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BUILDING HOPE PLANNING RESOURCE

The Building Hope Pastoral Strategic Planning Resource 2025–2027, launched at the recent workshops, is now available at https://dublindiocese.ie/planning-resource/.

World Mission Sunday 20th October 2024

“Go and Invite Everyone to the Banquet” This Sunday, October 20 is World Mission Sunday. The 2nd Collection/Share Collection is replaced by the collection for the Pontifical Missions Society at Masses this weekend. World Mission Sunday is the Holy Father’s annual...

ST BERNADETTE – RELIC PILGRIMAGE

In October, the relics of St Bernadette will visit two more churches in Dublin: Mary Immaculate, Inchicore, October 23-24; and Adam & Eve’s, Merchants Quay, October 25-26. For more information, visit www.stbernadette.ie

St John’s Men’s Social Group

The Men's Social and Music Group meets every Wednesday from 10-30am to 12-30pm in our Parish Centre. After our Summer break, we are starting again from 4 September 2024. The Men's Group is a venue for men to meet, relax, have fun and discuss the issues of the day over...

BUILDING HOPE WITH OPEN HEARTS

Archbishop Farrell’s new Pastoral Letter Building Hope with Open Hearts. This Pastoral Letter can be found at https://dublindiocese.ie/building-hope-with-open-hearts/. It launches across the Archdiocese a significant new phase of the Building Hope pastoral renewal...

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

18th October, Feast of Saint Luke

Today we celebrate the feast of one of the four evangelists. He is the only evangelist to have written both a gospel and what we have come to call the Acts of the Apostles. His literary work in two parts makes up about one quarter of the New Testament. The early church attributed this two volume work to one of the co-workers of Saint Paul, a man called Luke. He features in today’s first reading. At a vulnerable moment in his life, Saint Paul writes, ‘only Luke is with me’. Paul was very aware of his reliance on co-workers, like Luke. Paul’s ministry was very much a team ministry. On several occasions in his letters, Paul gives us the names of his team of co-workers, men and women. Luke’s gospel portrays Jesus as also relying upon a team of co-workers. In a passage that is only found in his gospel, Luke tells us that, as Jesus went on his way proclaiming the good news of the kingdom of God, as well as being accompanied by the twelve, he was also accompanied by a group of women who provided for him and the twelve out of their resources. In today’s gospel reading, another passage that is unique to Luke’s gospel, Jesus sends out seventy-two co-workers, in pairs, as labourers in God’s harvest. Before sending them out, he asks them to prayerfully ask the Lord of the harvest to send even more labourers into his harvest. Jesus knew that he needed a large team of men and women if the good news was to be heard by those who needed to hear it. The risen Lord continues to need a very large team of labourers today because God’s harvest continues to be rich. All of us, in virtue of our baptism, are called by the Lord to be his labourers in today’s world. He needs us, firstly, to allow ourselves to be personally touched by his gospel of God’s loving presence, and, then, to go forth and bring this gospel, this good news, to others by our whole way of life. Regardless of the circumstances of our life, each one of us has a role to play in the Lord’s great work of bringing the gospel to others today. As Pope Francis often says, we are all called to be missionary disciples. Today, we ask Saint Luke to help us to be true to this calling of the Lord.

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