Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Assistant Priest: Fr Augustine Ezenwelu
mob: 0470 576 857
Postal Address: PO Box 362, Devonport 7310
Parish Office: 90 Stewart Street, Devonport 7310
Office Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
10am - 3pm
Office Phone: 6424 2783 Fax: 6423 5160
FaceBook: Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Weekly Newsletter: mlcathparish.blogspot.com.au
Parish Newsletter: mlcathparishnewsletter.blogspot.com.au
Secretary: Annie Davies/Anne Fisher
Pastoral Council Chair: Mary Davies
Secretary: Annie Davies/Anne Fisher
Pastoral Council Chair: Mary Davies
Archdiocesan Website: www.hobart.catholic.org.au for news, information and details of other Parishes.
Our Parish Sacramental Life
Baptism: arrangements are made by contacting Parish Office.
Parents attend a Baptismal Preparation Session on first Tuesday of February, April, June, August, October and December.
Reconciliation, Confirmation and Eucharist: Are received following a Family–centred, Parish-based, School-supported Preparation Program.
Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults: prepares adults for reception into the Catholic community.
Marriage: arrangements are made by contacting one of our priests - couples attend a pre-marriage Program
Anointing of the Sick: please contact one of our priests
Reconciliation: Ulverstone - Fridays (10am - 10:30am)
Devonport - Saturday (5:15pm– 5.45pm)
Penguin - Saturday (5:15pm - 5:45pm)Devonport - Saturday (5:15pm– 5.45pm)
Care and Concern: If you are aware of anyone who is in need of assistance and has given permission to be contacted by Care and Concern, please phone the parish Office.
FIRST
Philip went to a Samaritan town and proclaimed the Christ
to them. The people united in welcoming the message Philip preached, either
because they had heard of the miracles he worked or because they saw them for
themselves. There were, for example, unclean spirits that came shrieking out of
many who were possessed, and several paralytics and cripples were cured. As a
result there was great rejoicing in that town.
When the apostles in Jerusalem
heard that Samaria
had accepted the word of God, they sent Peter and John to them, and they went
down there, and prayed for the Samaritans to receive the Holy Spirit, for as
yet he had not come down on any of them: they had only been baptised in the
name of the Lord Jesus. Then they laid hands on them, and they received the
Holy Spirit.
The
word of the Lord.
RESPONSORIAL PSALM
(R.) Let all the earth cry out to God with joy.
1. Cry out with joy to God all the earth, O sing to the
glory of his name. O render him glorious praise.
Say to God: ‘How tremendous your deeds! (R.)
2. ‘Before you all the earth shall bow; shall sing to you,
sing to your name!’ Come and see the works of God, tremendous his deeds among
men. (R.)
3. He turned the sea into dry land, they passed through the
river dry-shod. Let our joy then be in him; he rules for ever by his might. (R.)
4. Come and hear, all who fear God. I will tell what he did
for my soul: Blessed be God who did not reject my prayer nor withhold his love
from me. (R.)
SECOND READING : 1
Peter 3:15-18
Reverence the Lord Christ in your hearts, and always have
your answer ready for people who ask you the reason for the hope that you all
have. But give it with courtesy and respect and with a clear conscience, so
that those who slander you when you are living a good life in Christ may be
proved wrong in the accusations that they bring. And if it is the will of God
that you should suffer, it is better to suffer for doing right than for doing
wrong.
Why, Christ himself, innocent though he was, had died once
for sins, died for the guilty, to lead us to God. In the body he was put to
death, in the spirit he was raised to life.
The word of
the Lord.
GOSPEL ACCLAMATION
Alleluia, alleluia! All who love me will keep my words, and
my Father will love them and we will come to them. Alleluia!
GOSPEL: John 14:15-21
Jesus said to his disciples:
‘If you love me you will keep my commandments.
I shall ask the Father,
and he will give you another Advocate
to be with you for ever,
that Spirit of truth
whom the world can never receive
since it neither sees nor knows him;
but you know him,
because he is with you, he is in you.
I will not leave you orphans;
I will come back to you.
In a short time the world will no longer see me;
but you will see me,
because I live and you will live.
On that day
you will understand that I am in my Father
and you in me and I in you.
Anybody who receives my commandments and keeps them
will be one who loves me;
and anybody who loves me will be loved by my Father,
and I shall love him and show myself to him.’
The
Gospel of the Lord.
