Mass Times

Watch Us Live

Newsletter

Jesuit’s Sacred Space

Parish News & Events

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...

BUILDING HOPE PLANNING RESOURCE

The Building Hope Pastoral Strategic Planning Resource 2025–2027, launched at the recent workshops, is now available at https://dublindiocese.ie/planning-resource/.

St John’s Men’s Social Group

The Men's Social and Music Group meets every Wednesday from 10-30am to 12-30pm in our Parish Centre. After our Summer break, we are starting again from 4 September 2024. The Men's Group is a venue for men to meet, relax, have fun and discuss the issues of the day over...

BUILDING HOPE WITH OPEN HEARTS

Archbishop Farrell’s new Pastoral Letter Building Hope with Open Hearts. This Pastoral Letter can be found at https://dublindiocese.ie/building-hope-with-open-hearts/. It launches across the Archdiocese a significant new phase of the Building Hope pastoral renewal...

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

Saturday, First Week in Ordinary Time

At one point in his first letter to the Corinthians, Paul quotes a standard piece of wisdom, ‘bad company ruins good morals’. There is nothing especially Christian about this insight. It is a wisdom saying that is common to various cultures and traditions. We have a version of it in our own culture, ‘Show me your friends and I will tell you who you are’. In every age and in every culture we find the conviction that the company we keep shapes us. However, the saying, ‘bad company ruins good morals’, certainly did not apply to Jesus. In today’s gospel reading, Jesus keeps what would have been regarded at the time as very bad company, something he did regularly. When he called Levi, a tax collector, to follow him, he immediately went on to share table in Levi’s house, in the company of Levi’s fellow tax collectors and others considered ‘sinners’ by the moral guardians of the day. As a result, the scribes ask Jesus’ disciples, ‘Why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?’ ‘Why does this supposedly man of God keep such bad company? Doesn’t he know that bad company ruins good morals?’ In reality, the opposite happened. Far from sinners dragging Jesus down, his goodness lifted them up, just as a doctor heals the sick rather than being infected by them. We are all sinners, in one way or another, and Jesus came to lift us all up. He came to enhance our lives with his goodness, to make us more loving with his love. He came to enable us to keep setting out afresh, in the strength of his Spirit, the Holy Spirit. In another of his letters Paul says, ‘where sin abounds, grace abounds all the more’. If we open ourselves up to the Lord’s gracious presence, we will be empowered to grow up more fully into his image and likeness.

Neighbouring

Parishes