Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
To be a vibrant Catholic Community
unified in its commitment
to growing disciples for Christ
Parish Priest: Fr Mike Delaney
Mob: 0417 279 437
Mob: 0417 279 437
Priest in Residence: Fr Phil McCormack
Mob: 0437 521 257
Mob: 0437 521 257
Postal Address: PO Box 362 , Devonport 7310
Parish Office: 90 Stewart Street , Devonport 7310
(Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 10am - 3pm)
Office Phone: 6424 2783 Fax: 6423 5160
Email: merseyleven@aohtas.org.au
Secretary: Annie Davies / Anne Fisher
Pastoral Council Chair: Jenny Garnsey
Parish Mass times for the Month: mlcpmasstimes.blogspot.com.au
Weekly Homily Podcast: mikedelaney.podomatic.com
Our Parish Sacramental Life
Baptism: Parents are asked to contact the Parish Office to make arrangements for attending a Baptismal Preparation Session and booking a Baptism date.
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)
Care and Concern: If you are aware of anyone who is sick or in need of assistance in the Parish please visit them. Then, if they are willing and give permission, could you please pass on their names to the Parish Office. We have a group of parishioners who are part of the Care and Concern Group who are willing and able to provide some backup and support to them. Unfortunately, because of privacy issues, the Parish Office is not able to give out details unless prior permission has been given.
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Archdiocesan Website: www.hobart.catholic.org.au for news, information and details of other Parishes.
Heavenly Father,
We thank you for gathering us together
and calling us to serve as your disciples.
You have charged us through Your Son, Jesus, with the great mission
of evangelising and witnessing your love to the world.
Send your Holy Spirit to guide us as we discern your will
for the spiritual renewal of our parish.
Give us strength, courage, and clear vision
as we use our gifts to serve you.
We entrust our parish family to the care of Mary, our mother,
and ask for her intercession and guidance
as we strive to bear witness
to the Gospel and build an amazing parish.
Amen.
Weekday Masses 28th Nov – 1st Dec, 2017
Tuesday 9.30am Penguin
Wednesday 9.30am Latrobe
1.00pm Ulverstone - Funeral Mass
Thursday 12noon Devonport (St Andrew)
Friday 9.30am Ulverstone
12noon Devonport
Saturday 9.30am Ulverstone
Next Weekend 2nd & 3rd December, 2017
Saturday 6.00pm Penguin & Devonport
Sunday 8.30am Port Sorell
9.00am Ulverstone
10.30am Devonport
11.00am Sheffield
5.00pm Latrobe
Mersey Leven Catholic
Parish
Christmas Mass Times 2017
OUR
LADY OF LOURDES STEWART STREET, DEVONPORT
Christmas Eve 6.00pm Vigil Mass
8.00pm
Vigil Mass
ST PATRICK’S, GILBERT STREET, LATROBE
Christmas Day 9.30am Mass
HOLY
CROSS HIGH, STREET, SHEFFIELD
Christmas Day 9.30am Mass
ST
JOSEPH’S MASS CENTRE, ARTHUR STREET, PORT SORELL
Christmas Day 8.00am
Mass
SACRED
HEART ALEXANDRA ROAD, ULVERSTONE
Christmas Eve 6.00pm Vigil Mass
ST
MARY’S KING EDWARD STREET, PENGUIN
Christmas Eve 8.00pm
Vigil Mass
Ministry Rosters 2nd & 3rd December, 2017
Devonport:
Readers: Vigil: V Riley, A Stegmann, M Stewart
10:30am: J
Phillips, P Piccolo, K Pearce
Ministers of Communion: Vigil:
D Peters, M Heazlewood, T Muir, M Gerrand, P Shelverton
10:30am: F Sly, E Petts, K Hull, S
Arrowsmith, S Samarakkody, R Batepola
Cleaners. 1st Dec: M.W.C. 8th December: P Shelverton, E Petts
Piety Shop 2nd Dec: H Thompson 3rd Dec: O McGinley
Lawns at Parish House: T Davies
Ulverstone:
Reader/s: M & K McKenzie Ministers of Communion: E Reilly, M & K McKenzie, M
O’Halloran
Cleaners: V Ferguson, E Cox Flowers: G Doyle Hospitality: M Byrne, G Doyle
Latrobe:
Reader: P Cotterill Ministers of Communion: M Mackey, H Lim Procession: J Hyde
Penguin:
Greeters: G Hills-Eade, B Eade Commentator: Y Downes Readers: M & D Hiscutt
Ministers of Communion: J Barker, A Guest
Liturgy: Sulphur Creek C Setting Up: F Aichberger Care of Church: Y & R Downes
Port Sorell:
Readers: P Anderson, L Post Minister of Communion: T Jeffries Clean/Flowers/Prepare: A Holloway
Readings this week – Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe
First Reading: Ezekiel 34:11-12, 15-17
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 15:20-26, 28
Gospel: Matthew 25:31-46
PREGO REFLECTION:
I ask the Lord to come close as I still myself for prayer, perhaps focusing gently on my breathing.
