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Deacon John Writes

Deacon John Writes:

This Sunday is World Communications Day and the scriptures remind us of the power of prayer.  Prayer is world communications day in action.  It is the conversation we have with God.

The first reading, from the Acts of the Apostles, shows us the importance of prayer in our lives – to sustain and to comfort us through the current difficult period.

The gospel contains the opening section of Christ’s great prayer before he begins his passion and death.  It has been called the “high priestly prayer” of Jesus. .

When the disciples were uncertain about the future after Jesus’ Ascension into heaven they turned to the one thing they knew that could help them – prayer.  Their prayer would not be answered at once – it was nine days before Pentecost arrived and the Holy Spirit would fulfil what Christ had promised.  They persevered and did not stop praying — praying for guidance, for wisdom, for “hope unseen.” The disciples didn’t give up. Neither should we!

The psalm today offers us all the gift of hope. “The Lord is my light and my help; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; before whom shall I shrink?”

The scriptures cry out to us: trust and pray.  Trust in God’s generosity and mercy.  Trust in His plan for our lives. In the midst of our darkness, pray for light.

The important word is pray. The disciples did just this in the community when they turned to others for help and support. So should we. We are the Body of Christ, and that means we are, together, not only his hands and his feet – we are also his voice — to one another, and to the world.  Trust in Him and no matter how deep the darkness, the light we are all looking for will come.

Wait for it………Watch for it………Pray for it.

The disciples in the upper room did and look what they achieved!

Lepra

We have the opportunity to receive a £1000 donation from the Ecclesiastical Movement for Good awards, but to do so we need your help please!

As you know, £1,000 could make a huge difference to our work, especially now, and your nomination could be the one that wins us £1,000. In total, 500 charities stand to gain £1,000 and we’d love to be one of them.

It’s quick and easy to nominate Lepra – just visit https://www.movementforgood.com/#nominateACharity and enter our details. You’ll be asked to enter a charity number (213251), and then Lepra should auto populate below. Lepra’s charity type is Health. Then you just need to enter your name and email address. The closing date for nominations is 24th May.

Job Vacancy

“God doesn’t call the qualified. He qualifies the called”

2 Corinthians 3 v5

Position Vacant: Administrator / PA. Initially 20 hours. With 20 days annual leave + Bank holidays (pro rata) £10ph (dependent on skills / experience)

Computers for Charities is seeking an Administrator / PA. Duties include assisting day to day running of the Charity & support to Chairman.

Location: Eastbourne. This position offers wide opportunities to aid personal and professional development, whilst also challenging and diverse.

Skills required: Good People & Communication skills, Organisational ability, Compassion & Empathy including aptitude for initiative. UK driving licence essential, Committed Christian with valid passport desirable,

Computers for Charities, Recycling for Charities, Recycling for Charities Trading Ltd are interconnected. Whereas computers are a part of the charities work.

People constitute the focus of the charities support and ethos within its Eastbourne workshop, Locally, Nationally, Worldwide seeking to provide an open door between church and World through varying means.

Our organisations are Christian based, and keen to seek the most suitable candidate for this most crucial position.

Closing date for applications: Friday 19th June.

For further information.

Please call. Simon Rooksby – Chairman

Tel: 01323 848588 or email: [email protected]

Website: www.computersforcharities.org

Previous applicants are welcome to apply

Joke of the Week

Joke of the Week

Lord Birkett, the English judge, said “I do not object to people looking at their watches when I am speaking.  But I strongly object when they start shaking them to make certain they are still going.

Fr Rory Writes

Fr Rory Writes:

Once again from the Standbrook Abbey Hymnal, a line stands out that expresses

“The seed of Glory sown in man, will flower when we see your face”

After the early events following the crucifixion, the disciples were at a great loss.  An awareness that He has Risen from the dead begins to spread, that He has gone before them into Galilee; and that it is from there that He will ascend into heaven.  The situation is very difficult, and the forces that had Him crucified have not gone away.  The words we read from the scriptures, in the divine office and our daily mass, highlight the issues; “He calls us out of darkness into His true light”.

Our present circumstances highlighted by the closed churches, the great importance of the need to isolate and establish social distancing, in a strange way helps to draw us together.  This was admirable, expressed in the Queen’s address to the nation, as a most important part of the celebration of “Victory in Europe Day”.  Her words were memorable and will inspire for a long time to come.  She captured what is best in the human spirit and that those who died, all that long time ago, would echo the sentiment that give value to their sacrifice the loss of so much life in the war.

