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14 Sunday of Ordinary Time Podcast
Hopefully, the situation of the pandemic over the last months has taught us this – the value of stopping and listening. The challenge will be not to let this opportunity become suffocated as once again the demands of our life begin to encroach upon us. Let us take forward what we have learnt so that our lives become enriched by living in a more centred way. https://media.blubrry.com/davidranson/content.blubrry.com/davidranson/14th_Sunday_of_Year_2020.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: RSS
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14th Sunday of Ordinary Time
On this first week in July the Church in Australia celebrates National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sunday. This annual celebration is an opportunity to acknowledge the contribution that Indigenous Australians make to our experience of the Transcendent and to faith in this ancient land. As Deacon Boniface Perdjert from Wadeye, in the Northern Territory, and who passed away last year, commented once “Deep down, we Aborigines are religious people. We did not have many material goods, but we are rich with spiritual goods. It is this strong religious side that made us. It gave us our identity, our dignity, our self-assurance. My People existed here in Australia thousands of years before Abraham. In all…
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13th Sunday of Ordinary Time Podcast
It is not an easy time to be Catholic. There is a stripping of power and prestige taking place through events, and through the shifts in social mores and trends which increasingly see us as the ‘outsider’. This makes the need to renew our witness of sacrificial love even more pressing if we are to remain faithful to the call of the Gospel. https://media.blubrry.com/davidranson/content.blubrry.com/davidranson/Homily_for_13_Sunday_2020.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: RSS
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13th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Even the COVID19 pandemic does not seem to have eased negative publicity about the Church. It was curious to see articles recently in the media questioning the Church’s engagement of the Government’s JobKeeper scheme. As a religious practitioner, I am eligible for the Jobkeeper payment. I have also chosen to donate this to our First Collection to supplement the loss of income by the parish suffered because of the pandemic. Though this is entirely legal, ethical and transparent, the media’s attempt to make it into something otherwise shows how the Church struggles both to retain and to promote its credibility in society. In the face of such negative social scrutiny,…
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12th Sunday of Ordinary Time Podcast
It is not possible, in fact, to live without fear. It is part of our instinct for survival. Yet, it is possible for us to hear our fear and to choose another way. When Jesus says to us, “Do not be afraid”, he is saying to us “Do not stay trapped in fear. There is something more, something more to which your dignity as a child of God calls you. I am calling you beyond your fear.” https://media.blubrry.com/davidranson/content.blubrry.com/davidranson/Homily_for_12th_Sunday_.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: RSS
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12th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Some years ago, I had a friend working as a legal assistant in the refugee camps that sprang up in Hong Kong in the 1980s and 1990s. Every morning he travelled over by ferry to the islands on which the camps were situated to spend the day explaining international law to the refugees and trying to work out how their story might relate to their cause. Along the way, he wrote to me this moving story: “At Chim A Wan detention centre, Pham van Ai and I interviewed a woman who had been forced into prostitution in Vietnam. In fact, she did this in order to repay a loan she…
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Corpus Christi 2020 Podcast
The Eucharist is never our right. It is always a gift given to us, to be be celebrated with gratitude and humility. https://media.blubrry.com/davidranson/content.blubrry.com/davidranson/Corpus_Christi_Homily.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: RSS
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Corpus Christi 2020
The Irish used to have a saying, “It is the Mass that matters.” For them, recovering particularly from the Great Potato Famine in the 19th century, the Eucharist was the great source of identity in an environment that was incredibly oppressive. The celebration of the Mass was the rock of their existence in a sea of social hostility which threatened to engulf them. We recall even the famous Mass rocks ‑ those rocks on which Masses were celebrated set out in the countryside away from the detection of the English invaders. The saying, “It is the Mass that matters” followed the Irish Diaspora to our own shores where the Eucharist has continued to…
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Trinity Sunday 2020 Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/davidranson/content.blubrry.com/davidranson/Homily_for_Trinity_Sunday_2020.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: RSS
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Trinity Sunday 2020
The architect of the Parliament building in Canberra, Romaldo Giurgola was, apparently, fond of saying “great buildings begin with great ideas.” In other words, if you can’t imagine the possibilities first, the end result will not be all that significant. “Great buildings begin with great ideas.” It’s an observation that underscores the power and the importance of the imagination in our life. “You must give birth to your images,” wrote Rilke. “They are the future waiting to be born. Fear not the strangeness you feel. The future must enter into you long before it happens.”[1] The future begins in our imagination, in the images that we carry deep within us. We are often used to downplaying our imagination.…