I rest here in God’s presence for a little while.
In time, I turn slowly, prayerfully, to Jesus’s description of the Last Judgement.
Perhaps I picture myself before him … the Christ seated in glory as King of the Universe, yet still my caring Shepherd-Lord.
Taking care not to judge myself, I notice what stirs within me.
Whatever comes to mind, I speak to the Lord openly, entrusting all my limitations and weaknesses to his endless compassion and mercy.
Jesus invites into his kingdom all who have responded to those in need.
I ponder, and am perhaps drawn to reflect: Am I aware of all the guises in which Christ comes to me today? …
Or do I sometimes fail to notice his face – or even choose to ignore it?
I ask the Lord for courage to acknowledge his presence in all whom I see and meet this day, and to respond with openness and generosity.
I end my prayer with a slow sign of the cross. Glory be to the Father ...
Readings next week – 1st Sunday of Advent (Year B)
First Reading: Isaiah 63: 16-17, 64:1, 3-8
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 1:3-9
Gospel: Mark 13: 33-37
Rex Bates, Joseph Kiely, Victoria Webb, David Welch & …
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Kieran Hofer, Ken Lowry, Margaret Kenney, Kelvin Green
Let us pray for those whose anniversary occurs about this time: 22nd – 28th November
Joyce Doherty, Bernadette Ibell, Georgina Colliver, Jim Suckling, Molly Coventry, Harry Wilson, Rita Pompili, Gwen Thorp, Muriel Peterson, James Lowry, Stanley Hennessy and all those named in our November Remembrance Book.
May they rest
in peace
DATES FOR YOUR DIARY
3rd Dec: 2-4pm Parish Forum – Ulverstone
7th Dec: Advent Program with Clare Kiely-Hoye: Parish House Devonport 10am – 11:30am
21st Dec: Advent Program with Clare Kiely-Hoye: Parish House Devonport 10am – 11:30am.
Weekly
Ramblings
This
weekend as we gather to celebrate our whole of Parish Mass we also arrive at
the end of another Liturgical Year. Within our society that probably doesn’t
mean that much but for us as a Church community it reminds us that we are once
more being reminded of the coming of the Kingdom of God and, paradoxically,
beginning again as we enter into Advent and our time of preparation for the
birth of our Saviour.
It is now
12 months since Our Parish Vision was presented to the Parish and we have held
one Parish Forum (with a Next Steps gathering to be held next weekend) –
gatherings that help us explore what that Vision means as we move forward. As
I’ve mentioned on various occasions we are on a journey and, because we are a
fallible people, there will be missteps and re-assessments that we will need to
make – but our vision calls us to move forward ‘to be a vibrant Catholic community, unified in its commitment to
growing disciples for Christ’.
Please
continue to pray for the Parish and our needs so that we can be the best Parish
possible, a place where everyone is welcome and we all continue to work to grow
as disciples of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
This
weekend we also farewell (for the 2nd time) Bro Cris as he completes
his short appointment in our Parish. He returns to the Philippines next week
for his visa to be organised so that he can return after his ordination to work
in the Archdiocese. I would like to thank him for his willingness to be part of
everything that has been happening here and for being such a great person to
share the house and our ministry with. May God continue to bless you, Bro Cris,
and keep you safe in your preparation for Ordination on 16th March
2018.
