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Homily for Palm Sunday 2020

In what seems little more than the blink of an eye, so much has changed. Reflecting that change, new phrases and words come into our way of speaking: expressions which declare the unprecedented nature of what our world has encountered through the presence of this terrible coronavirus, covid -19.

One of the many ways in which the media presents this change is simply in bringing before us the different settings of the people brought before us on our televisions. From the normal studio environment, we are now often invited into the sitting rooms, the bedrooms and even the lofts of those brought before us as presenters, interviewers and interviewees.  We have even taken to the living rooms of royalty and the self isolation quarters of our prime minister.

 While we listen to what they have to say to us, our natural inquisitive natures mean that our eyes travel quickly also to the background, to the backdrop to the scene.  

There are many books on the shelves – sometimes neat and tidy, sometimes not; sometimes there are even unseasonal Christmas decorations!

But what is most significant of all, surely, are the photographs –  Images of family, of loved ones, of people who are unique and precious to the people speaking to us.

They are not intended to be the story that is being told, but in a very real sense, they indeed are the story. They represent the story of people’s lives, the ones who make life worth living. They are those who love and are loved in return.

There truly is indeed something called society, says our prime minister.  There truly is something so precious called family and friendship.

St. John of the Cross brought before us the idea of the via negativa – the God who is revealed to us in the darkness, in absence.
The jewel that is family and the precious gem that is true friendship is surely revealed to us just now through something akin to that via negativa, to the light that shines in the darkness!
It is seen through the very fact that we cannot gather together just now. It speaks to us that we are prevented from doing so much of what we have always just taken for granted We can’t visit grandparents nor can we  play with our grandchildren. We can’t enjoy the company of close friends or just play with or hang out with our pals.  
It is so painfully experienced above all, is it not, in the depths of anguish of those who cannot be present at the bedside of the dying or attend the funeral of a loved one ?
And through the “not being able to”, we realise still more how much we
love and treasure one another.

Let us move now, not back to the TV screens, but back to Jerusalem and to that entry into the Holy City and ultimately to the  coming days Passion.
And there we meet the suffering Christ who comes past us, heading to the hill of Calvary.
Jesus has taken so long to bring this family of his disciples together To form them, to teach them, to reassure and encourage them and to raise them up when they have fallen. This time of formation and bringing together has indeed been a long one.
Who is my mother and my brother and my sister? – Those who do the will of my Father, they are my brother and sister and mother.  
Now, though, it seems the relationship is beginning to disintegrate. For the family of his closest disciples, fear has begun to take over, trust evaporates and eventually Jesus will be left alone.  

And yet it is in carrying that experience of loss and loneliness that Jesus goes to the cross. Even as he endures this disintegration of relationship, he is able bring together the scattered and frightened children of God in a new and unbreakable bond. Through his death, he brings the world to life in him. Through his death, life will ultimately triumph; the power of death and sin will be overcome for ever.

So today, even as we see the disappearance, albeit temporary, of many of the normal signs and expressions of family life, as we practise social, or more accurately, physical distancing. Today, as we experience a type of liturgical disintegration in not being able to gather and walk together in procession to enter into Holy Week, to celebrate together the ultimate paradox of death and resurrection in Eucharist, even now we are still touched by the presence and the power of the one who brings life through death.

In these days, we hear people comment, again and again, that we appreciate now so much more the things and the people who really matter. In these days, we continue to be held together by the touch and embrace of the God who is totally one with us in our suffering.
The one who by His Holy Cross has redeemed the world and all its tragedies.
That is what we recall and make present in these days.
Even if we are unable to come physically together to do what the Church has done every year, the death of our savour is the process not of disintegration, but of our being born to eternal life in him.  

May the Lord continue to bless you
and keep you family and your friends safe
during this Holy Week and always.

Have mercy, Lord, on your Church,
As she brings you her supplications,
And be attentive to those who incline their hearts before you:
Do not allow, we pray, those you have redeemed
By the death of your only begotten Son,
To be harmed by their sins or weighed down by their trials.
Through Christ Our Lord.

Prayer over the People
                   Mass for 5th Saturday of Lent

Father Peter
Palm Sunday 2020

Homily for Sunday 29th March 2020

Gospel:- John 11:1-45
I am the resurrection and the life

Martha longs for life to be as it was before.
She longs, above all, that her brother, Lazarus, was still with her and her
sister Mary: that family life would still be as it always was.
In her typically practical approach to life,
somehow she has also decided that if Jesus had been present
this tragedy would never have happened.
Lazarus would still be alive and still with them.