PREGO REFLECTION ON TODAY'S GOSPEL:
Maybe it’s been easy to find some
quiet time to pray to the Lord or maybe I had to really juggle my timetable to
find space to pray. However, I am here now, grateful for these moments. What do
I want to say to the Lord today?
I read the text and hear Jesus’ voice
saying to me : “If you love me…” How does it make me feel? How do I respond?
I may feel in need of support, in
need of a friend, someone who will stay at my side at all times. Is there a
line in the text which gives me comfort? I stay with it for a few moments.
Perhaps I find it difficult to truly
comprehend the intimate relationship between Jesus and his Father and me.
I do not struggle, I simply speak to the Lord from my heart,
telling him what I find difficult and I ask him to help me. I listen to him.
I read the text one final time. What strikes me now? How do I feel
at the end of my prayer time?
Maybe I will need to return to the areas which held my attention several times during the week. When I am ready, I go from my place
of prayer in the name of the Father…..
First
Gospel: Matthew 28:16-20
Weekday
Masses 27th - 30th May, 2014
Tuesday: 9:30am Penguin
Wednesday: 9:30am Latrobe
Thursday: 12:00
noon Devonport
Friday: 9:30am Ulverstone
Next
Weekend 31st May & 1st June, 2014
Saturday Vigil: 6.00pm Penguin (L.W.C.)
Devonport
Sunday Mass: 8:30am Port Sorell (L.W.C.)
9:00am Ulverstone
10:30am Devonport
11:00am Sheffield
(L.W.C.)
5.00pm Latrobe
Eucharistic
Adoration:
Devonport: Every Friday 10am - 12noon,
concluding with Stations of the Cross and Angelus
Devonport: Benediction with Adoration - first Friday of
each month.
Prayer Groups:
Charismatic Renewal - Ulverstone (Community Room) Every
second and fourth Monday of the month 7:30pm
- Devonport (Emmaus House) Thursdays - 7:30pm
- Devonport (Emmaus House) Thursdays - 7:30pm
Christian Meditation: - Devonport, Emmaus House -
Wednesdays 7pm.
Ministry Rosters 31st May & 1st June, 2014
Devonport:
Readers:
Vigil: P Douglas, T Douglas, M
Knight 10.30am:
E
Petts , K
Douglas, K Pearce
Ministers of Communion: Vigil M Doyle, M
Heazlewood, S Innes , M Gerrand, P Shelverton
10.30am: B Peters, P bolster, F Sly, J Carter, E McLagan , B Schrader
Cleaners 30th May: B Bailey, A Harrison, M Greenhill 6th June: M.W.C.
Flowers: M Knight, V Mahoney
Ulverstone:
Reader: E Cox
Ministers of Communion: P Steyn, E
Cox, M Byrne, J Landford
Cleaners: KSC Flowers: C Mapley Hospitality: T Good Team
Penguin:
Greeters: A Landers, P Ravaillion Readers: M & D
Hiscutt
Procession: G Woods, E
Nickols
Ministers of Communion: M Kenney, A Guest Music:
M Bowles
Liturgy: Sulphur Creek J Setting Up: A Landers Care of Church: G Hills-Eade, A Landers
Port Sorell:
Readers: V
Duff, G Duff Ministers of Communion: T Jeffries Clean /Prepare/Flowers: C Howard
Joy Dean, John de Kievet, Brenda Lao, Shanon Breaden, Jamie
Griffiths, Anne Johnson, Lionel Rosevear, Kieran Simpson and ...
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Fr Pat McAnany, Kevin Shelverton,Sr Anne Cooley sjc, Don Burrows, Marie Butterworth, Bob Charlesworth, Maureen
Beechey, Mary Scolyer, David Ronstance, Nell Kelleher, Miing Vizcarra, Laurie McGuire and Denis Beattie.
Let us pray for those whose
anniversary occurs about this time:
Shirley Keenan, Dianne
McMullen, Joseph Mantuano, Ida Penraat, Dalton
Smith, Robert Roberts, Mary Marlow, Graeme
Garland, Bernard Stubbs, Vera Tolson, Mary Hyland, Rita Beach, Johanna Smink and Lois Dudfield.
May they Rest in Peace
48TH WORLD COMMUNICATIONS
DAY -
SUNDAY 25TH MAY
To celebrate the occasion, the Australian Catholic
Bishops Conference Communications Office has created a digital storytelling
project entitled 'Stirring Hearts'. Each story is told using digital media,
embracing our online communication technologies and social media to spread our
good news stories "to the ends of the earth" (Acts 1:8).
