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Their angels rejoice

Many of my most memorable moments as a priest – and as a human being – have been in the context of a death. Anointing the seriously ill, comforting and working together with a bereaved family to prepare a funeral, and of course celebrating the funeral itself – these are extraordinary moments that touch us to the core, and I remember very many of them.

And very often in the midst of all I sense the presence of Another, a man young but infinitely full of experience, love and wisdom. I’ve called on him so many times when faced with difficult situations, and without fail he is there, hidden but profoundly real. The Man who quietly slipped out of his own sepulcher one Sunday morning, is now available to all of us, when we open the door of our sometimes broken hearts, and invite Him in.

Fr Matthew

Some asked for the words of the Malcolm Guite sonnet I used on the Feast of All Saints, so here they are:

A Last Beatitude

And blessed are the ones we overlook;
The faithful servers on the coffee rota,
The ones who hold no candle, bell or book But keep the books and tally up the quota, The gentle souls who come to ‘do the flowers’, The quiet ones who organise the fete,
Church sitters who give up their weekday hours, Doorkeepers who may open heaven’s gate. God knows the depths that often go unspoken Amongst the shy, the quiet, and the kind,
Or the slow healing of a heart long broken Placing each flower so for a year’s mind. Invisible on earth, without a voice,
In heaven their angels glory and rejoice.

Malcolm Guite, from “Sounding the Seasons”, Canterbury Press

 

A busy November

The month of November begins this Thursday, and there is plenty to feed and celebrate our faith and parish life.

  • Thursday 1 November is the feast of All Saints. Don’t forget that this is still a Holy Day of Obligation, when we honour all those, known and unknown, who have gone before us and are with the Lord in heaven.
  • Friday 2 November is the Commemoration of the Faithful Departed, usually known as All Souls.
    Our November Memorial Books will be available throughout the month for your to write the names of those you want remembered in our Altar List Masses.
  • Saturday 10 November. We celebrate our Mass of Memories at 10am in St Brigid’s. Always well attended, you are invited to come to remember your own loved ones, whenever they died. We mention those we have lost these last twelve months, and offer the opportunity to light a candle.
  • Sunday 11 November Centenary Remembrance Sunday. It is 100 years since the end of World War I in 1918, so Remembrance Sunday this year takes on a special meaning.
  • Sunday 25 November Feast of Christ the King 40th Anniversary of the opening of the Church. The Primary School help the celebrations at 6pm Mass on the Saturday, followed by refreshments, while on the Sunday we will reverse Masses with St Brigid’s. That is 9am Mass will be at St Brigid’s, and 11am at Christ the King when the Archbishop will join us. A celebration meal at the New House will follow (see details elsewhere)
  • In the last week of November we will start a new series of faith sharing and discussion groups, following on from “Do You Love Me?” This time we will follow a book by Fr Denis McBride called “Journeying Towards Jesus” – specially written for this time of year. (Leaders’ gather on Wednesday 7 November 7.30pm at St Brigid’s Presbytery)

Fr Matthew

Shrines (and maybe wines? ..)

On Monday 5 November we invite you to the preliminary meeting in preparation for our 2019 September Pilgrimage. Our destination is the Burgundy region of France. Why? Yes, OK it is a top wine area of course, but Burgundy and its surrounds are also home to many important Christian sites.

The plan is to travel on Monday 9 September by ferry and coach (no flying), returning the following Monday. We will stay overnight at Chartres in both directions, with Mass and a visit of course to its world famous cathedral, one of the most beautiful in the world. Then travelling on via Nevers, with Mass at the shrine and incorrupt body of St Bernadette, we will stay 5 nights in or near the Burgundian town of Macon. From there we will visit Paray-le-Monial, origin and centre of devotion to the Sacred Heart, Taize ecumenical retreat centre, made famous by its music, and situated close to Cluny, site of one of the greatest abbeys of the Middle Ages.

North of Macon we’ll journey to Dijon, capital of Burgundy – home of the Palace of the Dukes (and home of mustard too) – and Beaune, the real capital of the Burgundy wine region, where we may just stop a while… South of Macon, at Ars we will celebrate Mass at the shrine of St John Vianney, patron of parish clergy, visiting his preserved presbytery, and then move on to the nearby incredibly elaborate Brou Church at Bourg-en-Bress.

Lastly we will visit bustling Lyon, second or third city of France (depending on your score). Founded by the Romans in BC 43, it has always been a key location through history, where the Rhone and Saone rivers join. Buildings of all periods from Roman remains to modern skyscrapers via everything in between – it is a world-famous capital of cuisine. Here we hope to have Mass at the hilltop shrine of Notre-Dame de Fourviere, with a tour of the city – and time for shopping!

It is not our intention to visit Paris or Lourdes on this trip, as there are many other ways to visit those beautiful places. Rather we offer you the opportunity to explore lesser know shrines and sites of France, with Billy Gill our gifted leader / organizer as usual.

Want to know more? We meet Monday 5 November 7.30pm at St Brigid’s Hall.

Fr Matthew