21st Sunday in Ordinary Time


Harvest Festival and Four County Vintage Tractor and Car Run.
In Aid of Carrick and Ballynarry Church Renovation Fund.
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Saturday 1st September.
Harvest Festival in Sheelin Park.
3:00 pm to 6:00pm.
Country Market in Clubrooms.
Fresh Home Produced Breads, Cakes, Jams, Fruit and Vegetables on sale.
Demonstrations: - Butter Making, Patchwork, Crocheting and Oil Painting.
Competitions: - Name the Doll, Guess cake weight, etc.
Tea and Refreshments Served.
Family Fun on Pitch.
Children: - Bouncing Castles,  Fun and Games.
Adults & Teenagers: - Shot-putt, Golf, Basket Ball shooting, Skittles,
Digger Duck Dip.
Dog Demonstration at 4:00pm.
Harvest Mass.
Mass of thanksgiving in Ballynary at 8:00 pm.
Fruits of the Harvest will be placed in front of the Alter giving all of us a opportunity to thank God for them.
Barn Dance.
Barn Dance and BBQ in Buddy’s at 9:30 pm.
Music by Chuck and June.
Spot Prizes Galore.
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Sunday 2nd September.
Four County Vintage Tractor and Car Run.
Assembly and Breakfast for participants at 10:30am at Fitzsimons’ Finea.
Run Commences at 12:00 Noon.
Returning to Fitzsimons’ for Refreshments and BBQ.
Live Music and Spot Prizes.
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Fr Frank and Parish Council
invite you all to come and enjoy this Family Fulfilled Weekend.

19th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Perpetual Novena to Our Lady of Knock.
The National Public Novena takes place each year at Knock Shrine from the 14th to the 22nd of August. Prayer leaflets may be had from the Shrine Office. Two sessions are held daily, namely at 3:00 pm and 8:30 pm except on Wednesday 15th and Sunday 19th, when ceremonies commence with anointing of the sick at 2:30 pm. After Concelebrated Mass in the Basilica there is a Procession to the Apparition Gable. A procession of the Blessed Sacrament is held in the afternoon and the beautiful candlelight procession takes place at night. For those who cannot be present the Novena may be made at home or in the local Church. This gives them a share in the Masses and prayers being offered each day at the Shrine.
Prayer to Our Lady of Knock
Our Lady of Knock, Queen of Ireland, you gave hope to your people in a time of distress, and comfort them in sorrow. You have inspired countless pilgrims to pray with confidence to your divine Son, remembering His promise, “Ask and you shall receive, seek and you shall find”. Help me to remember that we are all pilgrims on the road to heaven. Fill me with love and concern for my brothers and sisters in Christ, especially those who live with me. Comfort me when I am sick, lonely or depressed. Teach me how to take part ever more reverently in the Holy Mass. Give me a greater love of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament. Pray for me now, and at the hour of my death. Amen.



Olympic Gold Medalist
When Katie Taylor’s hand was held aloft as Olympic champion in the Excel Arena in London on Thursday evening, it was one of those sublime moments in sport that won’t be forgotten.
The jubilant scenes around the country and the huge TV audience which watched her fights in London illustrate how her achievement has touched even those with only a casual interest in sport. It has been the fulfilment of a sporting dream for Taylor as well as the Irish sporting public.
All the years of anonymous practice, of lonely fights in obscure places, of struggling for recognition in a sport that barely existed, all the prayers that they shared: it had all led to her historic victory.
“My dad said if I did go a couple of points down just stay calm. I just had to stick to the game plan. It was great to pick up the two points but at the end I didn’t know what way the score line went. It was a great last round.”
“Because I trained so hard since I was 10 or 11 years of age,” was how Taylor accounted for this performance. “And I serve an amazing God and without Him I wouldn’t be sitting with this medal around my neck. I am there but for the grace of God. I serve Him. I am nothing without Him.”
Following her victory , a whole generation of Irish youngsters will be inspired to take up sport. Katie’s shinning example is already laying the foundation for the next generation of Irish Olympians.
One of the mottoes of London 2012 has been “Inspire a Generation”.
Katie Taylor has done that and more.

Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time


Croagh Patrick
The annual pilgrimage to Croagh Patrick took place on Sunday last. After making the pilgrimage, the popes representative in Ireland, Archbishop Charles Brown said that making the pilgrimage up Ireland’s holiest mountain had been a “beautiful and unforgettable experience” and that it was personally gratifying to see a crowd of thousands making a journey of faith.
“I think that it is a great expression of the continuity of the Faith in Ireland,” he said. “On the first level I would say that it is a great confirmation for me that the Faith is very deep and in spite of everything it continues. “ And the second thing is that every pilgrimage is an image of the life of faith, and this pilgrimage, which is quite difficult, is a great image of what it means to be a Catholic. “It means in a sense to struggle for the life of faith, to fight for one’s faith, to put one foot in front of the other, to always go forward, to help one another on the path.”
 
