm. Further dates will be published after tonight’s meeting.
Monte Cassino
Monte Cassino is a rocky hill about 80 miles southeast of Rome. St Benedict established his first monastery here around 529, and never left. Others gathered around him, and it was there he wrote the Benedictine Rule that became the founding principle for western monasticism. Monte Cassino became a model for future communities. Benedict’s sister St Scholastica (feast day Monday) moved nearby to be close to him
Unfortunately its prominent site has always made Monte Cassino an object of strategic importance. In 581 the Lombards sacked the abbey, and the surviving monks fled to Rome. A flourishing period of Monte Cassino followed its re-establishment in 718, but in 884 Saracens sacked and then burned it down. It was rebuilt and reached the height of its fame in the 11th century under the abbot Desiderius, who later became Pope Victor III. The number of monks rose to over two hundred, and the library and its manuscripts became famous throughout the West. The buildings of the monastery were reconstructed on a grand scale. An earthquake damaged the Abbey in 1349, and although the site was rebuilt it marked the beginning of a long period of decline. The site was sacked by Napoleon’s
troops in 1799.
During the Battle of Monte Cassino in 1944 the Abbey made up one section of the 100 miles Gustav line, a defensive German line designed to hold the Allied attackers from advancing any further into Italy. On 15 February 1944 the abbey was almost completely destroyed in a series of heavy American led air-raids. The bombing was conducted because many reports from troops on the ground suggested that Germans were occupying the monastery. However, actually during the bombing no Germans were present, and it emerged that the only people killed in the monastery by the bombing were 230 Italian civilians seeking refuge. After the bombing Germans held the position until 17 May 1944, having repulsed four attacks by the Allies. Eventually Allied forces broke the line between 11 and 17 May, and the Polish flag was raised over the ruins on 18 May 1944.
The Abbey was totally rebuilt after the war, and Pope Paul VI reconsecrated it in 1964. Reborn yet again, it is one of the great sights of Italy.
Fr Matthew
3 churches newsletter, 9 February 2014
Download the 3 churches newsletter for Sunday 9 February 2014.
