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Sacrament of Confirmation

On Friday next 28th March the Sacrament of Confirmation will take place at 11:30 and 2pm in our parish church. We pray for God's blessing on all you are to be confirmed..

Schedule of Lenten Events in the 4 Parishes

St. Gabriel’s March 4th to 12th Novena of Grace Wednesdays in Lent Taizé Prayer & Reflection 7:30 to 8:30 pm, St. John’s March Sunday 23rd (and Vigil 6pm Saturday 22nd). Br. Richard Hendricks OFM Cap Poet and Writer will address all Masses. Thursday April 3rd and...

IRISH CATHOLIC ARTICLE

Click here for a PDF of an article recently published in the Irish Catholic, by Fr Gareth Byrne, Moderator of the Diocesan Curia and Chairperson of the Building Hope Pastoral Strategy Implementation Group. The introduction to the article, titled Risking a journey that...

Archbishop Farrell’s homily for launch of the Jubilee Year

Launch of the Jubilee Year 2025 “Pilgrims of Hope”  Homily of Archbishop Dermot Farrell St Mary’s Pro-Cathedral Sunday, December 29, 2024 (Also available at https://dublindiocese.ie/jubilee-year-launch/) “Jesus then went down with Mary and Joseph, and came to Nazareth...

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

Thursday, Third Week of Lent

In today’s gospel reading people interpret the life-giving work of Jesus in the most perverse way imaginable. Although it is clearly the Holy Spirit – the Spirit of God – that is at work through Jesus, some people claimed that it was the evil spirit – the spirit of Satan – that was at work through Jesus. They were unmoved by Jesus’ healing ministry, failing to see that, as Jesus said, it was through the finger of God that he was releasing people from all that was oppressing them. I have often been struck by that image of ‘the finger of God’. It puts me in mind of that wonderful painting by Michelangelo on the ceiling of the Sistine chapel in Rome of the creation of Adam. God stretches out his finger towards the finger of Adam in a powerful creative gesture. God who created us was powerfully at work recreating us through the ministry of Jesus, and, even more powerfully, through his death and resurrection. Whereas Satan’s power is always destructive, Jesus’ power, God’s power, is always creative. God, through his Son, now risen Lord, is always at work in a creative way in our lives and in our world. Our calling is to align ourselves in some way with the risen Lord’s creative and life-giving work. As Jesus says at the end of our gospel reading, we are to be with him, to gather with him. Together, in the strength of the risen Lord, we are to work against the destructive and life-taking forces that are always at work in our world. The creative, life-giving, finger of God that was at work through Jesus is to find expression in our own creative and life-giving fingers and hands, eyes, ears and mouth, heart, mind and imagination.

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