The Shoeshine Boy
Shoeshine boys are on the lowest rung of the ladder in the Third World—almost always homeless, and often as young as five or six years old, they eke out a miserable living on the streets of every African capital. By day, they aim to make enough to keep hunger at bay; at night, they sleep together in small groups in doorways or disused buildings.
The young boy who shone my shoes in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, that day was no different. Barefooted and clothed in rags, he couldn’t have been more than nine of ten years old. Without the chance of education, he was doomed to spend the rest of his life on these streets and, most probably, to die on them.
My shoes shined, I stood up and paid the young lad before walking on into the city. Fifteen minutes later, arriving at the door of my hotel, I heard a shout and looked around to see the shoeshine boy running after me. Perspiration dripping from his forehead, he held out his hand with a smile. He was holding my wallet, which I must have dropped by his stall earlier.
One of the most extraordinary things about this story is that I was due to fly the following day to Guinea to buy supplies for a project we had just opened, and as a result I was carrying at lease $5,000 in my wallet. The notes were bulging out of the sides. This boy had found more money than he could ever dream of making in his entire working life and he was offering to give it back to me. He didn’t have enough money to buy shoes, but he hadn’t touched a note in the wallet.
The Third World is full of contradictions, but none more striking than this: in the midst of some of the worst poverty, you can discover the greatest human qualities.
John O’Shea. Founder of Goal.
Princes and lords are but the breath of kings,
An honest man’s the noblest work of God.
Robert Burns (1759—1796)

Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time


The Olympic Games
After 7 years of preparation the 2012 Olympic Games opened in London on Friday evening watched by a global TV. audience numbered in billions.
Over the next 16 days 10,500 athletes from all over the world, including 66 from Ireland, will participate in the world’s premier sporting festival.
Since they were revived in 1896 the motto of the Olympics has been “Faster, Higher, Stronger”.
Anyone who loves sport knows it is an art form and can teach us much about life. Most sports call for skill, discipline, imagination, creativity and are clearly vehicles of self-expression. Just think of these magical moments in swimming, boxing, cycling, basketball, football, rugby, tennis and the rest where humanity shines at its most beautiful and best. There will be many moments like these on display at the 2012 Games this summer.
Sport enables us to discover much about ourselves from reflection on our performances and the processes we go through when training. The love of sport discloses the spirituality of sport. As they train, and push themselves beyond their comfort zone on through that pain barrier, athletes realise they are in control of the Physical, Intellectual, Emotional and Spiritual dimensions of their lives.
Without self-control, sport, or life in general, ends in disaster. For the Physical, there is temperance; for Intellectual, prudence; for the Emotional, fortitude; and for the Spiritual, justice. Tasting success or learning from failure generates joy for everyone who accepts that God is an appreciative spectator of their life.
Sport imitates life’s vital processes. Many sports teach the importance of making fast decisions in complicated situations. Loss of temper is mostly costly. Concentration and attention are rewarded. Underestimating the opposition is often disastrous. Hard work and sustained commitment are rewarded.  Pushing on through pain, serving a team, facing defeat with dignity and never giving up are essential for success.
Experienced coaches who have faith remind those they train that they are more than what they do. They are children of God. Otherwise, once they  retire they can all too easily see themselves as without purpose and so become depressed. Through sport we may see humanity at its most sublime.
Sport seems to satisfy our yearning for spiritual communion between people from every part of our Earth.
 For those who love it,
Sport is JOY.
The simple Basic Things
O God,
Give me all the simple basic things
Which will make me a useful person in this world.
Help me to be;
Honest
So that people will be able to depend on me;
Conscientious
So that nothing I do may be less than my best;
Punctual
So that I may not waste the time of others;
Reliable
So that I may never let people down;
Responsible
So that I may always think how my actions may affect others.
Help me to live in the constant awareness
Of your love for me, Amen.




Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time


Goodness and Sacrifice
On the 11th March 2011 a dreadful earthquake and tsunami struck Japan killing many people and destroying a vast amount of property. In the editorial of the July/August edition of the ‘Far East’ there is this extract from a letter written by a policeman to a friend in Vietnam:
“There was one really moving incident involving a little Japanese boy: he taught an adult like me a lesson on how to behave like a human being. I had been sent to a little grammar school to help a charity organisation distribute food to the refugees. It was a long line that snaked this way and that, and I saw a little boy around nine years old. He was wearing a T-shirt and a pair of shorts. It was getting very cold and the boy was at the very end of the line. I was worried that by the time his turn came there would not be any food left. So I spoke to him. He said he was at school when the earthquake happened. His father was working nearby and was driving to the school. The boy was on the third floor balcony when he saw the tsunami sweep his father away.
I asked him about his mother. He said his house is right by the beach and that his mother and little sister probably did not make it. He turned his head and wiped his tears when I asked about his relatives. The boy was shivering so I took off my police jacket and put it on him. That’s when my bag of food ration fell out. I picked it up and gave it to him. ‘when it comes to your turn, they might run out of food so here’s my portion, I already ate. Why don't you eat it?’ The boy took my food and bowed. I thought he would eat it right away, but he did not. Instead he went up to where the line ended and put it where all the food was waiting to be distributed.
I was shocked. I asked him why he had not eaten the food and had instead added it to the food pile. He answered, ‘Because I see a lot more people hungrier than I am. If I put it there, then they will distribute the food equally’. When I heard that I turned away so that people would not see me cry.
A society that can produce a nine-year-old who understands the concept of sacrifice for the greater good, must be a great society, a great people."

Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time


Eucharistic Congress Sunday 17th June (RTE One 2:00pm)
Closing Mass of the International Eucharist Congress with principal celebrant Papal Legate, Cardinal Marc Ouellet. Pope Benedict XVI contributes a message via video-link as he adds his blessing to the week-long celebration.
What some of the speakers at the congress during the week said:
The Eucharistic Congress is “a signpost for the future” where the Church will be able to share the Good News and “say to young people you will find love, commitment and care here”, the Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said. This is not going to happen overnight, he added.
The archbishop, who is presiding over the Eucharistic Congress, said the Church in Ireland would be renewed by returning to its centre in the message of the Gospel and the Eucharist.
Asked about abuse, he said that people from all over the world are in solidarity with the Irish Church and he defended the many priests who love the Church and have no involvement with the sins and failures of others.
He added that the Irish Church is looking towards its own future and what are the things it wants to stress in its renewal.
This hope for the future was echoed by Alois Loser, prior if the Taize community, who spoke at the congress.
“I am sure that coming back to the essentials of our faith we will find the courage and the way for the future. We don’t know the face of the Church of tomorrow, not in Ireland, not anywhere.”
“Especially now is the question of how the young generation can be involved. They do not just continue the old traditions but want to find a personal faith. Personal conviction is the future.”
Maria Voice, president of the Focolare movement, also saw hope despite the obstacles.
“Every difficult moment is part of God’s sacred story with people. And that story has always had wonderful times followed by sadly difficult ones, times of doubt, uncertainty, of criticism. But those periods have always served for our growth, for our purification, for witness”
 
Eucharistic Congress Prayer
Lord Jesus, You were sent by the Father to gather together those who are scattered.
You came among us, doing good and bringing healing, announcing the Word of salvation and giving the Bread which lasts forever.
Be our companion on life’s pilgrim way. May your Holy Spirit inflame our hearts, enliven our hope and open our minds, so that together with our sisters and brothers in faith we may recognise you in the Scriptures and in the breaking of bread.
May your Holy Spirit transform us into one body and lead us to walk humbly on the earth, in justice and love, as witnesses of your
resurrection.
In communion with Mary, whom you gave to us as our Mother at the foot of the cross, through you may all praise, honour and
blessing be to the Father in the Holy Spirit and in the Church, Now and forever. Amen

The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ



Eucharistic Congress 10th to 17th June
This weekend Marrion Carroll is speaking at both Masses on The Gift of The Blessed Eucharistic.
On Monday 11th June at 8:00 pm there will be an outdoor Mass in Lavagh at the site of the Old Church in
Evelyn Roe’s field to celebrate the beginning of the Eucharistic Congress .
Calendar of events at the R.D.S.
On RTE Two TV:
Sunday 10th June:        
              1:45 pm—Opening ceremony and Mass celebrated by the Papal Legate, Cardinal Quellet.
              Catholics from 99 countries and every Diocese in Ireland will join the Mass.
On RTE Radio (Long Wave 252)
Monday 11th June:
            1:45 pm—Ecumenical Liturgy of the Word
            4:00 pm—Ecumenical Service.
Tuesday 12th June:
             1:45 pm—Family Day.
             4:00 pm—Mass.
Wednesday 13th June:
             1:45 pm—Priesthood and Ministry.
             4:00 pm—Mass.
Thursday 14th June:
             3:00 pm—Liturgy of Reconciliation.
             4:00 pm—Mass celebrated by Cardinal Sean Brady.
Friday 15th June:
             1:45 pm—Suffering and Healing. Anointing of the sick.
             4:00 pm—Mass.
Saturday 16th June:
            Feast of Immaculate Heart of Mary.
             12:00 pm—Eucharist involving Young People.
Sunday 17th June:
             1:00 pm—Closing Mass (Statio Orbis). Croke Park
 Eucharistic Congress Prayer
Lord Jesus, You were sent by the Father to gather together those who are scattered.
You came among us, doing good and bringing healing, announcing the Word of salvation and giving the Bread which lasts forever.
Be our companion on life’s pilgrim way. May your Holy Spirit inflame our hearts, enliven our hope and open our minds, so that together with our sisters and brothers in faith we may recognise you in the Scriptures and in the breaking of bread.
May your Holy Spirit transform us into one body and lead us to walk humbly on the earth, in justice and love, as witnesses of your
resurrection.
In communion with Mary, whom you gave to us as our Mother at the foot of the cross, through you may all praise, honour and
blessing be to the Father in the Holy Spirit and in the Church, Now and forever. Amen