Parish News & Events
Family Mass Christmas Eve
The Family Mass team at St John’s Parish in Clontarf Road would like to invite children to participate in the parish’s Family Christmas Mass at 6pm on Christmas Eve. Children are welcome to join the Nativity pageant, read prayers or participate in a procession –...
Christmas Timetable for St. Gabriel’s and St. Johns Parishes
CHRISTMAS EVE 5pm St. Gabriel's Family Mass 6pm St. Johns Family Mass 9pm St. Gabriel's Vigil Mass of Christmas 9pm St. Johns Vigil Mass of Christmas. CHRISTMAS DAY MASSES 9am St. Gabriel's 10am St. Johns 10.30am St. Gabriel's (Family Mass) 12midday St. Johns Both...
CROSSCARE CHRISTMAS FOOD POVERTY APPEAL
As the cost of living continues to rise, more families than ever are turning to Crosscare for help. This year, almost 3,000 people – including 1,200 children – sought basic food support, while nearly 12,000 affordable meals were served in the Portland Row Community...
ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL BICENTENARY
“It is with great joy that I am pleased to announce that the Holy Father, Pope Leo, has consented to my request and has approved by decree that St Mary’s be designated as the Cathedral Church of our Archdiocese. It is appropriate that this announcement should be made...
MANRESA RETREATS
Manresa Jesuit Centre of Spirituality (Clontarf, Dublin) is offering the following: Advent Triduum Retreat. Monday-Friday, 1-5 December or 8-12 December 2025. A silent retreat guided by the Jesuit community, offering space for prayer, reflection, daily Mass,...
Reflection on Today’s
Gospel Reading
19th December
In the gospel reading there is a priest at prayer in the Temple, Zechariah, and the people outside the Temple are praying. It is in this setting of prayer that God announces unexpected good news to Zechariah through God’s messenger, Gabriel. Even though both Zechariah and his wife Elizabeth are getting on in years, Elizabeth will soon conceive and give birth to a son. He is to be named John and he will have a special mission to prepare people for the coming of the Lord. All of this was too much for Zechariah to take in. He couldn’t believe the messenger’s good news. He asked for a sign before he could begin to believe. The ways of the Lord were too wonderful for Zechariah to comprehend. We are being reminded that there is always more to God and to what God is doing that we ever realize. God’s purposes for our lives, for the world, will always leave us lost for words. Zechariah asked for a sign and he himself became the sign. His inability to speak make people realize that something extraordinary had happened in the Temple, that God had touched his life in a profound way. Saint Paul once spoke of a mystical experience he had that left him speechless. He could not speak about it to anyone. He said he ‘was caught up into Paradise and heard things that are not to be told, that no mortal is permitted to repeat’. We might all struggle to put into words some deeply significant experience of the Lord. In another of his letters, Paul says that God’s power at work within us can do immeasurably more than all we can ask or imagine. It is reassuring to know that God is always at work in ways that we cannot imagine or put into words. This awareness keeps us hopeful in difficult times, allowing us to say in the words of today’s psalm, ‘’It is you, O Lord, who are my hope’.
Neighbouring
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