Christ the King Bidding Prayers for the Feast of Sts Peter and Paul, 2019

As we celebrate the feast of Sts Peter and Paul and inspired by their steadfast faith in the Lord with we offer our petitions to Him with the confidence of well loved children

Our response is : May your love be upon us Lord 

Remembering the faith of Peter and Paul we pray for a renewal of power and enthusiasm in our task to spread the message of Christ’s love for all mankind

PAUSE

We pray……May your love be upon us Lord

Let us pray for all refugees especially those on the Mexican border at present that they may find a safe place to live and to care for their families

PAUSE

We pray…….May your love be upon us Lord

Hannah O’Brien and Craig Salisbury are to be married here in Christ the King this week and we pray that their love for each other may sustain them in whatever may lie ahead

PAUSE

We pray ….May your love be upon us Lord

We pray for all the deceased of our Three Churches remembering especially William Kennedy whose funeral took place this week. May his soul rest in peace and may his grieving relatives and friends be comforted in their loss

PAUSE

We pray…..May your love be upon us Lord

Let us spend a few moments in listening to the voice of our beloved Father

LONGER PAUSE

We ask Mary our mother to join her prayer to ours saying Hail Mary ….

 

Lord we ask you to hear and grant our petitions through Jesus your Son who lives in glory with You and the Holy Spirit forever

AMEN

 

Beyond, beside, within

One of my favourite “ways into” talking about the Trinity is the idea of Father, Son and Holy Spirit as God beyond, beside and within us. While this doesn’t grasp the whole truth, I find it a handy way of opening up what can seem a very abstract idea by using the language of relationship.

I was very glad to find that our regular poet Malcolm Guite uses the same idea in this sonnet for Trinity Sunday.

In the Beginning, not in time or space,
But in the quick before both space and time, In Life, in Love, in co-inherent Grace,
In three in one and one in three, in rhyme.

In music, in the whole creation story,
In His own image, His imagination,
The Triune Poet makes us for His glory, And makes us each the other’s inspiration.

He calls us out of darkness, chaos, chance, To improvise a music of our own,
To sing the chord that calls us to the dance.

Three notes resounding from a single tone, To sing the End in whom we all begin,
Our God beyond, beside us and within.

Fr Matthew

Why Herefordshire?

You may have noticed that for the last few weeks our Cycle of Prayers on this newsletter’s back page has been for parishes in Herefordshire. So why are we in Wales praying for parishes in a county in England?

Herefordshire is an integral part of our diocese – and has been since the Catholic dioceses of England and Wales were erected in 1850 at the so-called ‘Restoration of the Hierarchy’. The then Diocese of Newport and Menevia spread right across from Hereford to west Wales. However, Wales did not yet have any churches deemed suitable to be made into a cathedral, and so the newly founded Belmont Abbey served that purpose -in Hereford, of course. In 1895 west Wales left us to join the north, leaving Glamorgan with Herefordshire – and Monmouthshire, itself often seen as part of England rather than Wales. The cathedral was still at Belmont. Sometimes we were even seen as an English diocese with a bit of Wales tagged on!

Our far-sighted Bishop Hedley realised that Cardiff was going to be the major city, and moved down to live in our very own Station Road. You can still see his house, now the Court School. He prepared for us to become an archdiocese based in Cardiff, but it did not happen until after his death in 1916. St David’s in town now became our cathedral, jointly with Belmont, but this strange arrangement did not last. When the first archbishop, Bilsborrow, resigned in 1920, St David’s became the sole cathedral, and Belmont got on with being a Benedictine abbey, as it does to this day.

So Herefordshire is part of our diocese partly through the presence of Belmont, and partly, I suspect, by some pen-pushers drawing a few lines on a map back in 1850! However, as a former parish priest of Ledbury there, I know that it is good to have this quiet rural part of our diocese alongside the big cities of Cardiff and Newport, the Valleys and the Vale of Glamorgan. Variety is the spice of a diocese…

Fr Matthew