Please God, a greater focus upon the family, and the local community may be one of the great fruits of this very difficult time.  Times of trial capture what is best in the human spirit and may become a great blessing.  For our parishes, when we are left to choose between partaking on screen or being present at our parish mass, may help us to establish the commitment to be involved and to truly belong within our parish community.  At the same time there are always two sides to a coin.  The options that will be available because of the advance in technology could benefit and enhance our world.  It may reduce some of the necessity to travel and thereby help with global warming and allow different choices within the world of work.

In the meantime, because we have our website this can become a way of beginning.  We are very blessed with Jackie and Sophie, because of their willingness to do their best.  We can improve that best, though I accept it is not easy.  I have to admit to a lot of limitations, but I do hold a great belief, that a body of many parts working together, is best.  As we acknowledge the age profile of the clergy, there is a great need for a new generation, in the life of the church.

Several persons (though not a large number) have offered to help communicate with those who are isolated.  It highlighted for me the number of persons immediately known to me, whom I should be ringing in order to keep in touch.  As time goes on it becomes more difficult, so it would be very helpful if we could establish a couple more core groups to support this, which would be a great blessing.

We have some very sad losses of lives, and because the bereaved could not be properly supported, it is a very painful time.  At the beginning of my priesthood the sacrament of extreme unction at the time of death was greatly important.  It remains so for the elderly generation, and I particularly call to mind, Evelyn South, Margaret Malone, Douglas Booth and pray that their loss and affliction will be turned into great joy in heaven.

Next Thursday is the Feast of the Ascension, and next Sunday would have been the celebration of First Holy Communion at St Wilfrid’s.  We have a very good group, so I commend them to you for lots of prayers.  Currently, because I am over seventy, and being without my car, is a great loss to my priestly ministry. 

Over the next couple of weeks, we will celebrate the joyous events at the heart of our faith – the Ascension of Christ into heaven and the descent of the Holy Spirit to the Apostles, and so will be a source of great graces and blessings that will shine out in this time of great trial.

Deacon John Writes

Deacon John Writes:

From Easter to Pentecost the readings all concentrate on the preaching of the Good News of salvation and on the promises Jesus made to his disciples, culminating with the promise that all would receive the Holy Spirit. This Sunday we hear about the Holy Spirit and how we can experience Him in our daily lives. 

The reading from the Acts of the Apostles begins by describing how the Deacon, Philip, in Samaria, converted many of the Samaritans to Christianity and then how Peter and John were sent to follow this up through prayer and laying on of hands to bring the Holy Spirit to them.

The reading from the first letter of Peter reassures us that life is possible when we suffer in any way so long as we continue to live our Christian lives of love in the midst of any kind of suffering, be it from a virus or any other difficult situation. The Gospel contains Jesus’ promise to his disciples of the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit, and is part of the long “Farewell Discourse” near the end of John’s Gospel. The Gospel tells us quite specifically that, providing we live as Jesus commands, the Holy Spirit will accompany us in all that we do in the name of Jesus – our faith will be nurtured, we will see Jesus in the poor, the sick and in all those in need, so enabling us to be healers of discord in our world. We are assured that we will never have to face any trial alone—even death—if we walk with Jesus.  There is a sentence in the second Eucharistic Prayer when the priest holds his hands over the offerings and says: “Make holy, therefore, these gifts, we pray, by sending down your Spirit upon them like the dewfall, so that they may become for us the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ.” It has only been during the lockdown that Tessa & I have actually noticed the word ‘dewfall’ at this point while listening to Mass! 

Next Thursday is Ascension Day, the day on which Jesus was taken up to heaven. We can perhaps imagine him flying up from the land and vanishing into cloud in front of our eyes. Jesus invites all of us to prepare ourselves for a similar flight. Set our eyes towards heaven. Keep our hearts open to receive the Holy Spirit to help us achieve that goal. Surely that is what He is inviting, encouraging, helping us to do.

Fr Rory Writes

I have just read an extract from Pope Francis work, Evangelium Gaudium: – ‘The joy of the Gospels’.  It says, “Realities are more important than ideas”.  It certainly confronts me as I unfold my journey of faith, or lack of faith.