Each story is "unique, blessed and oftentimes a
challenging story of life and faith". The twelve digital stories are 5 to
6 minute Youtube videos published on the Stirring Hearts Website: www.stirringhearts.org.au
FROM FR MIKE:
On Monday night I joined with 18 others at Ulverstone to
listen to Sr Margaret Fyfe who shared some of her experiences and thoughts as a
Caritas Australia worker both here and overseas and how poverty affects people
both locally and internationally. She commenced her talk by quoting Archbishop
Helder Camara, the Brazilian Bishop who died in 1999 – ‘How hard it is to move
from charity to the realm of justice’.
Looking at what is happening in Australia both before and post
Budget the comment is worth reflecting on – as a nation and as individuals – so
that we aren’t simply concerned about what we give but rather why we give.
This weekend Fr Augustine heads off on Annual Leave and
will be away until 16th July. This means that there will be some changes about
how often Mass is celebrated in each centre – please check the weekly
newsletter for the Mass times. The Box below gives the two week roster
commencing 31st May/1st June.
Week 1
|
Week 2
|
|||
Penguin
(Vigil)
|
LWC
|
Penguin
(Vigil)
|
Mass
|
|
Devonport
(Vigil)
|
Mass
|
Devonport
(Vigil)
|
LWC
|
|
Port
Sorell
|
LWC
|
Port
Sorell
|
Mass
|
|
Ulverstone
|
Mass
|
Ulverstone
|
LWC
|
|
Devonport
|
LWC
(Special Children’s Mass on 1st June)
|
Devonport
|
Mass
|
|
LWC
|
LWC
|
|||
Latrobe
|
Mass
|
Latrobe
|
Mass
|
Because the arrangements for Confirmation and First
Eucharist were made before the best time for Fr Augustine’s holidays were
arranged there are a number of weeks when there will be a LWC at Sheffield –
greater than would be desired - so arrangements will be made with the community
for a weekday Mass to be celebrated at an appropriate time.
Until next week, take care on the roads and in your homes, Fr
Mike.
WELFARE COLLECTION THIS SUNDAY 25TH MAY, 2014:
The donations collected in the Archdiocesan Welfare
collection primarily go to Centacare Welfare Services with a small portion
going to the Apostleship of the Sea. Centacare Family Services delivers a broad
range of specialised and professional support. Envelopes for your donation can be found on
Church Pews.
KNIGHTS OF THE SOUTHERN CROSS: Meeting this Sunday 25th May, Sacred Heart
Community Room, Ulverstone 6pm for 6:30pm - All parish men are welcome
to attend.
MACKILLOP HILL:
CO-ORDINATION &
MAINTENANCE OF GROUNDS & BUILDINGS - MACKILLOP HILL:
MacKillop Hill is seeking
expressions of interest in this position
as soon as possible. Initially 10 - 12 hrs per week; Salary according to
qualifications and experience. Further
information: Sr Marg ph 6428:3095
or email: rsjforth@bigpond.net.au
SPIRITUALITY IN THE COFFEE SHOPPE: Monday 26th
May 10.30am – 12 noon Come along ..... share your issues and enjoy a lively discussion over morning tea!
MEN & SPIRITUALITY: Thursday 12th June 7:30pm - 9pm All
men welcome!
SACRAMENTAL PROGRAM:
Next Saturday our parish children participating in the program of
preparation for the Sacraments will be spending the day together to learn more
about Eucharist. As a parish we look
forward to celebrating with them their First Eucharist and full initiation into
the Church in a few weeks time.
The children will also be presented with a copy of the
Lord’s Prayer during any Mass or Liturgy next weekend.
CHILDREN’S MASS - 1ST JUNE:
The 10.30am Mass at Our Lady of Lourdes on Sunday 1st
June will be especially ‘child-friendly’ to help our children learn more about
Mass and so they can have a fuller awareness of belonging in our Church
community. All families with young
children are especially invited to the 10.30am Mass for this weekend.
BAPTISM:
Baptismal preparation sessions are now being held at Parish House, Devonport from 7.30 – 8.30 pm on
the first Tuesday of, June, August, October, December, February and April. These sessions are for any families who are
thinking of baptism as well as those who have booked a date or for anyone wanting
to know more about baptism including
those who may be expecting a child.
The next session
is on Tuesday 3rd June - 7:30pm
Please note:
Baptismal Preparation Sessions are now held at
Parish House, 90 Stewart Street , Devonport.
