Wednesday, September 19, 2007

New Principal - St Mary's College Maryborough, 2008

Hi everyone,

Below is an official announcement from Brisbane Catholic Education and on behalf of the Parish. I add my congratulations to Mrs Joy Massingham on her appointment as Principal of Saint Mary's College Maryborough, and extend a heartful welcome on behalf of the whole community. I would also like to thank the appointment panel for their work and role of discernment and also again give thanks for Mr John Mula's wonderful work and support as Principal. With every best wish to you all.

Sincerely, 
Fr Paul Kelly.

Appointment to Principalship

I am pleased to announce on behalf of Archbishop Bathersby and in conjunction with Father Paul Kelly, Parish Priest of St Mary's, Maryborough, the appointment of

Mrs Joy Massingham as principal of St Mary's College, Maryborough from the start of the 2008 school year.

Joy is an experienced teacher and leader in Catholic schools who is currently Deputy Principal at St John Fisher College, Bracken Ridge where she has held leadership positions since 2001. Joy holds a Master of Social Science (Pastoral Counselling) from the Australian Catholic University, a Bachelor of Education from the Brisbane College of Advanced Education and Certificate Two in Systematic Theology from the Institute of Faith Education.

This appointment follows a selection process involving national advertising, and a panel involving Sr Rose Cavallo, Pastoral Associate, St Mary's Parish, a parent representative, a representative of School Board and representatives of Brisbane Catholic Education on behalf of the Archdiocese.

I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge with gratitude the leadership of John Mula as principal of St Mary's College since Term 4 of 2002 and wish him all the very best as he takes up his role in the diocese of Cairns.

I trust you will make Joy welcome as she commences in her role in 2008.

Vicki Tanzer

(Acting) Executive Director of Catholic Education

Archdiocese of Brisbane

18 September 2007


Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Destination: Rome

Greetings from Rome,

I have safely arrived in Rome, after the trip to Florence. The train trip to and from Rome worked out as easily and as smoothly as I had hoped. As I came back I was delighted that it worked out so smoothly and it is so relatively easy to travel around Italy without any worries. I had hoped so and it turned out to be true.

I left my hotel in plenty of time and got down to the Florence train station, which was a bit of a mistake, because my train was an hour late. That will teach me, but I still prefer to be early than late. AT one point I was worried they would cancel my train altogether because others came and went and my scheduled train just stayed up the top with the words 'ritarde' (delayed) beside it. But it arrived and and bundled myself onboard, mysteriously with an extra packet stuffed full of things, and here I had promised myself I would try to lead a more uncluttered life and I have brought back with me more than i went to Florence with. Oops. people were friendly on the train, even when i pulled my bag from the overhead rack and my umbrella fell out and hit a man over the head. He was very understanding. One should never let these things go to ones head!

In Rome, and I am now at the College and they are very welcoming and friendly. I hear there are about 232 students for the priesthood studying here, including about four from Australian dioceses, namely Perth, Melbourne and Sydney, but I have yet to meet these students. I think they are rather intrigued with my accent, although would be familiar with it through people they have met.

Among the priests who are doing this sabbatical renewal course here are priests from all over the States and also two very nice priests from our neck of the woods: the Solomon Islands. We have already had very interesting conversations and I think this will be really excellent.

Thinking of you. The course starts formally on Wednesday and so tomorrow is a fairly quiet day for just settling in and getting orientated.

Last night I watched the news and the Pope was in loretto at an italian national youth conference. He looks extremely well and happy, which is excellent and the young people are responding to his words very well. I just saw a text of his address and it is very encouraging to everyone:

The Pope was asked various questions by the young ones in this meeting and replied to a number of questions that were put to him. One question addressed "the disquiet shared by many young people from all parts of the world and all religions" concerning their place in history and their fear of being left on the margins. The Pope replied by indicating how "according to the divine plan, the world has no margins. ... For God we are all at the center, ... equally loved and called to undertake great deeds, ... each using his or her own talents."

"Dear young people," said the Pope, "in Jesus' name I repeat to you tonight: Go! Live! Love! In God's eyes each of you is important, You are important to your family and friends, ... to your country, to the entire world, to the Church and to Jesus Christ." The Holy Father also exhorted the young people not to feel marginalized "because no life is unimportant. ... You must realize that you are important protagonists, because you are at the center of God's love."

Benedict XVI then delivered a talk to the participants, whom he described as "the hope of the Church in Italy," and he invited them "to open their hearts and offer everything to Jesus" with the "interior strength and trusting abandonment" that was Mary's.

"What a stupendous exhibition of youthful and inspiring faith we are experiencing this evening!" he cried. "This evening, thanks to you, Loreto has become the spiritual capital of youth, the center towards which multitudes of young people on the five continents turn. ... The Pope is close to you, and for each of you he asks from the Lord the gift of a full and happy life, a life rich in meaning."