Please take care on the roads and in your homes,
MACKILLOP HILL SPIRITUALITY CENTRE:
Spirituality in the Coffee Shoppe: This Monday 27th November, 10:30am – 12 noon. Last one
for 2017!
See you there! All welcome! Phone: 6428:3095 Email: mackillophill.forth@sosj.org.au
ADVENT 2017:
You are invited to participate
in an Advent Program based on the Scripture Readings of the Season. There will
be two sessions Thursday 7th December, 10am – 11:30am and Thursday 21st December, 10am
– 11:30am at ‘Parish House’, 90 Stewart Street, Devonport. For bookings
contact Clare Kiely-Hoye 6428:2760 or leave a message.
CARE AND CONCERN:
“Siloam” is the name of a group which meets under the
banner of Care and Concern. We focus on aspects of grief and loss often
experienced following the death of a loved one by offering the opportunity
simply to share and talk about where we are at this time.
The next meeting
will be Wednesday 29th November 2.00 pm at MacKillop Hill, 123
William Street, Forth. Anyone
is welcome to join us.
If you require transport please phone Mary Davies 6424 1183
and calling us to serve as your disciples.
as we use our gifts to serve you.
as we strive to bear witness
Amen.
Weekday Masses 28th Nov – 1st Dec, 2017
Tuesday 9.30am Penguin
Wednesday 9.30am Latrobe
1.00pm Ulverstone - Funeral Mass
Thursday 12noon Devonport (St Andrew)
Friday 9.30am Ulverstone
12noon Devonport
Saturday 9.30am Ulverstone
Next Weekend 2nd & 3rd December, 2017
Saturday 6.00pm Penguin & Devonport
Sunday 8.30am Port Sorell
9.00am Ulverstone
10.30am Devonport
11.00am Sheffield
5.00pm Latrobe
Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Christmas Mass Times 2017
Mersey Leven Catholic Parish
Christmas Mass Times 2017
OUR
LADY OF LOURDES STEWART STREET, DEVONPORT
Christmas Eve 6.00pm Vigil Mass
8.00pm
Vigil Mass
ST PATRICK’S, GILBERT STREET, LATROBE
Christmas Day 9.30am Mass
HOLY
CROSS HIGH, STREET, SHEFFIELD
Christmas Day 9.30am Mass
ST
JOSEPH’S MASS CENTRE, ARTHUR STREET, PORT SORELL
Christmas Day 8.00am
Mass
SACRED
HEART ALEXANDRA ROAD, ULVERSTONE
Christmas Eve 6.00pm Vigil Mass
ST
MARY’S KING EDWARD STREET, PENGUIN
Christmas Eve 8.00pm
Vigil Mass
Ministry Rosters 2nd & 3rd December, 2017
Devonport:
Readers: Vigil: V Riley, A Stegmann, M Stewart
10:30am: J Phillips, P Piccolo, K Pearce
10:30am: J Phillips, P Piccolo, K Pearce
Ministers of Communion: Vigil:
D Peters, M Heazlewood, T Muir, M Gerrand, P Shelverton
10:30am: F Sly, E Petts, K Hull, S
Arrowsmith, S Samarakkody, R Batepola
Cleaners. 1st Dec: M.W.C. 8th December: P Shelverton, E Petts
Piety Shop 2nd Dec: H Thompson 3rd Dec: O McGinley
Lawns at Parish House: T Davies
Lawns at Parish House: T Davies
Ulverstone:
Reader/s: M & K McKenzie Ministers of Communion: E Reilly, M & K McKenzie, M
O’Halloran
Cleaners: V Ferguson, E Cox Flowers: G Doyle Hospitality: M Byrne, G Doyle
Latrobe:
Reader: P Cotterill Ministers of Communion: M Mackey, H Lim Procession: J Hyde
Penguin:
Greeters: G Hills-Eade, B Eade Commentator: Y Downes Readers: M & D Hiscutt
Ministers of Communion: J Barker, A Guest
Liturgy: Sulphur Creek C Setting Up: F Aichberger Care of Church: Y & R Downes
Port Sorell:
Readers: P Anderson, L Post Minister of Communion: T Jeffries Clean/Flowers/Prepare: A Holloway
Readings this week – Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe
First Reading: Ezekiel 34:11-12, 15-17
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 15:20-26, 28
Gospel: Matthew 25:31-46
PREGO REFLECTION:
I ask the Lord to come close as I still myself for prayer, perhaps focusing gently on my breathing.
