• Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    14th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 4 July 2021 – Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sunday.

    How often we can fail to recognise the presence of God in the ordinary things of life.  We want God to come in the grand scheme, in a form that takes away all our doubt and anxiety, in the miraculous gesture. This is at the base of the apocalyptic cults such as QAnon amongst others.  And in so doing, we miss the presence of God in the smile of a stranger, the challenging word of a friend, the simplicity of the scene outside our window. This is at the heart of the gospel this Sunday. Who could think that this peasant from Nazareth was the prophet long expected? The people in today’s gospel…

    Comments Off on 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 4 July 2021 – Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sunday.
  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    13th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    The Russian journalist, Anna Politkovskaya, who was murdered in Moscow several years ago, wrote in her book Putin’s Russia, “There is a part of every society that wants nothing more than to be lulled into sleep.” [1]It was a striking statement about how there is a part of us which simply does not want to know too much.  It is sad but true observation that we cannot bear too much reality. We seek to shield ourselves from reality, not to take too close an interest in things, or simply overlay complex situations with our own prejudices and biases. The problems that swirl around us – from the threat of global economic instability,…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    12th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    Often with all the challenges we may be facing we might feel like getting into our own little boat and heading off into the middle of the lake where no one can disturb us. However, once we are out in the lake, we are not guaranteed serenity. I remember once picking up a small poster which read, “Dear God, help me; the sea is so wide, and my boat is so small.”  The size of the lake itself can be overwhelming, and then storms whip up so that the serenity for which we went in search is replaced by fear.   Nowhere, then, is entirely safe, and perhaps that is very much…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    11th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    One of the things that fascinate children in a particular way is planting something and watching it grow.  Do you recall how mesmerised you were when you first planted something and watched it begin to grow?  I recall doing it with sees of wheat in moist cotton wool. The advantage of this particular process was, of course, that one didn’t need to wait very long to see the result of one’s planting! Planting and harvesting for a child is perhaps as fascinating as it is because it mirrors children’s own reality, their own potential and promise. Maybe this is why the child within us likes to plant a tree to mark the…

  • Homilies,  Sunday

    Corpus Christi Sunday 2021

     We know today that very few people still derive their information from the traditional newspaper. There are not a few young people who have never read a newspaper. Their news come entirely from social media. If people do venture away from social media and look for news through an online platform then they are confronted with sites that offer literally a smorgasbord of news with very little commentary or analysis. I find these pages fascinating, and rather disturbing, I find them fascinating for several reasons: firstly, for the sheer volume of stories that are posted there; secondly for the extraordinary banality of most of them; and thirdly for the way…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    Trinity Sunday 2021

    Weddings are always something special in our life. I am not simply thinking of our own wedding, but our attendance at other weddings. Such occasions bring before us something for which we all long: the simplicity of falling in love, the promise of exchanging a commitment to each other, the hope of beginning a life together.  A wedding mirrors something fundamentally human to us.  We feel right in the world. In the midst of all the other troubles and uncertainties we experience something with all the promise of being good, true and beautiful. And the occasion fascinates us. Somehow it brings us home to ourselves. For some, their wedding is not the…

  • Homilies,  Occasional,  Uncategorised

    Mass for the Celebration of 200 Years of Catholic Education – 24 May 2021

    In Tolkein’s Lord of the Rings, one of the main character’s Sam says at one stage, “We shouldn’t be here at all, if we’d known more about it before we started. But I suppose it’s often that way. The brave things in the old tales and songs, Mr. Frodo: adventures, as I used to call them. I used to think that they were things the wonderful folk of the stories went out and looked for, because they wanted them, because they were exciting and life was a bit dull, a kind of a sport, as you might say. But that’s not the way of it with the tales that really mattered, or the ones…

    Comments Off on Mass for the Celebration of 200 Years of Catholic Education – 24 May 2021
  • Reflections

    Pastoral Letter to the Parish of Chatswood – Pentecost 2021

    Pentecost, as an essential part of the story of Resurrection, celebrates the birth of the Church. The Spirit of God stirs into flame the hearts and minds of the first disciples and sends them forth with the passion of mission. It is an opportune time, therefore, for us to reflect on our own call to mission as a community of faith. In celebrating Pentecost this year, I would like to share with you something of my experience of be- ing with you for the last five months, what I have learnt, and my sense of the opportunities that stretch before us.  It has been a singular privilege for me to…

    Comments Off on Pastoral Letter to the Parish of Chatswood – Pentecost 2021
  • Homilies,  Year B

    Pentecost Sunday 2021

    There is a perspective in theology that regards the event of Pentecost as the birth of the Church.  On this day, the Spirit is poured out on the disciples.  They are released from their disillusionments and their fears; they are enSpirited and emboldened to go out and to preach the good news that the life of Christ is more powerful than death, that the self-sacrifice of his love has overpowered the forces of selfishness and suspicion, that the future stretches out beyond us a constant invitation full of possibility.  Our dead-ends have become new beginnings; our sunsets have been changed into dawns. Yes, on this day the Spirit overwhelms our timidity, our doubt,…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    Ascension Sunday 2021

    Imagine for a little while a moment in your life which was full of possibility.  Maybe it was when you first started school, or started work, or left home.  Perhaps it was a moment of commitment such as when you got married, or at the birth of your children.  A moment rich in possibility, full of promise!  Can you remember how there was no certainty about the future at that time, but somehow there was a sense that this what life was about?  All of life up to this point somehow seemed to come together and open out into the future.  And the something new was full of promise. Our celebration of the Resurrection and Ascension…

error: Content is protected !!