"Today, unfortunately, a full and happy life is not infrequently seen by many young people as a distant dream. ... Do not be afraid, Christ can fulfil the most intimate aspirations of your heart! ... Each one of you, if you remain united to Christ, can achieve great things. ... You should not be afraid to dream of great plans for goodness, and you should not let yourselves be discouraged by difficulties. Christ has trust in you and wants you to realize all your most noble and exalted dreams of true happiness."

The Holy Father then recalled the Annunciation, when the angel told Mary "of her participation, in the most intimate possible way, in the greatest of God's plans: the salvation of humanity." The Pope emphasized how "her 'yes' changed her life and the history of humanity entire. ... And from Mary we learn to pronounce our own 'yes,' because she really knows what it means to respond generously to the requests of the Lord."

Mary, Benedict XVI continued, "knows of your great desire for love, your need to love and to be loved. Looking at her, ... you will discover the beauty of love. ... true and profound love." All young people starting out in life "cultivate the dream of a love that will give full meaning to their future. For many of them this is achieved in marriage and the creation of a family."

"I well know that today such a dream is becoming ever less easy to accomplish. How many failures of love do we see around us! ... The Mother of God, the community of believers and the Pope are near you and pray that the crisis affecting families in our time does not become irreversible," said the Holy Father, and he renewed his invitation to participants "not to be afraid," because "for those who trust in God nothing is impossible.

"This is true for people destined for married life," he added, "and even more so for those whom God has called to a life of complete detachment from the goods of the earth and of complete dedication to His Kingdom. Among you are those directed towards the priesthood, consecrated life, and others who aspire to be missionaries."

"Be certain that a life dedicated to God is never spent in vain," said the Holy Father. He then concluded his talk by reminding the young people of the celebrations for World Youth Day 2008, due to take place in Sydney, Australia. "Let us pray," he said, "that the Lord Who accomplishes all prodigies may enable many of you to be there."


I like how the Pope has affirmed and encouraged people of every vocation. It is very nice.


Cheers everyone and be assured of my continued thoughts and prayers for you all back home


cheerio

Paul

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Florence II

Hello again everyone,

Have a look when you get the chance of my latest piccies hot off the press from Florence.

its on my webshots site which can be accessed as before, or try this shortcut link

www.mysteriousthree.com


I have fixed the problem with the system that publishes whatever people reply to my travelogue. SOrry for the confusion. When I was in France, when i had to edit the publishing list, it all showed up in French and I had to guess what it was asking me. Anway, now its all in English so I can read it again and click the right buttons to ensure thi8ngs go the right direction.

Cheers
Paul


Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Westminister 2007

Yesterday, Sunday 15th July 2007. Attended the 10.30am mass at Westminister Catholic Cathedral. The primary Catholic Church in United Kingdom. It is the church where Cardinal Cormack O'Connor has his bishops chair.

Lit a special candle at a side chapel dedicated to the Holy Souls of the faithful departed, and offered prayers before mass  and during the mass for the repose of the soul of Bobbie Rollings, and for the comfort and consolation of Noel and famuily and friends at this time of sadness.

The Mass was so peaceful and so beautiful. The mass had a choir singing. It was like angels singing. It filled me with such serenity and peace and hope.

Thinking and praying for you during this mass.

The homily ironically touched upon a topic I mentioned in an earlier log, about what to do when we come across someone in need, like those who ask for money in the street. Although the homily did not contradict my point it was still challenging. It reiterated that Jesus really meant to see each other as brothers and sisters - we are all linked. I totally agree with that too. He also mentioned that this did not mean we should let other walk all over us, but he added that past rip-offs and past hurts can sometimes be an excuse for peope stopping from moving out of their comfort  zone. he didn't put it liek this but the meaning was the same:  " should most hurts have an expiry date?"


After Mass, I walked back home to the tube train station via 10 Downing street (well past it, you can't get through that area but near it). I have put the latest photos on my webshots site and you can find the link below at the footer to this message.

god bless everyone, continuing to keep you all my thoughts and prayers

Paul







Friday, July 13, 2007

London


Hi everyone.

I have just arrived in London. And ready to greet me when I arrived was the most beutiful draft versions of two more songs I have done a very rough draft of. I know someone who does them up nicely with proper arrangement, and I have been blown away by my own song in the hands of a nice arranger (sorry if that sounds like boasting but it has come up nicely)

when i get a chance I will find a way of posting the songs so you can all hear them and see what you think

cheerio

by the way there are a couple more logs from Shanghai but technical problems have prevented me from publishing them. I can't get the info off my little palm diary onto the internet. All efforts have failed but I am working on it.

cheerio for now

Paul

Saturday, June 23, 2007

John the Baptist

BIRTH OF THE BAPTIST: 24TH JUNE 2007

Something becoming known that has been planned since the foundation of time…… a secret…. taking shape ….. a mystery, coming to resolution……….

This is what this weekend’s special feast is about this weekend…………

This is a concrete expression of the later words of Jesus….. what you hear in whispers… will be shouted from the rooftops……..