I rest here in God’s presence for a little while.
In time, I turn slowly, prayerfully, to Jesus’s description of the Last Judgement.
Perhaps I picture myself before him … the Christ seated in glory as King of the Universe, yet still my caring Shepherd-Lord.
Taking care not to judge myself, I notice what stirs within me.
Whatever comes to mind, I speak to the Lord openly, entrusting all my limitations and weaknesses to his endless compassion and mercy.
Jesus invites into his kingdom all who have responded to those in need.
I ponder, and am perhaps drawn to reflect: Am I aware of all the guises in which Christ comes to me today? …
Or do I sometimes fail to notice his face – or even choose to ignore it?
I ask the Lord for courage to acknowledge his presence in all whom I see and meet this day, and to respond with openness and generosity.
I end my prayer with a slow sign of the cross. Glory be to the Father ...
Readings next week – 1st Sunday of Advent (Year B)
First Reading: Isaiah 63: 16-17, 64:1, 3-8
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 1:3-9
Gospel: Mark 13: 33-37
Rex Bates, Joseph Kiely, Victoria Webb, David Welch & …
Let us pray for those who have died recently:
Kieran Hofer, Ken Lowry, Margaret Kenney, Kelvin Green
Let us pray for those whose anniversary occurs about this time: 22nd – 28th November
Joyce Doherty, Bernadette Ibell, Georgina Colliver, Jim Suckling, Molly Coventry, Harry Wilson, Rita Pompili, Gwen Thorp, Muriel Peterson, James Lowry, Stanley Hennessy and all those named in our November Remembrance Book.
May they rest
in peace
DATES FOR YOUR DIARY
3rd Dec: 2-4pm Parish Forum – Ulverstone
7th Dec: Advent Program with Clare Kiely-Hoye: Parish House Devonport 10am – 11:30am
21st Dec: Advent Program with Clare Kiely-Hoye: Parish House Devonport 10am – 11:30am.
Weekly
Ramblings
This
weekend as we gather to celebrate our whole of Parish Mass we also arrive at
the end of another Liturgical Year. Within our society that probably doesn’t
mean that much but for us as a Church community it reminds us that we are once
more being reminded of the coming of the Kingdom of God and, paradoxically,
beginning again as we enter into Advent and our time of preparation for the
birth of our Saviour.
It is now
12 months since Our Parish Vision was presented to the Parish and we have held
one Parish Forum (with a Next Steps gathering to be held next weekend) –
gatherings that help us explore what that Vision means as we move forward. As
I’ve mentioned on various occasions we are on a journey and, because we are a
fallible people, there will be missteps and re-assessments that we will need to
make – but our vision calls us to move forward ‘to be a vibrant Catholic community, unified in its commitment to
growing disciples for Christ’.
Please
continue to pray for the Parish and our needs so that we can be the best Parish
possible, a place where everyone is welcome and we all continue to work to grow
as disciples of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
This
weekend we also farewell (for the 2nd time) Bro Cris as he completes
his short appointment in our Parish. He returns to the Philippines next week
for his visa to be organised so that he can return after his ordination to work
in the Archdiocese. I would like to thank him for his willingness to be part of
everything that has been happening here and for being such a great person to
share the house and our ministry with. May God continue to bless you, Bro Cris,
and keep you safe in your preparation for Ordination on 16th March
2018.
Please take care on the roads and in your homes,
MACKILLOP HILL SPIRITUALITY CENTRE:
Spirituality in the Coffee Shoppe: This Monday 27th November, 10:30am – 12 noon. Last one
for 2017!
See you there! All welcome! Phone: 6428:3095 Email: mackillophill.forth@sosj.org.au
ADVENT 2017:
You are invited to participate
in an Advent Program based on the Scripture Readings of the Season. There will
be two sessions Thursday 7th December, 10am – 11:30am and Thursday 21st December, 10am
– 11:30am at ‘Parish House’, 90 Stewart Street, Devonport. For bookings
contact Clare Kiely-Hoye 6428:2760 or leave a message.