As we return, to a post coronavirus world, it will be changed in many ways. Social media will remain a large part of life, travel, especially by aircraft will take a long time to recover.  Family and hopefully community-based lifestyle may be enhanced.

For us as a church, I believe we will have an incredibly challenging time.  From experiencing screening, you may have found a site that suits, and sustains your faith.  For centuries, the mass was in Latin, pews the normal furnishing, and the spiritual experience a priority.  America which has a higher percentage of practice in recent times, experienced people doing a lot of “shopping around” for the church that best suited them.

The Second Vatican Council was a hugely important occasion in the life of the church, a privileged and blessed time.  The prospects for the future, but now a full sense of sadness in contrast with the promise that it offered.  I was very aware of the situation when in Ireland; and could foresee the great challenge and difficulties that the churches would have with mass attendance.  I believe that this was especially true for the seminaries and in the present time most are closed. 

Now as we focus upon the present moments in the life of the church – the Feast of the Ascension, and please God, we may have great preparation for Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit greatly empowered the early church.

The foundation of our faith is so important.  Returning to its source for me; the home and family I grew up in.  As mentioned before my Sister Mary’s book “A Mother’s Love” catches many moments of the crosses and trials but also the great moments of grace and here is one extract from her book.

My guardian angel’s description of love, placed upon my heart, reads:

God’s love is without end.  Love is bountiful, forgiving, enduring.  It is never self-seeking, but reaches out its tender shoots to embrace all on their spiritual journey.  Love seeks to lighten the load of others.  Love knows that all are brothers and sisters in Christ.  Love knows that all can be forgiven.  It bears no grudges, but is unconditional.  Speak of this God of Love.  He seeks to be part of each pilgrim’s life on this earthly journey.  God’s love heals and supports, nourishes, and suffuses the spirit.

There are also testaments from persons experiencing the dark side of life, and the accounts of their experiences of evil, deserve our attention and the sure response that we make.  This is working for God, belief in the one He has sent, Jesus.  Through the coming days and weeks all our attention must be with the first disciples as we will listen to their story……..

Deacon John Writes

Deacon John Writes:

In the Gospel for this Sunday Jesus makes it clear that He is God, when He says “To have seen me is to have seen the Father” and then “whoever believes in me will perform the same works as I do myself.” God became man, one of us to show us a real person leading a life of caring for others, a life of healing, forgiving, a life of love.

We are called not just to be followers of Christ but to be Christ to the world around us. It is through our being Christ that He may live and act in the world today and every day. That is easy to say but from where do we get the strength to be Christ to the world? The answer to this surely lies in the Sacraments, especially from receiving the Eucharist. When we receive the Body and Blood of Christ, Christ is in us, giving us the power to be like Him.

One of the key actions we can take is to Listen. In the Gospel Jesus first listens to the disciples, listens to Thomas, listens to Philip and then comforts them, eases their fears, teaches them. We can do the same: listen to what people are saying to us by giving them our time and undivided attention. 

Secondly, we hear time and again how Christ healed the people he came in contact with. We all have the power to heal, not physically perhaps, but through our words, gestures and actions such as showing acts of kindness. It is by doing these things that we show that we care and allow Jesus to live his life through us.

One of the key signs Jesus made was that of forgiveness not just in words but in actions too. We should always be asking ourselves some questions such as: How forgiving am I? Do I pray daily for the grace to forgive others? Do I show this forgiveness through what I do – a phone call, (a handshake or a hug in normal circumstances). 

When we come forward to receive Christ’s Body and Blood and confirm that with our “Amen” we should all remember that what we are really saying is “Lord, live in me today so that I may give life, heal and forgive as you did.” Remember there is nothing casual about that “Amen” – it is the most important word we say in that Mass.

St Wilfrid’s Church

Now the weather has changed and you are clearing out your cupboards and drawers once again. Please remember to put aside any suitable donations for St Wilfrid’s sales table, which will be running as soon as things are back to ‘normal’.”

Our Website

Our Website

Please don’t forget to explore our Church website to watch live Masses from across England, Ireland and Scotland, including Masses and Sermons from our very own Pope. 

We also are showing photos of the activities our community have been doing whilst we are confined at home.  If you would like to share any photos on our website, please send them into us using the church email, with a note saying that you consent to any photos that you have sent to us being displayed on the church website.  Many thanks and stay safe.