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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...

MANRESA RETREATS

Looking to pause and reconnect with God? Manresa Jesuit Centre of Spirituality (Clontarf, Dublin) is offering the following retreats: 8-day Directed Retreat Tuesday-Thursday, 24 June-3 July 2025. A directed retreat offers time for personal prayer, silence, and...

Blessing of the Graves

Sunday     1st June   4pm    Kilbarrack      Prayers Sunday     8th June   12pm.  St Fintan’s    Mass Sunday    15th June   3pm.   Fingal           Prayers Please note the new arrangements for Balgriffin Cemetery agreed with Fingal County Council and informed to the...

PRAYER AND FASTING FOR THE HOLY LAND

The Irish Bishops, meeting in Maynooth on Monday, offered prayers for peace in the Holy Land, for Ukraine, Sudan and in other troubled parts of the world. In particular, bishops discussed the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, stating: “From all over Ireland,...

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

Monday, Fourteenth Week in Ordinary Time

The sense of touch is to the fore in today’s gospel reading. A synagogue official approaches Jesus, bowing low in front of him, and asks him to lay his hands upon his daughter who has just died. He believed that if Jesus touched his daughter, she would be brought from death to life and restored to her family and community. A woman who had suffered with a flow of blood for twelve years came up behind Jesus and touched his cloak. She believed that if she touched Jesus, she would be healed of her living death, and restored to the synagogue community. The faith of both the synagogue official and of the woman excluded from the synagogue because of her condition was vindicated. Jesus brought the official’s daughter from death to life and healed the woman of her isolating condition. The synagogue official allowed Jesus to lay his hands on his daughter and the woman laid her hands upon Jesus and in both situations life triumphed over death. The risen Lord continues to touch our lives in a life-giving way in responses to our pleas for help, as he touched Jairus’ daughter. In the words of today’s first reading, he is ‘the gate of heaven’, the gate through whom the life of heaven enters our world. The Lord who touches our lives also invites us to reach out and touch him, as the woman did in the gospel reading. We touch him when we seek his face in prayer. We touch him when we lovingly touch the broken and isolated of our world. Whenever we reach out to touch the Lord, we will discover that he is already reaching out to touch our lives. In seeking him, we discover, as Zacchaeus did, that he is seeking us with an even greater sense of urgency, ‘I must stay at your house today’.

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