CARE AND CONCERN:
“Siloam” is the name of a group which meets under the
banner of Care and Concern. We focus on aspects of grief and loss often
experienced following the death of a loved one by offering the opportunity
simply to share and talk about where we are at this time.
The next meeting
will be Wednesday 29th November 2.00 pm at MacKillop Hill, 123
William Street, Forth. Anyone
is welcome to join us.
If you require transport please phone Mary Davies 6424 1183
You are invited to a Christmas Party afternoon tea on
Wednesday, December 6th, 2017 at 1.45 PM
Sacred Heart Church
Community Room, Alexandra Road, Ulv.
RSVP yes or no, by 4th
December latest, to
Juliet Smith 64255854
Debbie Rimmelzwaan 64251384
Elizabeth Cox 0400179297
NEWS FROM ACROSS THE ARCHDIOCESE:
THE JOURNEY CATHOLIC RADIO PROGRAM – AIRS 3 December 2017 - This week on the Journey, the first
Sunday of Advent, Fr Richard Healy reflects on the Gospel of Matthew and
encourages us to be alert and on guard! Walking the Walk, with Sam Clear talks
about Facing the Darkness, Sr Hilda shares her Wisdom from The Abbey, and
reminds us to Call Him God (repeat), and Fr Dave Callaghan in his God spot, The
Call encourages with his words of My Sheep, Listen To My Voice (repeat). Our
music this week is at the top of our game, put it all together and you have an
inspiring show about faith, hope, love and life. Go to www.jcr.org.au or www.itunes.jcr.org.au where you can
listen anytime and subscribe to weekly shows by email.
Grief to
Grace – Healing the Wounds of Abuse – is a
spiritual retreat for anyone who has suffered degradation or violation through
physical, emotional, sexual or spiritual abuse. The retreat will be held April
8th – 13th 2018. To request an application contact Anne by emailing info@grieftograceaus.org.au or
phone 0407704539. For more information visit www.grieftograce.org
Thursday Nights - OLOL
Hall, Devonport. Eyes down 7.30pm!
Callers for Thursday 30th
November – Rod Clark & Merv Tippett.
Prayer of the Heart
Taken from the daily email by Fr Richard Rohr OFM. You can subscribe and receive the email each day by clicking here
Read Thomas Merton’s own description of meditation or
contemplative prayer:
In the “prayer of the heart” we seek first of all the
deepest ground of our identity in God. We do not reason about dogmas of faith,
or “the mysteries.” We seek rather to gain a direct existential grasp, a
personal experience of the deepest truths of life and faith, finding ourselves
in God's truth. Inner certainty depends on purification. The dark night
rectifies our deepest intentions. In the silence of this “night of faith” we
return to simplicity and sincerity of heart. We learn recollection, which
consists in listening for God's will, in direct and simple attention to
reality. Recollection is awareness of the unconditional. Prayer then means
yearning for the simple presence of God, for a personal understanding of his
word, for knowledge of his will and for capacity to hear and obey him. It is
thus something much more than uttering petitions for good things external to
our own deepest concerns.
. . . Consequently: first of all our meditation should begin
with the realization of our nothingness and helplessness in the presence of
God. This need not be a mournful or discouraging experience. On the contrary,
it can be deeply tranquil and joyful since it brings us in direct contact with
the source of all joy and all life. But one reason why our meditation never
gets started is perhaps that we never make this real, serious return to the
center of our own nothingness before God. Hence we never enter into the deepest
reality of our relationship with him.
In other words we meditate merely “in the mind,” in the
imagination, or at best in the desires, considering religious truths from a
detached objective viewpoint. We do not begin by seeking to “find our heart,”
that is to sink into a deep awareness of the ground of our identity before God
and in God. “Finding our heart” and recovering this awareness of our inmost
identity implies the recognition that our external, everyday self is to a great
extent a mask and a fabrication. It is not our true self. And indeed our true
self is not easy to find. It is hidden in obscurity and “nothingness,” at the
center where we are in direct dependence on God. [1]
As you meditate in silence, allow yourself to become empty
and naked before God’s loving gaze. In your nothingness, at the center of your
heart, God can mirror back to you your True Self, one with God’s own heart.