God knows each one of us….. calls us by name…… forms us in secret….. and intends and plans to bring one or more different facets of God’s own plan to fruition in each one of us…… for us… it may not be the profound and unrepeatable role of John the Baptist……. (God’s warm up man, if you like)….. the herald…… whose role was TO PREPARE the way for the Messiah…. call us all to open our hearts, repent of our sins, turn back to God and clear any obstacles to the coming of Christ and his good news….

John the Baptist,…. who mixed with Kings and everyday citizens….but was uncompromising and equal in relating to all…. he was not overawed or blinded by the respect of famous and rich, but called them too, to the repentace of sin that he noted…

If a painting were to be done representing John the Baptist… it would capture his simplicity, his asceticism, and also, I reckon, it should show him pointing….. for he (in a gracious way) pointed to what was wrong and pointed to how to set it right…. and even more importantly…whenever anyone looked at him, so to speak, he pointed them back to Jesus…. saying… “I am not the one you seek….. he is the one who is to come….’

The gospel passage is an extraordinary moment…. when John’s name is revealed….. the parents of John needed to trust in what God was doing in their lives…. and they also had to be prepared to break with tradition when it was God’s will to do otherwise…… tradition is good…. but the principles on which tradition is based, are even more important ….. so… the tradition of the time said that a son should be named after either his father or a relative in the family….. but God asked this child to be named John and breaking with tradition… to achieve God’s will….. Zaccheriah spoke his first words in months and said….. his name is JOHN.

We too, have a part to play in God’s plan for the world…… each one of us is called to be a herald of Christ in our lives and act in a way that keeps pointing back to jesus and his life-giving message……..

we too, when necessary, need to put aside the letter of tradition and go with what is needed in the circumstances of a specific issue…. especially if to do so is in furtherance of Jesus mission in the world…..

Friday, June 15, 2007

Eleventh Week in ordinary Time year C


ELEVENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME – YEAR B
(17TH JUNE 2007)
This is a very special gospel….. this incident, of the woman washing Jesus' feet and drying them with her hair…. is featured in every one of the four gospels….albeit in slightly different forms…….. whilst the gospels are strikingly similar in many places…… there are not that many incidents that are featured in each of the four gospels incuding Johns gospel, which is distinctly different from the gospels of Mark, luke and Matthew…….    what is also interesting is this…… it has been noted by one commentator…. that although this incident is featured in every one of the gospels, the writer of each gospel uses and adapts the incident differently to make different points………

in Luke’s gospel…..( Lk 7:36ff)   woman who has sinned greatly, and knows just how important it is to be forgiven ….shows enormous gratitude and devotion to jesus……

In Matthew….(Mt 26:6 ff)  the woman is not a sinner at all…. rather she is doing a deeply symbolic and prophetic action…. anointing him…  in preparation of his burial…. for this woman recognizes the significance of jesus and what he has come here to do…
In Mark (14: 1 ff) similarly, the woman’s actions are like that of a prophetess ! 

finally, John’s gospel (John 12:1 ff) names the woman…. it is Mary of Bethany…. along with  Martha and the raised-from-the dead Lazarus…….  in this version Mary appears to be unaware of the full significance of what she is doing… as an act of service, devotion and foreshadowing of what must come to Jesus: his suffering and death on the cross….

It has also been noted, that the only version of these incidents that is ever featured on the weekend cycle of readings… is today’s version… lukes… which portrays the woman as a sinner……..  // 

it is a shame that these other versions of the gospel incident are not also given voice regularly in the Sunday cycle of readings…….  , to remind us of the different roles that women played in Jesus group of followers….. and that many of the women who followed jesus were more attuned to his message than some of his apostles…….. disciples and followers of Jesus too…. and not all of them were notorious public sinners….any more than the men….

In any case…..This particular gospel of Luke (today/tonight) does reflect on sinfulness and forgiveness… and the sense of enormous gratitude it brings……. 

the reaction of the Pharisee who was hosting the dinner is interesting….. ‘if he knew what kind of a woman was touching him he should know that she is a sinner.’

It raises a really challenging thought in my mind……….how easy it is to be distracted……..   to look in the wrong direction…….   Jesus didn’t want the Pharisee to be spending his time trying to work out just how much of a sinner this person was who was anointing him….. rather…… this beautiful scene….    hopefully was an opportunity for those present… and ourselves here today….  to look inside ourselves and become aware of our sinfulness….. and… in a spiritual sense… fall at the feel of jesus…..    wash him with our tears of repentance……   anointing him the oil of gladness that he himself provides………… 

there are so many opportunities in this life for us to look inside ourselves….. but at times it can feel as if we would all be better off if we spent less time defending our righteousness and justification for who we are and what we do or don’t do…. or worse…..    pointing out the weaknesses and faults of others…. whilst of course failing to see the culpability in myself……… //  to “more profitably” spend the time looking at our own weaknesses and flaws……(not with the eyes of condemnation or rejection…..…but with the eyes of love that Jesus sees us with… so that we might be healed and strengthened and given the grace to grow in love and compassion….. and go beyond our faults and weaknesses….. growing more and more into the image of Christ that Jesus invites us to become….