Soup and sandwich dinner after Mass
Saturday
21st June. All welcome. Please contribute by bringing a plate
of sandwiches or a dessert.
125TH ANNIVERSARY OF SACRED HEART SCHOOL ,
ULVERSTONE - 28TH AND 29TH JUNE 2014:
Saturday 28th June - Cocktail Party 7pm - Sacred Heart
School - $25 per head (concession applies) inc welcome drink and canapes. Tickets
to be pre-purchased from the school office.
Sunday 29th June - Mass of Thanksgiving at 9.00am
at Sacred Heart Church
with Archbishop Porteous, followed by presentation by Sr Josephine Brady rsj at
10.30am on the history of the Sisters of St Joseph in the church.
Family BBQ and School Open Day from 12 noon to 3pm at Sacred Heart
School , Buttons Avenue ,
Ulverstone.
We will be launching a fundraiser for the refurbishment of
the school chapel as a joint initiative with this anniversary celebration.
Please rsvp by Friday 13th June to Debbie on 64252680 or shu@catholic.tas.edu.au
OLOL DEVONPORT PIETY SHOP: has a selection of inexpensive
gifts / cards suitable for Confirmation and Holy Communion and other events.
MT ST VINCENT NURSING HOME:
Can you help? Mt St Vincent Nursing Home require volunteers to assist
residents with their meals at lunch time or tea time. This at times mean company for slow
eaters. If you are able to assist or
know anyone who would be interested please phone Yvonne KromKamp on
6425:2166.
SOCIAL JUSTICE ISSUES
“We have been saddened to see part of our
international aid budget diverted to funding for asylum seekers being processed
in our community. These are men and women who richly deserve our support, but
not at the expense of others in desperate need. Any reduction or diversion of
international aid funds remains a concern, particularly where those funds are
directed at addressing many of the problems that cause people to flee their
homelands.”
From the Australian Catholic Bishop’s Social Justice
Statement 2013-2014: Lazarus at our Gate: A critical moment in the fight
against world poverty.
FOOTY MARGIN: Round 9 Sydney won by 50
points Winners: S McBain
BINGO Thursday Nights - OLOL Hall, Devonport.
Eyes down 7.30pm!
Callers for Thursday 29th May are Merv
Tippett & Bruce Peters
EVANGELII GAUDIUM
'When we adopt a pastoral goal and a missionary
style which would actually reach everyone without exception or exclusion, the
message has to concentrate on the essentials, on what is most beautiful, most
grand, most appealing and at the same time most necessary.'
-
Para
35 from Evangelii Gaudium, Pope
Francis, Nov. 24, 2013
Can the sacrament
of Reconciliation be celebrated in some cases with a general confession and
general absolution?
'In
cases of serious necessity (as in imminent danger of death) recourse may be had
to a communal celebration of Reconciliation with general confession and general
absolution, as long as the norms of the Church are observed and there is the
intention of individually confessing one’s grave sins in due time.'
From:
Compendium of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church: Paragraph 311 (Contributed by the Catholic Enquiry Centre www.catholicenquiry.com)
As this week, and month, comes to an end, we join with the
Church in the Broken Bay Diocese in marking the feast of its patron, Mary, Star
of the Sea. Here is some information about this title given to Mary and why it
is so significant for the Church in Australia .
Our Lady, Star of the Sea is an ancient title for the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus Christ. The words Star of
the Sea are a translation of the Latin title Stella Maris. The title was used to emphasize Mary's role as a
sign of hope and as a guiding star for Christians, especially gentiles, whom
the Old Testament Israelites metaphorically referred to as the sea, meaning
anyone beyond the 'coasts', or, that is to say, sociopolitical, and religious
(Mosaic law), borders of Israelite territory. Under this title, the Virgin Mary
is believed to intercede as a guide and protector of those who travel or seek
their livelihoods on the sea.
Social
Justice – Helping spread Catholic social teaching
The Catholic Justice Ecology and Development Office in
Perth (Archdiocese of Perth) takes up the task of justice issues in social
structures from the previous Catholic Social Justice Council, with ecological
and development matters added to its brief. This office offers a Christian
context for issues relating to justice, ecology and development, and helps to
spread Catholic Social Teaching in the local Church and in the wider community.
Words of Wisdom – Gaudium et spes 41
The following quote is taken from one of the documents
arising out of Vatican II.
