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Golden Jubilee: Father Martin Hogan

Father Martin Hogan celebrates 50 years of faithful service as a priest. All are welcome to this special celebration on Wednesday 8th July at 7:30pm in St. Canice's Church Finglas.

New Deacon

I am delighted to announce that the Rev. Declan Barry, deacon has been appointed to minister in the parishes of St. Johns, St. Gabriels and St. Anthonys by Archbishop Farrell. He will bring his considerable ability to bear on his ministry to the parishioners of all...

Feast of St John the Baptist

To mark this occasion Fr John Harris O.P. Prior of the Dominicans will celebrate the 12 noon Mass on Sunday 28th June.

NIGHT FEVER Sunday 28th June at 4pm

On Sunday afternoon 28th June, from 4.00pm—5.00 pm near the feast of St. John the Baptist, June 24th, we will repeat Night Fever. It was very successful last year. A team of people will go out from the church to invite people to come into the church to light a candle...

PETER’S PENCE 27th & 28th June

The Peter’s Pence collection takes place on the weekend of June 27/28. Donating to Peter’s Pence is a concrete gesture of communion with the Holy Father and closeness to his mission of proclaiming the Gospel and bringing hope and love to every part of the world.

Reflection on Today’s

Gospel Reading

Monday, Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time

Once or twice I had a small splinter in my eye. It caused a little bit of pain and it tended to absorb me fully until I could get rid of it. It impacted on my ability to see things clearly and even to do the normal things. A friend was a help to me in locating the splinter and in having it removed. In the gospel reading, Jesus speaks of someone with a plank in their eye trying to take the splinter out of someone else’s eye. Whatever about a splinter, there is no possibility of our ever having a plank in our eye! Jesus often spoke in images that occasionally must have made people smile, as this image must have done. He wasn’t talking about physical splinters or planks. He was referring to people who set out to correct the faults of others, while being completely unaware of their own much more serious faults. It is not just a case of the blind leading the blind but of the totally blind leading the partially blind. We all have our faults and those faults prevent us from seeing others clearly. Jesus is saying that because none of us see others clearly, as clearly as the Lord sees them, we should be slow to try and correct their faults, slow to judge them. Because only the Lord can see into the heart of others, he alone can judge them fairly. The rest of us can only say, ‘Who am I to judge?’ The Lord wants us to focus on our own failings before focusing on the failings of others, but to do so in the awareness that he loves us with our failings. As Pope Francis was fond of saying, ‘I am a loved sinner’. The more aware we are of ourselves as loved sinners, the less likely we are to judge others.

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