8 February 2015 - Belmont Abbey Parish
Transcription
8 February 2015 - Belmont Abbey Parish
PARISH NEWSLETTER 8th February 2015 (Cycle B) 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time PARISH PRIEST Fr. Nicholas Wetz OSB Tel: 01432 - 277319 email:[email protected] www.belmontparish.org.uk Parish Deacon Rev Deacon Eddie Wyman Tel: 01432 - 263575 Parish Hall 01432 - 374781 Safeguarding Representative Gabrielle Stanley 07939 472059 Items for the Newsletter to [email protected] or The Parish Office Parish ‘Social’ AGM There will be a short social AGM on Tuesday 10th February between 7-8pm. Do drop in at any time for a drink and a chat or to raise any questions or issues you may have. I’ll say a few words at 7.30 about parish plans and ideas for 2015. Marriage Care During this week celebrating Marriage, we pray for all married couples and remember just what makes marriage so special. We celebrate the love and commitment of all couples, both those who have been recently married and those who have lived a lifetime together. We also look forward to the weddings that will take place this summer in our parish and pray for all engaged couples. Sadly, marriages often encounter difficulties. Marriage Care provide help, support and advice in such situations. The second collection today is help fund their work. Fr Nicholas 1 Last Sunday’s 1st Collection £546.12 FLAME 2 Standing Orders: £480.00 Flame 2 is the largest National Catholic youth event of 2015 and will take place in the Wembley Arena on Saturday 7 March 2015. Starting at 12 noon, it will finish at 5.30pm and is aimed at young people from year 10 and above. Over 10,000 young people from all over the country are booked to attend. Speakers will include Cardinal Luis Tagle from Manila and Baroness Sheila Hollins. The day will conclude with a time of Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament led by Cardinal Vincent Nichols. 2nd Collection £509.94 Columban Missionaries - Thank you. WORLD YOUTH DAY – KRAKOW – JULY 2016 World Youth Day is an incredible, life changing experience. Nowhere else in the world is there an event where millions of young people from every corner of the world come together to celebrate and share their faith. It was started 30 years ago by Pope John Paul V V V V V II and will be attended next year by Pope Francis. The previous World Youth PROCLAIM 15 Day was in Rio de Janeiro and Krakow in Poland is now preparing to welcome This is the name of the major pilgrims in July 2016. Conference on Evangelisation being organised by the Bishops of England and The Diocese of Cardiff has booked 50 Wales to be held at Birmingham on 11 places for two weeks in July. One week July 2015. Thirty five delegates will be will be spent in the Diocese of Bialostok attending from the various parishes in in northern Poland as a ‘Mission’ week the Diocese of Cardiff. A coach is now or week of preparation. We will travel being arranged to pick up the delegates to Krakow for the celebrations in from various parishes in order to travel preparation for the arrival of the Pope to Birmingham together. Further and will stay in the university Halls of information has already been circulated Residence. Further details will be to the participants. All who attend the circulated shortly after Easter. The total Birmingham Conference will be invited cost is envisaged to be £800 per person. to play an important role in the Parishes will be invited to help sponsor Diocesan Proclaim Day which will be young people and there will held on 10 October 2015. Those wishing opportunities for Diocesan fund raising to participate in preparations for the as well. Diocesan Day are welcome to meet at Cathedral Clergy House, Charles Street, V V V V V on the Third Monday of each month 2 from 7.00pm – 8.30pm. Further details jumble - so please start looking and available from Fr. Gareth Leyshon at St. leaving things in the Parish Hall Porch. Philip Evans Parish, Cardiff. Many thanks! V V V V V V V V V V 150 CLUB WHITE RABBIT Thank you to everyone who has paid their 2015 subscription for the 150 Club. There are a few more to come in so if you pay by cash or cheque, please place it in an