Reference:
[1] Thomas Merton, Contemplative Prayer (Image Books: 1996,
©1969), 45, 48-49. Emphasis in original.
Sacred Heart Church
Community Room, Alexandra Road, Ulv.
RSVP yes or no, by 4th
December latest, to
Juliet Smith 64255854
Debbie Rimmelzwaan 64251384
Elizabeth Cox 0400179297
NEWS FROM ACROSS THE ARCHDIOCESE:
THE JOURNEY CATHOLIC RADIO PROGRAM – AIRS 3 December 2017 - This week on the Journey, the first
Sunday of Advent, Fr Richard Healy reflects on the Gospel of Matthew and
encourages us to be alert and on guard! Walking the Walk, with Sam Clear talks
about Facing the Darkness, Sr Hilda shares her Wisdom from The Abbey, and
reminds us to Call Him God (repeat), and Fr Dave Callaghan in his God spot, The
Call encourages with his words of My Sheep, Listen To My Voice (repeat). Our
music this week is at the top of our game, put it all together and you have an
inspiring show about faith, hope, love and life. Go to www.jcr.org.au or www.itunes.jcr.org.au where you can
listen anytime and subscribe to weekly shows by email.
Grief to
Grace – Healing the Wounds of Abuse – is a
spiritual retreat for anyone who has suffered degradation or violation through
physical, emotional, sexual or spiritual abuse. The retreat will be held April
8th – 13th 2018. To request an application contact Anne by emailing info@grieftograceaus.org.au or
phone 0407704539. For more information visit www.grieftograce.org
Thursday Nights - OLOL
Hall, Devonport. Eyes down 7.30pm!
Callers for Thursday 30th
November – Rod Clark & Merv Tippett.
Prayer of the Heart
Taken from the daily email by Fr Richard Rohr OFM. You can subscribe and receive the email each day by clicking here
Read Thomas Merton’s own description of meditation or
contemplative prayer:
In the “prayer of the heart” we seek first of all the
deepest ground of our identity in God. We do not reason about dogmas of faith,
or “the mysteries.” We seek rather to gain a direct existential grasp, a
personal experience of the deepest truths of life and faith, finding ourselves
in God's truth. Inner certainty depends on purification. The dark night
rectifies our deepest intentions. In the silence of this “night of faith” we
return to simplicity and sincerity of heart. We learn recollection, which
consists in listening for God's will, in direct and simple attention to
reality. Recollection is awareness of the unconditional. Prayer then means
yearning for the simple presence of God, for a personal understanding of his
word, for knowledge of his will and for capacity to hear and obey him. It is
thus something much more than uttering petitions for good things external to
our own deepest concerns.
. . . Consequently: first of all our meditation should begin
with the realization of our nothingness and helplessness in the presence of
God. This need not be a mournful or discouraging experience. On the contrary,
it can be deeply tranquil and joyful since it brings us in direct contact with
the source of all joy and all life. But one reason why our meditation never
gets started is perhaps that we never make this real, serious return to the
center of our own nothingness before God. Hence we never enter into the deepest
reality of our relationship with him.
In other words we meditate merely “in the mind,” in the
imagination, or at best in the desires, considering religious truths from a
detached objective viewpoint. We do not begin by seeking to “find our heart,”
that is to sink into a deep awareness of the ground of our identity before God
and in God. “Finding our heart” and recovering this awareness of our inmost
identity implies the recognition that our external, everyday self is to a great
extent a mask and a fabrication. It is not our true self. And indeed our true
self is not easy to find. It is hidden in obscurity and “nothingness,” at the
center where we are in direct dependence on God. [1]
As you meditate in silence, allow yourself to become empty
and naked before God’s loving gaze. In your nothingness, at the center of your
heart, God can mirror back to you your True Self, one with God’s own heart.
Reference:
[1] Thomas Merton, Contemplative Prayer (Image Books: 1996,
©1969), 45, 48-49. Emphasis in original.
GOD’S CLOSENESS
This is an article taken from the archive of Fr Ron Rolheiser OMI. You can find the original article here
There’s a growing body of literature today that chronicles the experience of persons who were clinically dead for a period of time (minutes or hours) and were medically resuscitated and brought back to life. Many of us, for example, are familiar with Dr. Eben Alexander’s book, Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife. More recently Hollywood produced a movie, Miracles from Heaven, which portrays the true story of a young Texas girl who was clinically dead, medically revived, and who shares what she experienced in the afterlife.