We are joined in solidarity today with Martha
Because we too long that things once again
Would be as they always have been.
That life would be as it was for us, for our loved ones,
for our church and indeed for our world.
We may even be tempted to say with her
“Lord, if you have been here, this would not have happened”.

We long to move forward from the depths
of this awful viral threat to take up normal life again.
To enjoy the countless things we took for granted.
So many things that we seldom stopped to think about them.
We long for the touch of our loved ones.
We look to be able to hug our grandchildren again.
We long for the normal patterns of everyday life, the company of friends
and even the banter at work.
We long, also, to be again the active Eucharistic parish family, physically
gathered together, young and old, around the tables of God’s word and
sacrament.

Martha in her longing is presented with the question,
“Do you believe me?” She is invited to travel into the land of true and
deep faith.
The question continues,
“Do you believe me when I tell you that I am the resurrection and the
life?
Do you believe me when I tell you that I can transform and redeem even
the most terrible of situations?”

Jesus promise, of course, goes far beyond what Martha had sought.
And Martha can say, “Yes”.

Martha declares her belief when life could scarcely have been worse for her.
She proclaims her faith in the Lord of life, even when surrounded by the darkness of death. 
We too are invited to say in the midst of this darkness, Yes, Lord, I believe.
The same Lord who invited Martha to belief is the one who makes our “yes” possible. The one who, by his initiative of love, makes true, deep and enduring faith possible.

We can say “yes” today also because we can see also the Lord at work in
the transparent goodness of so many people around us in these days.
In the skills and the courage of all our National Health Service workers;
in those who are serving others with the many tasks of daily life.
We can see it even in our media at times in these days. A media which
has been  able to speak with a voice which is truly and deeply spiritual.

Unbind him. Let him go free.

Those final words of our gospel had the power to bring Lazarus out from the tomb.
Those words speak with power also to our elect, still in our minds and our prayer, and point towards the new life to which they will be called in the waters of their Baptism.
They speak to us all in relation to the weakness and death of sin still present in all of us, but which is destroyed by the power of the Lord of life.

And surely in these days of anguish, the Lord invites us to make his words
our own as we cry out to him:-
Unbind us, Lord. Let us go free.
Unbind our world and bring an end to this time of suffering and pain.
Unbind us, Lord,  
And bring to us all
Your healing and peace.

Fr.Peter
5th Sunday of Lent, 2020

Prayer of the Faithful for Sunday 29th March 2020

For Pope Francis and for the whole Church: that God will transform our fears into hope, selfishness into love, and deaths into new life.

For all preparing for Baptism:- In our own parish of Christ the King, we pray especially for Emma Ward:- that God will lead  Emma and all the elect in our parishes to newness of life through Baptism

For all key workers during the present crisis, in all the different areas of service and healing:- That they may know of our support, care and prayerful concern for them.

For all who have contracted the coronavirus: that God’s healing Spirit will ease their symptoms and restore them to health

For an end to the pandemic: that God will guide and inspire everyone working to curtail the virus and that each one of us may play our part.

For strength and courage: that God will inspire all who are searching for treatments for the coronavirus or working to develop a vaccine for it

For all who must face death each day, particularly emergency personnel and hospital chaplains: that God will strengthen their spirits and help them honour the life of each person they assist

For those who are mourning the death of a loved one: that they may know Christ’s loving and sustaining presence with them in their time of loss

For all who have died recently, especially Isa McLachlan, Cathie Boyle, Joe Kane,  and Alphonse Francis:- For the month’s mind of Michael McCreadie.

For those whose anniversaries occur at this time, especially Tommy Orr, Edward Orr,
Matthew Cluckie, Artie Monaghan, Neil Campbell, Vincent McGlone,  :-  
That they will rise in glory to share in the joy of the kingdom.

Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Spiritual Resources

Pray as You Go                                                                              Jesuit Missionaries

www.prayasyougo.org.uk                                            App available for smart phones

Pray As You Go is a short daily prayer session lasting approximately ten to twelve minutes. The format includes a piece of music, a reading from the readings of the day and a short prayerful reflection based on the chosen reading.

It particularly appeals to me because it’s related to one of the readings of the day, it allows me to experience different types of spiritual music and I like the idea that I’m connected to others who are meditating on the same reflection. However, the Jesuit site also offers a number of other resources including reflections on the rosary, lectio divina and personal retreats. 

In response to our current period of uncertainty Pray as You Stay was launched on Monday 23rd March as a prayer support for us during these very difficult and challenging times.