envelope as soon as possible and hand it to Chris Moore or Fr Nick. Following the success of last year’s production Soldier to Saint by RISE Theatre, we have invited them back to perform their latest offering White Rabbit in Hedley Lodge at 7.30pm, Friday 20th March 2015. V V V V V This is a tale of faith, love and selfdiscovery, of two people lost in a grown-up world of work, normality and disappointment - a place with no time for fairy tales or childhood dreams. Jenny cannot STOP, her fast-paced work life spiraling out of control. Tom cannot START, his life as an artist now at a complete standstill. Suddenly an unexpected encounter with a stranger sets them on a life-changing journey. Could this be the White Rabbit of their childhood? Experience for yourself the message of hope and forgiveness in this imaginative and moving play by singersongwriter and director Charley Pinfold. NEW EMAIL ADDRESS The parish is setting up new email addresses for publications such as the newsletter and The Angel. From today, items for the newsletter should be sent to [email protected]. The previous address will continue to be checked for the month of February. Items for the website may be sent to [email protected]. V V V V V Tickets are now on sale from the Parish Office (see Chris Moore or Fr Nick) £8 for adults, £6 for under 18s. JUMBLE SALE 1.30pm on Saturday 7th March at OLQM - same time - same place as always but we need items for the V V V V V 3 PILGRIMAGE TO FRANCE 25-29 MAY 2015 Luncheon would cost the sum of £15 but for the sick it would be on a voluntary basis. Please note transport is Pilgrimage plans are going well. There possibly available. will be a meeting to sort out final details and have a social get together on Friday Could any sick that wish to come 17th April in the Annexe at SFX after the contact Andrew Grant on 01886 6:30pm Mass. (Approx. 7:10). 832368. Andrew Grant FRICS DL In the meantime could everyone please send a cheque for their outstanding V V V V V balance, payable to St. Francis Xavier’s HOMILY Church, to the SFX office. Cheques should arrive no later than Friday 20th March. Please mark the envelope “She began to wait on them.” “France Pilgrimage.” Illustration The final total cost is £300 pp for adults and £150pp for children (less deposit if There’s a story about a man – let’s call him Sam – who was walking by a river paid). one day when he spotted a woman in Thank you. John and Mary Cook 850231 the water in obvious distress. Without a moment’s hesitation, he jumped in, V V V V V swam to the woman and guided her safely to the riverbank, where a small MASS AND ANOINTING OF THE SICK group of people had gathered to watch SATURDAY 28TH FEBRUARY 2015 the dramatic rescue. No sooner had Sam made sure that the woman was British and Sovereign Order of Malta going to be okay than the shout went (BASOM) are holding their annual up: “There’s another one!” Sam leapt reunion at the Church of the Oratory, back into the river and swam to rescue Hagley Road, Birmingham on Saturday a drowning man. Our exhausted hero 28th February 2015. dragged him to the shore and hadn’t even got out of the water this time There will be a solemn Mass which will when the cry went up again: “Someone be offered at 11:00am which will else is drowning!” This time a child was include the Sacrament of the Anointing rescued by valiant Sam. of the Sick. After Mass luncheon will be provided in the Oratory halls. Those By now the crowd had grown to quite a that are sick are invited to come. size, so when the eagle-eyed spectators 4 shouted out that there were more people floating down the river, all eyes turned expectantly to Sam. But instead of diving back in, Sam calmly stood up, turned his back to the river and started walking away. Angrily, the crowd challenged him: “Aren’t you going to rescue those people?” “You rescue them,” Sam said. “I’m going to find out who’s throwing people into this river.” instead heads off for other places. And his intention is not simply to heal, since healing is only one aspect of his mission. He has come to “preach” – to proclaim the good news of the nearness of God’s kingdom, of which the healings and the