Saturday, June 09, 2007

Body and Blood of Christ - year c

THE BODY AND BLOOD OF THE LORD – YEAR C. JUNE 10TH 2007

 

There is a saying:  “You are what you eat.” 

 

In the Eucharist, we believe that “we become what we receive…”    In Eucharist…we receive the body and blood of Jesus Christ….. and in so doing….we trust in // and engage directly // with the grace of God that it contains ……   that it might transform us to become more and more like Jesus with every passing day………..in our values, in our union with Jesus …..  in our being……….     this is what we are celebrating today, and each time we receive holy communion…….

 

It was wonderful last weekend to celebrate with our young ones who received their confirmation and first holy communion ….  and to have bishop Finnigan with us…….    it is a strong sign of our communion with eachother and with the nwider universal church which derives its source from our communion in jesus…..  

 

I truly believe.. that as exciting as first holy communion is… there is only one thing better than one’s first holy communion… and that is one’s second holy communion….. and there is only one thing better than second holy communion and that is third…. and so on……   it sets up a pattern of communion with the body and blood of Christ in our daily life……

 

I also think it is particularly beautiful…..  we believe in the God of the incarnation…. God made flesh…….  and so, God, who was made flesh and dwelt among us, understands intimately that we human beings are both spirit AND flesh… and as such…. we need tangible….touchable…..   sacraments so that we may engage with the realities of God’s love and Jesus’ presence …not only intellectually….but also physically……    and materially…….    God gives us sacraments so that we can not only think about God’s care for us, God’s healing, forgiving and uniting plan for us… but we can actually engage with it… and feel it and touch it…. and taste it…..

 

this is a gift of inexplicable value…… 

 

and we celebrate today… Jesus Christ, who comes to us and makes his home in us, through the sacrament of his body and blood….

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Pentecost 2007

PENTECOST 2007

The presence and action of the Holy Spirit in our lives and the lives of the church are absolutely vital….. The Spirit makes effective all that the church and every one of its disciples do….

Every single one of the seven sacraments…  has a major point in  the rite, where the church ‘calls down the action of the Holy spirit upon what we are doing, to make it effective……..   this will be particularly noticeable next week…. when Bishop Finnigan, representing the wider universal church that we all belong to …….will pray a special pray with his hands outstretched… calling down the Holy Spirit upon the young people who are to receive Confirmation……..    (confirming their baptism and strengthening and affirming the many gifts of the the spirit within them)……..    and then at Eucharist… the bishop will place his handsover the gifts of bread and wine and do what we do at each and every mass….   ask God to send the holy spirit upon these gifts of bread and wine so that they may become the body and blood of Jesus Christ……

 

Without the action of the Holy spirit, our rituals would be mere commemorations… without the holy spirit alive and active within us, we would not be united with Jesus and participating in God’s diving life………

 

Because the spirit is present and active amongst us, it is sometimes hard to notice….  just as we take for granted the air around us..,… we would only notice it if it was not there………    sometimes we see it more  obviously in our lives…..  just as we notice the air around us when it gets stirred up into a powerful windstorm… however… the spirit is as muc present in the stillness as in the storm……

 

The famous german scholar, Karl Rahner…  speaks about the everyday action of the Holy Spirit

 

he talks about how the action of the spirit can become obvious in those occasions when we do an action that is not explainable from our own self-interest….   ijn occasions where we do an act of kindness and we don’t get anything out of it ourselves..not even a sense of satisfaction… he seems to be suggesting that in cases like this, it is clearly the spirit at work…  something bigger than ourselves…absolute, un-interested graciousness….. because there is nothing in it for ourselves….. 

(my apologies if I have quotes this before, but it goes to the heart of things.. and remains abidingly relevant)….

he writes:

 

Did you ever do a kindness to a person from whom you could not expect even so much as a shadow of gratitude of appreciation….(while, at the same time, we had not even the compensation of feeling that we had acted unselfishly or decently in doing so? )…  Let us look into our lives, then, and see if we can discover whether any such experience ever came our way. If we can find that it did, we may be sure that the spirit was at work within us then, and …eternity and ourselves had a brief encounter-  that the spirit means more than an ingredient in the make-up of a passing world……   That explains the lives of the saints…. they know well that God’s grace can also grace the dull round of daily tasks (done well)……and bring the ‘doers’ a step nearer to God…..   When  we Christians experience the action of the spirit, it means that we are (in point of fact) having contact with the supernatural, although the contact may be scarcely noticeable…… (Karl Rahner (1904-1984): “Belief Today” (Sheed and Ward. New York, 1967. pp 40-41).

 

 

what the church needs today more than ever, are mystics of the everyday…. whose charism is the darn ordinary………   whose field of mission is reflecting on, speaking about and praying about rh everyday and the ordinary….   for the Spirit, and therefore Jesus, is at work in this field………   and it goes unnoticed, yet it makes up a significant part of our everyday lives…

 

The Holy Spirit effects to major things in our lives:   The Spirit makes Jesus and his message present in a new and real way in our lives, here and now. and present in our hearts.