To access other Jesuit resources including ‘United in prayer – be near Jesus at home,’ copy this link into your search engine:  https://www.pathwaystogod.org/

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Lenten Reflections from John’s gospel                 Redemptorist Publications

Father Denis McBride is described as ‘a renowned priest, lecturer and author.’ You may be familiar with his books already as we have a number of them in the prayer group library. We also used pictures from his book ‘Stations of the Cross then and now,’ for our Lenten Reflection Evening in 2018.

The Lenten reflections include an introductory video which compares John’s narrative to the other three gospels. The three Lenten Narratives reflect on:

  • The Woman of Samaria
  • The Man Born Blind
  • The Raising of Lazarus

How to access:       www.rpbooks.co.uk   or google:  Redemptorist Publications

Rectangle: Rounded Corners: RP response to COVID 19

Click on the red rectangle which says

Scroll down to the heading:                                                                                                            Three Lenten Narratives from the Gospel of John. Clicking on the picture of Father Denis will take you to all of the videos or click on the ‘watch now’ box to watch straight away.

Mass on line

I know many of you have already accessed mass and other online services via the Archdiocese of Glasgow website:     www.rcag.org.uk 

Vatican Services can be accessed via Vatican’s YouTube channel

I chose to watch Sunday mass and exposition there this week. I found the service very intimate and was left with the feeling that I personally had attended mass with Pope Francis and a very small group of others. The translator was excellent and led exposition beautifully, in my opinion.

Redemptorist Publications are also providing access to Father Denis McBride’s Sunday mass from Saturday noon. www.rpbooks.co.uk    

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National Novena to Our Lady of Knock                    www.knockshrine.ie or google Knock

Parish Church Live Stream

Knock is conducting a National Novena to Our Lady of Knock from 17-25 March. Novena intentions: Praying for a swift end to the Coronavirus, the protection of all people against it, all who are ill at this time and all medical and civil authorities.

Two sessions daily:                 12 noon: Angelus, Mass and Novena prayers
7.00pm: Rosary
7.30pm: Mass and Novena prayers followed by Eucharistic blessing

Apparition Chapel Live Stream

The Apparition Chapel, the site of the apparition at Knock in 1879 is also accessible on livestream and provides access to the ‘sacred silence of the site.’ It creates a still, tranquil and prayerful atmosphere.

Light a Candle

Candles can be purchased online (suggested donation 2 Euros). Candles will be lighted and placed at the apparition site on your behalf.

—————————————————————————————————————-Resources for Catholics

The Tablet Catholic Newsweekly    

The Tablet has constructed a very long list of resources which are available on line at this time. www.thetablet.co.uk/ or google:  The Tablet

Scroll down and click on the heading under the picture of Pope Francis. ‘Isolated but not alone: resources for Catholics.’

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Music

Pray as You Go provides artist and album information for all of their music. I’ve found it a good resource for exploring new music. While I’ve downloaded the specific songs and tunes I’ve wanted from iTunes, I’d assume they’ll also be available through Spotify or the details provided should help you to purchase an album.

Artists whose music I’ve shared at our prayer ministry and reflection evenings include:

Artist                                                  Albums

Eric Nordhoff              Soaking – Your Great Name and Quietime

Salt of the Sound        And on Earth Peace, Dwell Among Us, In Prayer, Lent Vol 1, Waiting for the Dawn

Karen Money              Secret Things

Noirin Ni Riain           Vox De Nube (The Beatitudes)

Taize                            Laudete Omnes Genti, Laudate: Music of Taize

Reading

I know many of us already read Father Ronald Rolheiser’s column in the Scottish Catholic Observer. His weekly column, as well as archived columns, may be accessed at www.ronrolheiser.com or google: Father Ronald Rolheiser

He has provided an excellent column this week reflecting on how we may grow through this time. You can also sign up for a twice weekly e-newsletter to twice weekly receive a reflection from his archives.

There are many books we could consider recommending just now. If I had to choose just one, my recommendation would be the late Father Daniel O’Leary’s ‘Travelling Light.’   I think this book requires dedicated time to read and reflect on the daily two page ‘breather’ before participating in the suggested reflection.  Perhaps we have the time for this just now.

Poetry

From BBC Radio London .. Yes there is fear yes there is …

This poem was penned by a Capuchin Franciscan brother in Ireland. If you are unable to access it using the above link, google: Youtube Radio London, Yes, there is fear.

Worth a listen to if you haven’t heard it already!

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May the Lord bless you and keep you.

May the Lord let his face shine on you and be gracious to you.

May the Lord uncover his face to you and bring you peace. (Numbers 6:24-27)

Keep safe