exorcisms are but a sign. Application It’s easy for us to be so wrapped up in our lives – the daily routine, the demands that simple existence makes upon us – that we lose sight of our true purpose and calling. Like Job, we can be left struggling with our existence, failing to find a meaning in our lives. Sickness, mental illness, stress and anxiety in particular can so consume us that our life feels like no more than “pressed service” and “hired drudgery”. But that highly charged, symbolic good deed of Jesus points a way forward for us: Simon’s mother-in-law, totally incapacitated by her illness, is restored by Jesus’ touch not simply to health but to service. She is “helped up” by Jesus – and she begins to “wait on them” (the original Greek word means she “ministers” or “deacons” to them). In other words, her encounter with Jesus transforms her suffering into the freedom to serve. This Gospel truth is a lesson the disciples struggle to learn: that true greatness lies in service, for Jesus himself came not to be served but to serve. Gospel Teaching Today’s Gospel shows Jesus doing a good deed, as he heals Simon’s motherin-law. Quickly a crowd gathers as word spreads of Jesus’ healing powers. It’s almost as if Jesus is presented with the suffering of the whole town. And he dives in, curing those who are sick and freeing those caught up by evil spirits. But Jesus faces a dilemma. Is this why he came – to cure sick people, to establish a base here in Capernaum so that those who are burdened can come to him? In the silence of the night, away from the crowds, he is able to look beyond the immediate need and hear his Father’s voice speak to him of his true purpose, his real mission. Yes, Jesus is a healer – but his mission is not simply to cure sickness, and he has not been sent just to this one town. Like Sam in the story, Jesus sees that there is a bigger issue at stake, a more urgent and important task he has to accomplish. So although “everybody is looking for” Jesus – doubtless there Jesus’ mission was indeed to heal – but were more people in need of healing – this healing was accomplished on the Jesus does not return to the town but cross, and was a healing of the whole of 5 humanity, indeed the whole of creation. Those of us who, like Simon’s mother-in-law, are touched by Jesus are raised to serve like him, to continue his mission of bringing healing and wholeness into our world. So many people are weighed down by burdens of suffering, trapped by external forces of oppression and poverty, or enslaved by internal compulsions and addictions. The response of Christ – of the Christian – is to do more than simply ask “Why?” We are called to engage actively, by proclaiming the nearness of God’s kingdom through lives of loving service. was as if, for the crowd, these miracles validated his preaching claims. Anyone can preach, but someone who can back up their preaching with healing is surely worth listening to. And for Jesus these cures were not the beall and end-all of his mission. They were signs of something else: the setting up of the kingdom of God. From the start Jesus never claimed any credit for these miracles. He was up-front about where he got his power from: his Father. And it was his Father who had sent him to inaugurate a new way of life, a new style of living according to the values of the kingdom which was about to come. V V V V V Two thousand years on the Church continues this mission of proclaiming the kingdom to a world that is often as weary as Jesus’s listeners. In the midst of war, scandal, opposition and sheer human frailty we keep in mind that we are not trying to compete with other agencies, with governments or lifestyle promoters. Our message is radically different from any other. It says that God intends us to live in a way that puts others first, that thrives on self-sacrifice after the fashion of Christ and that has no time for the self-centred idealism of much of what advertisers and spindoctors present us with today. For Christians are in the world but not of it. That’s because, warts and all, they are part of the kingdom of God. And as Jesus’s audience found out, despite the problems that each day might bring, the kingdom is very near. FAITH IN FOCUS: SIGN OF THINGS TO COME ‘Life is but a breath and my eyes will never again see joy.’ We can all sympathise with Job. He feels so downhearted that nothing seems worthwhile any more. And from time to time we can all end up asking what’s the point of life and whether it’s worth all the effort. We take our fair share of knocks and it’s easy to stay down rather than pick ourselves up and dust ourselves down. That’s why the cures that Jesus worked came as such a bombshell to a people that had grown cynical about life. St Mark tells us that from the outset of his ministry Jesus attracted large crowds eager to see him perform cures on those who were sick. Of course, Jesus was no doctor. But it 6 Ministers, etc. For next Sunday 15th February: 6th Sunday in OT 8:30am Welcomer Liz Norman 9:30am 11:00am Clare & Basil Nickerson Hackman Family Sacristan Jerry Hogan 1st Reading Adrian Eyre 2nd Reading Jacqui Ramage-Smith Frances Wood Margaret Rose Morawiecki Family Bidding Prayer Richard Batho Offertory Children’s Liturgy Monica Tomlin Georgina McGurk & Menna McBain Extra-Ordinary Fran Smallwood & Minister(s) Julia Davey Stephen Fisher Next Sunday - Second Collection: Catholic Education Service Next Week - Newsletter Folding: CG-C Dates to be noted 20 March 2015 White Rabbit - Hedley Lodge, Belmont Abbey - 7:30pm I ARISE TODAY: THE LENT RETREAT February 16-19 (3 days mid-week registration fee £28) CHILDREN’S LITURGY 8.30 am Children's Liturgy 15 Feb 11.00 am Liturgy Wisdom from the Celtic saints. We learn what it is to be pilgrims to the place of our resurrection: our Lenten journey for 2015. 08-Feb Jacqui Moore & Monica Russell 15-Feb Anna Nugent & Robert Blackburn Dom Brendan Thomas 22-Feb Marje Hayes & Pauline Gill 01-Mar Jacqui Moore & Mary Wood DEATHS and ANNIVERSARIES: Please pray for all who have died: May they rest in peace. Beryl Swain, Francis Bray, Elizabeth Croton, Mary Hill, Joe Schofield, Mary Carroll, Norah Gethen, Agnes Ward, Philip Davies, Dominic Sterckx, Denise Homfray, Geoffrey Shimmin, Margaret Thomas, Catherine Connely, Agnes Holtom, Sarah Slattery, Lena Whitlock, Mary Anderson, Mary Jillow, Rhoda Linehan, William Tyler. Leslie Blackmon, Rev. Hilary Brightling, Elwin Lyons, Claude Meredith and Isabel Wheatly. The SICK: Please pray for Will Kinsman, Toni Cornforth, Mary Carroll, Sue Rogers, Elizabeth Lloyd-Jones, Jane Shaw, David Ellis, Norma Naudain, Fr Michal Cronin, Siobhan Hayes, Elaine Campbell, Sr Catherine, Joanne Savory, Ken Harding, Brian Holberry, Vincent Hanna, and Sadie Bowyer. Belmont Abbey Parish is part of Belmont Abbey Mission Trust (Registered Charity - 226277) 7 Liturgy for Sunday 8th February 2015 Readings: Sunday Cycle B; Weekdays: Cycle 1; Divine Office: Week 1 Entrance: O come, let us worship God and bow low before the God who made us, for he is the Lord our God. Acclamation: Save us, Saviour of the world ... Communion: Let them thank the Lord for his mercy, his wonders for the children of men, for he satisfies the thirsty soul, and the hungry he fills with good things. 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time Principal Celebrants, Extraordinary Ministers, Readers, etc. 8:30am Celebrant Fr. Nicholas Welcomer Cooper Family 9:30am Fr Nicholas Anne Stapleton Sacristan Marnie Archer & Brenda Sherwood Stephen Fisher 1st Reading Julia Davey 2nd Reading Richard Batho Frances Wood Ramage-Hill Family Marje Hayes A. Morton-Saner & M. Campbell Extra-Ordinary S. Hayes & Kath Parry Minister(s) Mass Intention Parish Intention Brian Draper Pat Draper Bidding Prayer Liz Norman Offertory 11:00am Chris Moore Benefactors Parish Intention Second Collection: Marriage Care Tesco Vouchers: Order this week please What’s On for the week Mon St Teilo: Mass at 8:00 am in the Oratory Tue St Scholastica: Mass at 8:00 am Wed Our Lady of Lourdes: Mass at 8:00 am: Midday Mass in the Oratory Thu Feria: Mass at 8:00 am Fri Feria: Mass at 8:00 am; Midday Mass in the Oratory Sat SS Cyril & Methodius: Mass at 8:00 am: Sacrament of Reconciliation at 10:00 am Events for the week Tuesday 10 7-8:00pm - Short social AGM in the Parish Centre - All Welcome! 8