Parish News & Events
WHY SUNDAY MATTERS
“As we journey together through this Jubilee Year of Hope, we, the Irish Bishops, warmly invite all Catholics to reflect on the profound gift of Sunday Mass. This special year offers a unique opportunity to rediscover the heart of our faith and, for those who have...
TALK ON ST LAURENCE O’TOOLE
Talk on St Laurence O’Toole on Monday, September 1, at 8pm in the headquarters of the Knights of Columbanus, Ely Place, Dublin 2. The talk will be given by Fr John Scroope O’Brien, Clontarf, who is a distant relative of St Laurence. All are welcome.
DUBLIN DIOCESAN PILGRIMAGE TO LOURDES
The Dublin Archdiocesan Lourdes Pilgrimage will take place from September 4 to September 9, led by Archbishop Farrell. To travel as a hotel pilgrim please contact Joe Walsh Tours at 012410800 for further information.
DEATH OF BROTHER KEVIN
Statement of Archbishop Dermot Farrell, Archbishop of Dublin, on the announcement of the death of Brother Kevin Crowley OFMCap: Firstly, my sincere sympathy to Brother Kevin’s family and his Capuchin confrères on his death. Brother Kevin devoted his life to the...
SPRING SYNOD GATHERINGS
In March 2025, synod gatherings took place across the 5 pastoral areas of the Archdiocese, along with a 6th youth synod gathering. Clergy, chairs of Pastoral Councils, Paris Synod Animators, and pastoral staff were invited, with around 300 people from the Diocese...
Reflection on Today’s
Gospel Reading
Friday, Twenty Second Week in Ordinary Time
There is a striking statement about Jesus in today’s first reading, ‘God wanted all perfection to be found in him’. It could be said that Jesus was the perfect human being because, in the words of the reading, he was ‘the image of the unseen God’. We are all made in the image of God and we become fully human, perfect humans, to the extent that we are images of God. According to the first letter of Saint John, God is love, and the more we are images of God who is love, the more God’s love shapes our lives, the more fully human we will be. Jesus was the fullest possible image of God’s love. He was God’s love in human form, which made him fully alive as a human being, the one in whom all perfection is to be found. Our calling is to allow Jesus, the risen Lord, to live in us, so that we become as fully human as he was. Because all perfection was to be found in Jesus, he could not be contained by the religious traditions of the time. In the language of the gospel reading, he was like new wine that could not be contained by old wineskins. He was like a whole new cloak that couldn’t just be patched on to an old cloak. With his coming, everything was being renewed, including the regulations relating to fasting. However, Jesus came not just to renew the religious traditions of his time. He came to renew ‘everything in heaven and everything on earth’ in the words of the first reading. Above all, he came to renew all of humanity. The love he released into the world, the fire he set ablaze, was to renew the whole human race. The risen Lord has poured his love into our hearts through the Holy Spirit to renew us in his image, so that we become fully alive as human beings, as loving as he is. It is only as we allow the risen Lord to renew us in his love that the face of the earth will begin to be renewed.
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