Mass Times

Watch Us Live

Newsletter

Jesuit’s Sacred Space

Parish News & Events

St Johns Family Mass Team

The St John’s Family Mass team would like to welcome children to participate in our weekly Mass at 6pm on Saturdays during school term. At this Mass, children have the opportunity to read and to bring up gifts. The team is also looking for new members to join the...

MANRESA RETREATS

Looking to pause and reconnect with God? Manresa Jesuit Centre of Spirituality (Clontarf, Dublin) is offering the following retreats: Oasis Days: Saturday, 27 September 2025; Saturday, 18 October 2025. Take time to pause with an Oasis Day – a gentle, one-day retreat...

CROSSCARE COLLECTION, SEPTEMBER 21

This year’s annual collection for Crosscare will take place on Sunday, September 21, in parishes across the Archdiocese. Your generosity directly supports vital Crosscare services that help those most in need at this challenging time for so many in our communities.

SEASON OF CREATION

This year’s Season of Creation has as its theme “Peace with Creation”, inspired by the passage from Isaiah 32:14-18, “My people will abide in a peaceful habitation, in secure dwellings, and in quiet resting places.” In a world of challenges and division, marked by war...

WHY SUNDAY MATTERS

“As we journey together through this Jubilee Year of Hope, we, the Irish Bishops, warmly invite all Catholics to reflect on the profound gift of Sunday Mass. This special year offers a unique opportunity to rediscover the heart of our faith and, for those who have...

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

Thursday, Twenty Fourth Week in Ordinary Time

In many ways today’s gospel describes one of the most striking scenes in all of the gospels. A woman breaks into a meal uninvited at which Jesus is a guest. She weeps unrestrainedly with her tears falling on the feet of Jesus. She then proceeds to wipe her tears away from Jesus’ feet with her hair. She then covers his feet with kisses and anoints them with an alabaster jar of ointment she had brought with her. It was an extravagant outpouring by any standards. To the Pharisee who had invited Jesus to his house, the behaviour of this woman was unseemly, unbecoming, and scandalous, especially as she had a reputation as a sinner. Yet, Jesus understood what lay behind the woman’s extravagant and unconventional behaviour. It was loving gratitude for the gift of God’s merciful love earlier conveyed to her through Jesus. It was love in return for love. She had received the gift of God’s unconditional love from Jesus and, now, she was responding in kind. The Pharisee had not experienced God’s loving forgiveness in the way the woman had and, so, could not understand her gestures. The portrayal of the woman reminds us that we give to the Lord in response to being gifted by the Lord. The experience of receiving the Lord’s unconditional love is the wellspring of a life of loving service of the Lord. Prior to the Lord’s commandment to love one another is the invitation to receive the gift of the Lord’s love. Receiving from the Lord is the inspiration for our giving to him, our loving service of him in and through those who cross our path in life.

Neighbouring

Parishes