Parish News & Events
NOVENA TO THE HOLY SPIRIT BEGINS THIS SUNDAY 1st June
You are warmly invited to join once again with every parish in the diocese in the annual Novena to the Holy Spirit – our dedicated period of prayer, reflection and planning for the renewal of the Church in the Archdiocese of Dublin. The Novena will take place in the...
Blessing of the Graves
Sunday 1st June 4pm Kilbarrack Prayers Sunday 8th June 12pm. St Fintan’s Mass Sunday 15th June 3pm. Fingal Prayers Sunday 13th July 3pm. Balgriffin Prayers The 2025 Blessing of Graves ceremonies for Dublin...
DARE TO HOPE
On Saturday, June 14, the Irish Bishops’ Conference, in collaboration with Knock Shrine, will host Dare to Hope – a dynamic and prayerful gathering for young adults aged 18 to 30. The event will take place in the Youth Village at the International Eucharistic and...
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,...
800th Anniversary of the Canonisation of Laurence O’Toole – homily of Archbishop Farrell
(Also available at https://dublindiocese.ie/st-laurence-o-toole-eu-normandy/) “The Lamb … will be their shepherd; he will lead them to springs of living water. and God will wipe away all tears from their eyes. Our faith is gospel, it is good news. “The Lamb will be...
Reflection on Today’s
Gospel Reading
Tuesday, Seventh Week of Easter
We would all like to know what eternal life will be like. We can certainly never answer that question fully. As Saint Paul says, ‘eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor the human heart conceived, what God has prepared for those who love him’. Yet, in today’s gospel reading, Jesus says, ‘And eternal life is this: to know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent’. The knowing Jesus speaks is a knowing of the heart, the knowing that springs from love. Jesus suggests that in eternal life we will be in a relationship of love with God the Father and himself, as a result of which we will truly know God and himself, know them as they are, as love. Again to quote Saint Paul, ‘now we see as in a mirror dimly, but then we will see face to face. Now I know only in part; then I will know fully, even as I have been fully known’. Paul is suggesting that the Lord knows us fully now, in this life, but it is only in eternal life that we will know the Lord fully. We are not without some knowledge of the Lord in this life. ‘We know in part’, as Paul says. Jesus has made himself and God known to us, to some extent. As he says in the gospel reading, addressing God in prayer, ‘I have made your name known to those you took from the world to give me’, namely, his disciples who represent us all. When it comes to Lord, we may see dimly, as Paul says, but we are not in darkness. The Lord has revealed and continues to reveal the light of his presence to us. We are grateful for that light. We are at our best, at our most content, when we allow the light of the Lord’s presence to shine upon us. In eternal life, the light of the Lord’s presence will be at its brightest and we will be at our most responsive to it. In that sense, eternal life is the bringing to completion of the good work that the Lord has been doing among us and within us in this earthly life.
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