 

The Spirit unites us, conforms us, incorporates us INTO Christ… and once we are part of Christ, we are part of God’s inner life, through Jesus, to the Father, by the bond of the Holy Spirit…. we sit, as it were, at the table of God’s inner life…  

 

Thirdly.. the reception of the spirit is a commissioning …  a sending……   a sending out on mission into the world……  not only to spread the message of the good news… but also to live it and BE it…. to each other and to all…. and to recognize the presence and the action of the Spirit in the people and events around us…

 

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Fifth Sunday in Easter – 5/5/07

 

Easter 5

 

Fifth Sunday in Easter – 5/5/07
 
If loving people was easy, Jesus would not have had to go around reminding everyone to do it. It is a radical love – a challenging love…..   not a wishy-washy love…..
We all know that this is not an easy task. It is fairly easy to love those who are loving to us at the moment. Loving those who are cranky to us, those who reject us, those who think we are fools, those who resent us, etc.—that is the real task. Jesus tells us that "This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another."

We can find so many ways to resist loving one another and we find ways to justify that resistance. Some times we must be pushed to become more open to others. This was also the experience of the early Church. At first, as we read in parts of the Acts of the Apostles, the followers of Christ would only preach to the Jewish people. They really had to be pushed by the Spirit in order to open up and accept non-Jewish people as followers of Jesus.

Today's first reading tells us that we must undergo hardships to enter the Kingdom of God. Yet almost everything about western culture speaks of trying to avoid any hardships. Our cultural values are about having more than enough of everything, about having everything that we want or desire, about having control over our own lives and the lives of others, etc. The follower of Jesus Christ must begin to work against these values, striving to have only that which really helps the inner life of prayer and the inner life of loving others. That will surely be hardship for most of us since our lives are fairly comfortable.

Is Jesus against having a comfortable life? Not at all! But Jesus wants us free to do the will of the Father and to have deep interior freedom means that we must always be able to give up comfort when it stands in the way of loving others—and that interior freedom can only grow if we practice an honest asceticism. That means that we must at times embrace an uncomfortable life so that our freedom can grow stronger.
But also, the word 'love' is highly misused…. Love does not mean saying 'yes' to everything and everyone….   'love' is not necessarily a synonym for 'niceness' .   Christian love does not mean being some kind of 'dormats for Christ' where everyone feels they can demand and act badly and because we are expected to 'love' we must put up with it….   Love can be tough-love….    Love can mean saying "no"   and refusing to cooperate with destructive things.

In the end, though, actions do speak louder than words……Those who do not believe can only begin to come to faith if they see that our lives have been changed by following the Lord. May the Holy Spirit come upon on in these Easter days and may we be strengthened in our capacity to love one another. If that happens, then surely we can know the new heaven and the new earth that the Second Reading today speaks about so clearly.


We want to see our earth with all tears wiped away. We want to see our earth renewed in the image of God. How we long to live without war and with the peace and joy of God in our hearts! Politics cannot ever bring this about, but faith can. May our faith be strengthened! God is making all things new.

(adapted from homily of the abbot, "Monastery of Christ in the Desert")

Friday, April 27, 2007

SUNDAY WEEK FOUR OF EASTER C - 2007

Often, when I am reading this gospel to young school students…..  the part where Jesus says… “I am the shepherd….. …. / and other places where Jesus says…. “I am the good shepherd…. I know my sheep and they know me… they know my voice and they follow me.,…” 

 

I often ask the students after this reading…..  “Is jesus talking about real sheep in this story?”….

 

No matter how young they are…. the answer has invariably been….”NO..”

 

then I ask….  “who is Jesus talking about then?”..

 

 

and they always say….”Us……..” they know that we all belong to God and God knows us each by name and loves us and cares for us and watches out for us………

 

I can’t help but think of that rather unfortunate but hilarious news story I read yesterday….about masters who not only did not recognize their own sheep…but did not even realize they WERE sheep……. apparently some unscrupulous businesses in Japan have been ripping off Thousands of Japanese  customers…..  in a scam in which they were sold Australian and British sheep and told they were poodles, ………Flocks of sheep were imported to Japan and then sold by a company called Poodles as Pets, marketed as fashionable accessories, available at $1,600 each.

That is a very cheap compared to a real poodle which retails for twice that much in Japan.

The scam was uncovered when Japanese movie-star went on a talk-show and wondered why her new pet would not bark or eat dog food.. She was crestfallen when told it was a sheep.

Then hundreds of other viewers got in touch with police to say they feared their new "poodle" was also a sheep.

One couple said they became suspicious when they took their "dog" to have its claws trimmed and were told it had hooves.

Japanese police believe there could be 2,000 people affected by the scam, which capitalised on the fact that sheep are rare in Japan, so according to reports many do not know what they look like.

"We launched an investigation after we were made aware that a company were selling sheep as poodles," Japanese authorities said. Many of the sheep have now been donated to zoos and farms.

