Deacon Martin reflects...
Connection - Light Switch or Smoke Detector? Have you taken a quiet moment recently to think about your relationship with God? If not, I invite you to do so and summarise it in one of two ways. Here are two simple descriptors to choose from: Is the relationship like A 'Light Switch' or A 'Smoke Detector'? If your relationship is like the 'Light Switch' you find that you only converse with God in times of dire need. Seeking His help in a time of distress or anxiety because the routine of life is so busy and all else seems to have failed is the switch 'on' moment. When things are going well, you feel so self-sufficient and content you switch 'off' that connection. When the darkness of bereavement, illness, addiction, anxiety, depression, abuse, poverty or injustice strike and all beyond your control, then in desperation you return to switch 'On' and petition for help and connection is temporarily restored. After the problem is resolved, you switch off again. Or Is your relationship like a ' Smoke Detector', which is always on and alert. It is ever aware of the presence of God, recognising that God is present in the 'ordinary' things, even the most mundane tasks in life. He dwells within you and guides your steps. As the detector is sensitive to danger, God is ever present to protect you from harm. If you accidently switch it off, it will alert you to restore the connection quickly. God forgives unconditionally and instantly. Keeping connectivity allows you to trust knowing that God is in control. Why not make a commitment to stay connected every day. Don’t be discouraged if you don’t connect right away or if you accidently break the link. Connection can be restored so keep at it. If you are desiring that connection, know that God desires it even more. It’s only a matter of time before you maintain a glorious connection- Always on and alert.
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Deacon Martin Reflects
Gifts we receive from our Pilgrimage Unconditional Love A deeper understanding of God’s love for us personally. Identity A belief in our true identity as a truly loved child of God. Forgiveness The ability to forgive ourselves and others in ways and in places we never thought we could. Friendship An intimate relationship with Jesus our Saviour. Confidence A deep knowledge and understanding that we are not alone and that God is always with us. Courage The strength to say “yes” to what God is inviting us to do in life and embracing how to share our gifts. Freedom The freedom to 'let go and let God' and to accept the plan He has for us. Hope That at the end of our pilgrim journey we will have everlasting life. Deacon Martin Donnelly reflects...
Yet another Pilgrimage! People often say the more familiar you are with a task or a journey the easier it becomes. This is a reasonable assumption to make however having just completed my Lough Derg pilgrimage 2024 I found it just as challenging - perhaps a little more challenging than my first encounter over 40 years ago. True pilgrimage involves more than clearing one's mind from routine. As a pilgrim on St Patrick's Purgatory, one has to silence one's thoughts and concentrate on the physical senses. The well-trodden ancient stones create an energy due to the countless prayers made on each step which is quite unique. When I stand in the humble beauty of the Basilica, I feel privileged to be where many people's lives have been transformed through a mantra of prayer, life giving sharing of the Word of God, the healing of reconciliation and the nourishment of the Eucharist. I feel that in a mystical way I am participating in an exhilarating experience and a challenge of physical endurance. When I look across the lake and hills and valleys from the spot where St Davog was deployed by St Patrick to set up a place of prayer I am folded into that time — a time in which the faith was moving through communities influencing life in Ireland, often in subtle ways. A striking aspect of Lough Derg pilgrimage is a person’s emotional and intuitive response to it. Something in me responds to the Penitential Beds where people paradoxically make the painful journey to find healing. The endurance of cold uneven stones is a reminder of the suffering of Christ whose passion and death brought forgiveness and healing to humanity. Pilgrimage reveals not only knowledge and wisdom about the remote island itself, but also knowledge and wisdom about the pilgrim who completes each station. God has designed history, geography, prayer, tradition, to share faith in places where there is a sacred space to allow Him to find each person where they are at on their life's journey and renew a living relationship. This is how this marvellous world was designed — to present all sorts of connections and resonances to anyone who will pay attention. We make pilgrimages all the time — to see family or visit an ancestral hometown; to tour the house of a favourite author or artist or spiritual teacher; to revisit a place that touched us profoundly, either with joy or pain. Pilgrimage is an event which is grace filled restores faith and fill our hearts with hope. I wonder what journey will you make in the next month or year? Where can you linger with your mind, memory, emotions, gifts, and sense and connect with the graces God has hidden there just for you? The best answer I can give is to come away to an out of the way corner of God's creation to where even the most troubles soul can find true peace. Many have the pilgrimage pencilled in on their calendar year and look forward to the experience- thankfully, I don't have to wait that long to return and receive such grace even if for most of the season I have my shoes on. Deacon Martin Donnelly For the opening weekend of the Three Day Pilgrimage, Deacon Martin Donnelly, a member of the Clergy Team offers some words of reflection.
Groups of people huddled on the shore shivering in a breeze that is reminiscent of autumn rather than summer as we await our cruise. We gaze across the lake at the ancient sanctuary of Patrick looking somewhat brighter and lighter grey than it has ever looked even in weak sunlight. What brings us here? It is not the weather and certainly not dreams of luxury. It is our desire to break from the routine and busyness of our world and draw ourselves close to the triune God. As we take our first barefoot steps on the island we feel we are on Holy ground and our pilgrimage has begun. The stones are still as testing for our feet and if the rain does not soak us then the midges will certainly tease us. Thoughts of a sleepless night ahead and pretending that toast and oat cakes are a sumptuous evening meal add to the chill. There are so many things I want to say to God but I don't know where to start. So I kneel before the tabernacle in the Basilica and open my heart to the Lord. He knows me better than I know myself. I allow him to see me as I am in my human frailty and pray for the freedom to accept the plan He has for me. Bless my pilgrimage. |
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