There are now hundreds of stories like this, gathered through dozens of years, published or simply shared with loved ones. What’s interesting (and consoling) is that virtually all these stories are wonderfully positive, irrespective of the person’s faith or religious background. In virtually every case their experience, while partially indescribable, was one in which they felt a warm, personal, overwhelming sense of love, light, and welcome, and not a few of them found themselves meeting relatives of theirs that had passed on before them, sometimes even relatives that they didn’t know they had. As well, in virtually every case, they did not want to return to life here but, like Peter on the Mountain of the Transfiguration, wanted to stay there.
Recently while speaking at conference, I referenced this literature and pointed out that, among other things, it seems everyone goes to heaven when they die. This, of course, immediately sparked a spirited discussion: “What about hell? Aren’t we judged when we die? Doesn’t anyone go to hell?” My answer to those questions, which need far more nuance than are contained in a short soundbite, was that while we all go to heaven when we die, depending upon our moral and spiritual disposition, we might not want to stay there. Hell, as Jesus assures us, is a real option; though, as Jesus also assures us, we judge ourselves. God puts no one to hell. Hell is our choice.
However it was what happened after this discussion that I want to share here: A woman approached me as I was leaving and told me that she had had this exact experience. She had been clinically dead for some minutes and then revived through medical resuscitation. And, just like the experience of all the others in the literature around this issue, she too experienced a wonderful warmth, light, and welcome, and did not want to return to life here on earth. Inside of all of this warmth and love however what she remembers most and most wants to share with others is this: I learned that God is very close. We have no idea how close God is to us. God is closer to us than we ever imagine! Her experience has left her forever branded with a sense of God’s warmth, love, and welcome, but what’s left the deepest brand of all inside her is the sense of God’s closeness.
I was struck by this because, like millions of others, I generally don’t feel that closeness, or at least don’t feel it very affectively or imaginatively. God can seem pretty far away, abstract and impersonal, a Deity with millions of things to worry about without having to worry about the minutiae of my small life.
Moreover, as Christians, we believe that God is infinite and ineffable. This means that while we can know God, we can never imagine God. Given that truth, it makes it even harder for us to imagine that the infinite Creator and Sustainer of all things is intimately and personally present inside us, worrying with, sharing our heartaches, and knowing our most guarded feelings.
Compounding this is the fact that whenever we do try to imagine God’s person our imaginations come up against the unimaginable. For example, try to imagine this: There are billions of persons on this earth and billions more have lived on this earth before us. At this very minute, thousands of people are being born, thousands are dying, thousands are sinning, thousands are doing virtuous acts, thousands are making love, thousands are experiencing violence, thousands are feeling their hearts swelling with joy, all of this part of trillions upon trillions of phenomena. How can one heart, one mind, one person be consciously on top of all of this and so fully aware and empathetic that no hair falls from our heads or sparrow from the sky without this person taking notice? It’s impossible to imagine, pure and simple, and that’s part of the very definition of God.
How can God be as close to us as we are to ourselves? Partly this is mystery, and wisdom bids us befriend mystery because anything we can understand is not very deep! The mystery of God’s intimate, personal presence inside us is beyond our imaginations. But everything within our faith tradition and now most everything in the testimony of hundreds of people who have experienced the afterlife assure us that, while God may be infinite and ineffable, God is very close to us, closer than we imagine.
This is an article taken from the archive of Fr Ron Rolheiser OMI. You can find the original article here
There’s a growing body of literature today that chronicles the experience of persons who were clinically dead for a period of time (minutes or hours) and were medically resuscitated and brought back to life. Many of us, for example, are familiar with Dr. Eben Alexander’s book, Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife. More recently Hollywood produced a movie, Miracles from Heaven, which portrays the true story of a young Texas girl who was clinically dead, medically revived, and who shares what she experienced in the afterlife.