The owners of these sheep did not really know what they had……..     it makes jesus parable and example of the good shepherd… and his words of the gospel even more striking…..  even though sheep can look the same…. even if they can be mistaken for something else (apparently)….. this good shepherd knows each one of sheep by name and calls them…..

 

But unlike sheep… we are not called to follow like unquestioning sheep….but rather… we are called to be followers of Jesus like discerning disciples…. Jesus cares for and watches over us as a shepherd looks over sheep…. but Jesus relates to us and invites us into discipleship as he would welcome a friend and an equal……..  so we have the best of both worlds…

 

We do not follow blindly but listen to Jesus’ voice through prayer, both private prayer and public prayer. We need both sorts of prayer to hear us properly: one in silence on our own and the other in community worshipping the Good shepherd…and listening to his good news with our fellow disciples and companions on the journey.

 

One last thought… about the scriptures……    Jesus again calls anyone who dares follow him in discipleship to be very much in touch with the cares and worries, the fears and suffering of others….. Jesus, the good shepherd, remained close to and very much in touch with those who suffered, who were on the edges of society….. who were oppressed……. 

 

The readings today remind us that we will be sorry at the the final reckoning if the Lord finds us dry-eyed….  because it may very well mean that we have not been able to weep with those who weep……… and stand in support with those who suffer……

 

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Lent Four 22nd April 2007

NEWSLETTER -   DATE:  22nd April 2007 

LITURGICAL CALENDAR:   3rd Sunday Easter C

 (THIS DOCUMENT IS FILED IN THE FOLLOWING LOCATION AND NAME:


 

EDITORIAL: By MAGDALA

The song “One Day at a time,” kept being said in situations over the last week.  Even a few bars where sung by some.  I’ve been thinking about this, especially after the second or third time. What was God trying saying to me through this?  To be perfectly honest,  all I keep thinking about is the fact I asked for a tape by Judy Collins with this song on it when she released it, which was around this time twenty one years ago – I was just about to have my tenth birthday and this is what I wanted.  I still remember hearing and seeing the advert being played on the television and how I was so yearning to have a copy of it.  I was blessed to receive it for my birthday along with my own first cassette player. 

 

I think back how excited I was to have both of these items, but the other thing that comes to mind is I think this was one of the times when God was allowing me to say ‘yes’ to being educated in His word through the music.  The disciples had a choose to say ‘yes’ to walk with Jesus along the journey.

 

Each of you in your own life, have had moments when God has instilled in you some kind of memory of joy in your faith journey.  A desire, to want to know a little more about this faith journey that has brought you to this place at this time. 

 

Whether that is in a song like in my situation; or a teaching from the gospels as the disciples heard; or a fun morning after church, talking with like-minded church friend/s and community members; or hearing one of your favourite stories from the bible; or listen to others share their journey of faith; or a memorable moment at Sunday school; for each of us this will be one or more different experiences that have helped us to listen.

 

I ask each of you to think about a situation that recalls a moment when you opened your heart up to the seed of faith God had planted in you.  For us all, I believe there is at least one sacred moment that God placed a desire/joy to want to walk along in your journey of faith.  

 

You see, Simon Peter was being asked to ‘Follow’ Jesus deeper in relationship with Him.  I believe we are reminded that it’s a calling for each of us to ‘Follow’ into deeper relationship with Christ and that you can take ‘one day at a time.’

 

Inspired by God to keep going……….

 

Magdala Thorne

 

+++

 

From Fr Paul.

 

A special welcome back to Fr Harry Bliss who has kindly returned to celebrate masses this weekend while I fulfil a commitment to do a wedding in Brisbane. Thanks Fr Harry, I know the community is delighted to catch up with you again. God bless.

….

 

 

 

…….

Exploring Our Faith:-

There are different styles or genres within the one Bible. It is important to read the different styles with the proper understanding of the style of the text. For example, within the Bible there is Poetry, History, Parable, Proverbs, Song, Allegory (that is ” a figurative treatment of one subject under the guise of another; a presentation of an abstract or spiritual meaning under concrete or material forms”), Letters, Preaching, Creation Sagas, Lists of Family Trees and so many more styles. One would naturally read a poem differently from the way one would read a standard informational letter. The meaning one takes from each type of writing depends on the context.

 

……

MASS/ LITURGY SCHEDULE: for coming week:

 

MONDAY:  23rd April, 2007

*   NO MASSES OR LITURGY

 

TUESDAY:  24th  April, 2007

* (NEW TIME) 8.00AM -    mass

 

WEDNESDAY: 25th  April, 2007

7PM -    7AM MASS - (NO EVENING MASS)

 

THURSDAY: 26th  April, 2007

* (NEW TIME) 12.01PM. -    MASS

 

FRIDAY: 27th  April, 2007

* (NEW TIME)  7.00 AM -    MASS

 

………………….