'The heavenly kingdom is the goal of the earthly society and the
earthly kingdom is a means and condition for attaining the heavenly.'
Meme of the week
If you have ever been
struck by the proliferation of different cooking and eating styles – paleo,
gluten-free, vegan, vegetarian and so on – you might find this meme amusing.
DAG HAMMARSKJOLD ON SEXUALITY AND DESIRE
A Reflection by Fr Ron Rolheiser OMI - the original article can be found at
http://ronrolheiser.com/en/#.U36pfvmSy1c
The lusts of the flesh reveal the loneliness of the soul.
Dag Hammarskjold, the former Secretary-General of the United Nations, wrote those words and they highlight part of the deeper intentionality of sexual desire. And this insight was more than just a theoretical one for Hammarskjold. He knew loneliness and unfulfilled desire.
As more and more of his journals are published in English, we are becoming more aware that Dag Hammarskjold was both a man of extraordinary moral integrity and extraordinary spiritual depth. And he came by it legitimately. His father, at one time the Prime Minister of Sweden, had been a great statesman of uncompromising integrity and his mother had been a woman of great warmth and spiritual depth. Hammarskjold inherited the best of both, and it made him both a rare statesman and a great spiritual writer. However not everything was whole in his life.
While in his professional life he dealt with issues of world importance and was taxed for every ounce of his energies, the rest of his life was not nearly so complete. As a young man, he had lost a woman he deeply loved to another man, and this was a wound that never left him. He never dated or pursued marriage again. He longed to be married, but, for all kinds of reasons, as is the case for millions of people, it just never happened. He was, in the words of his biographer, Walter Lipsey, “checkmated rather than mated.”
Hammarskjold, in his journals, often reflects on this “checkmate” and upon the lacuna it left in his life. There’s a searing honesty about its pain and about how he tries to grapple with it. On the one hand, he is clear that this is a pain that cannot be denied and which never goes away; on the other hand, he is able to redirect it somewhat, sublimating it into a wider embrace, into a different kind of marriage bed.
“I feel pain, a longing to share in this embrace [of a husband and wife], to be absorbed, to share in this encounter. A longing like carnal desire, but directed toward earth, water, sky, and returned by the whispers of the trees, the fragrance of the soil, the caresses of the wind, the embrace of water and light.” Was this satisfying? Not quite, but it brought a certain peace: “Content? No, no, no – but refreshed, rested, while waiting.”
In this, both in how he experienced the pain of his inconsummation and in how he tried to redirect those longings, his feelings parallel those of Thomas Merton. Merton was once asked by a journalist how he felt about celibacy. Merton replied that “celibacy was hell”, that it condemned one to live in a loneliness that God himself condemned (“It is not good for the man to be alone”), and that it was in fact a dangerous way to live since it was an abnormal way of living. But Merton then went on to say that, just because it was anomalous and dangerous, didn’t mean that it couldn’t be wonderfully generative and life-giving, both for the one living it as well as for those around him or her. And that was no doubt true in Merton’s own case, just as it was true for Hammarskjold. Both infused more oxygen into the planet.
Moreover, Merton tried to sublimate his desire for a marriage bed in much the same way as Hammarskjold did: “I had decided to marry the silence of the forest. The sweet dark warmth of the whole world will have to be my wife. Out of the heart of that dark warmth comes the secret that is heard only in silence, but it is the root of all the secrets that are whispered by all the lovers in their beds all over the world.”
Both Hammarskjold and Merton longed for that deep, highly individualized, intimate and sexual, one-to-one embrace which was denied them by their place in life and which is denied to millions of us by every sort of circumstance and conscription. Merton chose to forego sexual consummation deliberately, to embrace religious vows; Hammarskjold had it chosen for him, by circumstance. At the end of the day the effect was the same. Both then tried to sublimate that need and desire for congenital intimacy by, in their own words, somehow marrying the world and making love in a less-particularized way.
Many married persons who enjoy that unique depth of one-to-one intimacy that Hammarskjold and Merton longed for, must, I suspect, inchoately also long to find within their sexual intimacy that wider embrace of which Hammarskjold and Merton speak, knowing that they want that too in their sexual embrace.
Thinkers have forever mulled-over the problem of the one and the many, the interrelationship between the particular and the universal, because this isn’t just a theoretical issue in metaphysics, something to entertain philosophers, it’s also something that lies inextricably entangled within the powerful pressure of sexuality in lovers in their beds all over the world.
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