There are now hundreds of stories like this, gathered through dozens of years, published or simply shared with loved ones. What’s interesting (and consoling) is that virtually all these stories are wonderfully positive, irrespective of the person’s faith or religious background. In virtually every case their experience, while partially indescribable, was one in which they felt a warm, personal, overwhelming sense of love, light, and welcome, and not a few of them found themselves meeting relatives of theirs that had passed on before them, sometimes even relatives that they didn’t know they had. As well, in virtually every case, they did not want to return to life here but, like Peter on the Mountain of the Transfiguration, wanted to stay there.
Recently while speaking at conference, I referenced this literature and pointed out that, among other things, it seems everyone goes to heaven when they die. This, of course, immediately sparked a spirited discussion: “What about hell? Aren’t we judged when we die? Doesn’t anyone go to hell?” My answer to those questions, which need far more nuance than are contained in a short soundbite, was that while we all go to heaven when we die, depending upon our moral and spiritual disposition, we might not want to stay there. Hell, as Jesus assures us, is a real option; though, as Jesus also assures us, we judge ourselves. God puts no one to hell. Hell is our choice.
However it was what happened after this discussion that I want to share here: A woman approached me as I was leaving and told me that she had had this exact experience. She had been clinically dead for some minutes and then revived through medical resuscitation. And, just like the experience of all the others in the literature around this issue, she too experienced a wonderful warmth, light, and welcome, and did not want to return to life here on earth. Inside of all of this warmth and love however what she remembers most and most wants to share with others is this: I learned that God is very close. We have no idea how close God is to us. God is closer to us than we ever imagine! Her experience has left her forever branded with a sense of God’s warmth, love, and welcome, but what’s left the deepest brand of all inside her is the sense of God’s closeness.
I was struck by this because, like millions of others, I generally don’t feel that closeness, or at least don’t feel it very affectively or imaginatively. God can seem pretty far away, abstract and impersonal, a Deity with millions of things to worry about without having to worry about the minutiae of my small life.
Moreover, as Christians, we believe that God is infinite and ineffable. This means that while we can know God, we can never imagine God. Given that truth, it makes it even harder for us to imagine that the infinite Creator and Sustainer of all things is intimately and personally present inside us, worrying with, sharing our heartaches, and knowing our most guarded feelings.
Compounding this is the fact that whenever we do try to imagine God’s person our imaginations come up against the unimaginable. For example, try to imagine this: There are billions of persons on this earth and billions more have lived on this earth before us. At this very minute, thousands of people are being born, thousands are dying, thousands are sinning, thousands are doing virtuous acts, thousands are making love, thousands are experiencing violence, thousands are feeling their hearts swelling with joy, all of this part of trillions upon trillions of phenomena. How can one heart, one mind, one person be consciously on top of all of this and so fully aware and empathetic that no hair falls from our heads or sparrow from the sky without this person taking notice? It’s impossible to imagine, pure and simple, and that’s part of the very definition of God.
How can God be as close to us as we are to ourselves? Partly this is mystery, and wisdom bids us befriend mystery because anything we can understand is not very deep! The mystery of God’s intimate, personal presence inside us is beyond our imaginations. But everything within our faith tradition and now most everything in the testimony of hundreds of people who have experienced the afterlife assure us that, while God may be infinite and ineffable, God is very close to us, closer than we imagine.
IT’S A DELIGHTFUL TIME OF THE YEAR
But meanwhile the entire culture around us is awash in Christmas and we ignore that fact at the risk of once again seeming irrelevant in people’s lives.
Advent is not Christmas. And to celebrate Christmas properly we need a proper Advent. Advent is not Christmas, but neither is Advent Lent. It holds a two-fold character as a time of preparation for Christmas and a time of anticipation for Christ’s second coming, both events worth celebrating. Accordingly, The Roman Missal notes it is a period of “expectant delight.”
Join us this Advent as we delight in the season.
But meanwhile the entire culture around us is awash in Christmas and we ignore that fact at the risk of once again seeming irrelevant in people’s lives.
Advent is not Christmas. And to celebrate Christmas properly we need a proper Advent. Advent is not Christmas, but neither is Advent Lent. It holds a two-fold character as a time of preparation for Christmas and a time of anticipation for Christ’s second coming, both events worth celebrating. Accordingly, The Roman Missal notes it is a period of “expectant delight.”
Join us this Advent as we delight in the season.
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