UPCOMING/ ANNOUNCEMENTS :

 

 

 

<![if !supportLists]>·        <![endif]>For Next week the AFTER MASS CUPPA group is:

<![if !supportLists]>·        <![endif]>The roster is:        

<![if !supportLists]>§         <![endif]>5th Sunday             St Mary’s Primary School

 

<![if !supportLists]>·        <![endif]>For Next week, the Welcomers Group is:

<![if !supportLists]>§         <![endif]>Magdala/Luke

<![if !supportLists]>·         <![endif]>Next Parish Pastoral council Meeting:  6.45pm on Tuesday the 1st May

<![if !supportLists]>·         <![endif]>I think the altar servers training night is Friday 27th april.

 

<![if !supportLists]>·        <![endif]>Date claimer: Communion/Confirmation program should run as follows.

Week beginning 24 April- Parent information evening (Tuesday). 6pm.

                        30 April- Session 1

                          7 May- Session 2

                        14 May- Session 3

                        24 May- Practice (Thursday)

Saturday 2 June - 6pm Confirmation and First Communion - St Mary's Maryborough;
Sunday 3 June - 8am Confirmation and First Communion - St Mary's Maryborough
Sunday 3 June - 10am Possibility of either Mass or Confirmation/First Communion - Sacred Heart Tiaro.

 

 

 


 

 

Friday, April 13, 2007

Easter Week Two 15th April (2007)

Homily reflection

 

the most striking thing about today’s Gospel is the fact that jesus, when he comes across Thomas and his stubborn decision not to believe unless he sees and touches for himself……    / Jesus does not reproach him…. Jesus isn’t hurt or upset by Thomas unbelief…. in fact, Jesus tenderly assures Thomas and helps him overcome his doubts and lack of faith…….    Jesus, of course, need not be upset…..  because HE knows that truth of his own resurrection…  anyone who does not believe, simple has not come to realize the truth of the reality…….

 

Jesus, here, is being like a caring parent…  not unlike the father of the prodigal son, who is delighted to welcome his lost son back to right relationship….

 

a writer once said of this relationship….Every parent is at some time, like the father of the unreturned prodical son……  with no other option but to keep their house ‘open to hope’…….  

 

Jesus’ hope that Thomas would doubt no longer but believe… is also a hope that all who find it hard to trust in the central fact of the bodily resurrection of the Lord, may not be hindered by the fact that they must now trust in the testimony of countless generations of believers… even though they have not themselves seen and touched the risen Lord in the same way as Thomas did….. (in fact, although one would consider it a privilege to be able to have seen and touched the risen Lord, this gospel presents the encounter almost as an unfortunate necessity… Thomas is almost considered less fortunate than we who are given the opportunity to believe simply in faith……

--

The early Christians, according to the Acts of the Apostles, were so filled with the Holy Spirit that miracles and wonders were happening wherever
they were.  Even those who were not followers of Christ could see these miracles and wonders and commented on them. 

But not everyone is going to become a Christian just because of miracles and wonders.  Over the centuries, there are accounts of miracles and wonders happening in all the great religions and even in religious believes that are not so great!

Instead, now, after the Resurrection, we are still confronted with this one question:  what do you believe about Jesus the Christ?

The Gospel today shows us Thomas, who simply would not believe that Jesus rose from the dead and was now present in a new way in the midst of His
followers. 

 

It is a reminder…. if we set up an argument a certain way, it often ends up being fulfilled like that too…….   If I tell myself.. I will not believe….  then the events and circumstances around me all conspire to prove my assumption… and I dismiss anything to the contrary as a coincidence or a random event…..      yet, if I start by assuming that these things are correct… then events, circumstances and insights all come together to confirm that indeed this is true…….  

 

Finally, Jesus Himself appears to Thomas and makes him put his hands on and into his wounds.  Then Thomas believes.


We are invited to reflect today on our own belief.  Why do we believe?  If we have doubts about our belief, what will help us dispel those doubts?
What can help us deepen our faith in Jesus as our Savior, as God, and as present with us now?

Our tradition tells us that to understand and believe in Christ, we must read the Scriptures and meditate on them.  We must also come to know other
believers and trust in their experiences.  Christianity is a religion that preaches Jesus crucified and risen, but always in the context of the community of those who believe in Him.

Today let us ask Saint Thomas to intercede for us that we can believe more deeply in the great mystery of salvation.  Let us be patient with our
doubts and keep looking for the truth of Christ's presence.  Most of all, let us rejoice in the Lord who loves us and invites us deeper into these mysteries.

 

 

 

 

 (Quote from ‘Mark Link – Vision 2000 Year C) . This reflection also may have been adapted from other sources, I wrote the original draft a few years ago and updated and expanded it this year, and I cannot recall if I utilised other sources. Apologies for any ommissions)

 

 

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Easter 2007

Jesus is Risen from the dead……. 

 

 

 

This is our faith.  

 

 

 

Occasionally one hears a person say….    “Risen from the dead?  This is too good to be true.”….  

 

 

 

but here is the thing……   God always give us more than we could ever ask for, expect or dare to hope for…….   For example….. we were promised a saviour…..  but we never imagined it would be God himself who would come to save us…..   We knew that God loved us, but we could never have dared to think that God would become one like us, and share our weaknesses and human condition…..   and so on……   God’s gifts are never quite what we expect…..  but always better than we hoped for….

 

 

 

So this special day……  Jesus resurrection is NOT too good to be true….. //    God has a habit of giving us things that are too good to be false !!     (taken from 365 days with the lord).

 

 

 

++++

 

 

 

“Seek and you shall find”

 

 

 

I saw a great quote the other day about Easter…..   “The stone covering the tomb was not rolled away to let jesus out…(God has no need for entrances and exits;  --  as Jesus later showed several times when he appeared in the locked room of the disciples….  ..no.. the stone was not rolled away to let Jesus out of the tomb…..   but to let us go in and see the truth of what was there….. or to be precise not there….…….” 

 

 

 

Also, there is another wonderful quote from Pope St Gregory the Great (c.540-604)

 

 

 

We must reflect upon the intense love in the heart of Mary Magdalen, who would not leave the Lord’s grave, even after his own disciples had gone away. She continued seeking him whom she could not find; in tears she kept searching; and, alight with love, she yearned for him whom she believed had been removed. Thus it happened that she alone saw him, she who had remained behind to seek him… She had already sought and found nothing. But she persevered, and therefore found the object of her love. (See John 20:11-18)

 

 

 

so…..    for me……

 

 

 

If Christmas was the great season of “God with us” when we celebrated that God loved the world so much that God became one just like us…and dwelt among us…… the feast of “God’s presence shining through… being revealed in this time and this place….”

 

 

 

then Easter is the great season of “see. God WAS with us… God IS always with us…..even in our darkest hour…. even when it felt like we had been abandoned….  even when we felt there was no hope…..God was there with us… silently present… ever faithful…. and drawing us always towards life and victory……. Easter is the season of “God present -  even when it doesn’t appear to be so….”….  of recognizing the presence and action of God in that which is often hidden from our eyes……

 

 

 

This is the great celebration of Searching-found /  Hope-fulfilled…  of “rightly-placed trust…..”

 

 

 

so… it Easter IS the time for feasting…  of sharing meals….  of breaking bread with family and friends….  and (in turn) recognizing the love and abiding presence of Jesus in each other……  re-committing ourselves to recognize and give homage to the presence of Christ in those around us…  a presence we sometimes take for granted or find hard to see in each other (at times).. but which God always sees in each of us…. with the eyes of love…

 

 

 

{{Easter is THE pre-eminent time for celebrating initiation into the Church family community too… because at Easter we celebrate the new life Jesus won for us… and that Jesus invites us all to belong to God’s family….so tonight we are honoured to be celebrating the initiation into the Catholic community of two adults…   ….  they have both been baptized into other Christian church traditions, so we respect their baptism… there is only one baptism, into Christ, so we don’t re-baptise…..   but in tonights ceremony we are honoured to confirm the baptism they have already received … and also welcome them into full communion with the Catholic church family……  and I would like to thank our candidates for the honour of celebrating this special moment with the community, as this very special moment in your faith journey… is a source of renewal and joy for the whole community..   renewing and strengthening the commitment and living faith that we all share…}}

 

 

 

The love and grace of the Lord has not only “broken free of the tomb”… Jesus has also broken free of the limits of time and culture… and is present and active in the lives and events of this place… and this people here and now… …

 

 

 

I have said before, and it is worth repeating….   there is a scene in the gospels where an angel is found sitting in the empty tomb….   this is a wonderful scene….  the first sign that Jesus is risen is not the encounter with jesus in the garden or the meeting of Jesus on the road to Emmaus… but the fact that the tomb is empty.. the stone rolled away….  the cloth used to cover him crumpled and thrown away in a corner…..   in some ways beautifully understated….. 

 

 

 

even the angel… not some terrific winged creature… but presumably an ordinary looking man, sitting there calmly, dressed in a simple white robe… with this to say… and these words are addressed as much to us two thousand years or so later……….as to those first disciples…..

 

(and of course.. the angel didn’t quite put it like I am about to… but he might as well have said it like this… the meaning is the same….)

 

“you are looking in the wrong place for Jesus… he is not here…  do you know where he is……   if you want to find him………   go back where you just came from……   because ….he has gone to look for you……..………..    at your home………   he is not here……. he has risen….   he has gone ahead of you…. into town….   into your homes… into your streets….  into your schools and work places… and hospitals… and sports clubs… and anywhere else where everyday life plays itself out…. he has gone ahead of you into these places and it is here that the risen Lord will meet you…. look for him…. you will find him………    every time you experience kindness (or sense it inside yourself or show it, or receive it from another), whenever you experience….graciousness, justice, hope,  truth,     

 

a commitment to the good of the community, reverence  (that is a deep and heartfelt respect and regard for others and for the things around us), faith, (faithfulness), a sense of wonder, service, human dignity, servant leadership, devotion and steadfastness, forgiveness, compassion, empathy, peacefulness, gentleness, simple joy and of course love which takes as things are and not tries to turn it into something else……. wherever you show or encounter these and more….. you are encountering the risen lord…

 

 

 

He has gone ahead of you, into this town…. he will meet you there…..