Homilies

  • Homilies,  Year B

    4th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    One of the privileges of our life is to be able to sit with someone else and to listen to their story and to hold their struggle to find meaning in their life.  Sometimes those people with whom we might sit may have been struggling a long time, and alone. Sometimes they may have given up any struggle, and, rather, given in to the emotional or spiritual impasse they reached many years before.  And sometimes they may have only just set out on a deeper search for themselves and for who God might be for them. Often, of course, we have no word to give, and the silence is hard to bear.  On…

  • Homilies,  Occasional

    Australia Day 2021

    Recent events in the United States have been of great concern to us. Though the systems of democracy have remained intact, the events that have led to the presidential inauguration have demonstrated the fragility of democracy as a system of politics. The world has nervously awaited the peaceful resolution of the transition of power, recognising that such cannot be simply taken for granted. The flaws in the system have become all too exposed. Whatever of our own personal politics and how we may have viewed the outcome of the American election, all of us hope for a future known for its measurement and order. And the key to this in…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    I am sure that many of us have heard the story of the chap driving in the country who stops to ask the famer which is the way to the city.  Says the farmer to him in reply, “Oh, if I were going to the city, I wouldn’t start from here!” How often we give this very same reply to our faith, and to our relationship with God, and even with each other.  We get caught in the thinking, that if I were going to relate to God better it couldn’t possibly be from how I am feeling at the moment.  If only I didn’t have to contend with this pain or with…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time 2021

    Not so long ago, I chanced to see a rather striking sign outside a church.  The text of the sign was simply, “Can you hear the voice of God in the silences of the day?”  Can you hear the voice of God in the silences of the day? I was particularly struck by it because often enough we expect to hear God in another way. We think God speaks to us in an exceptional way, or that he only speaks to exceptional people, and, sadly, we don’t include ourselves amongst them.  So often we will hear people say, “God never speaks to me,” or the question behind this conclusion which is “Why does…

  • Homilies,  Sunday,  Year B

    Feast of the Baptism of the Lord 2021

    As the months roll on all of us are desperately waiting for the pandemic to be over. We wonder how long it will take for the situation to change, for restrictions to be lifted, for our lives to return to some of the normalcy we had before. We had hoped that our waiting might be over just before Christmas; however, as this new year has started we have realized that our waiting is not over, and that perhaps we will be waiting for the better part of this year. We spend a great deal of our life waiting – perhaps more than, at first, we care to realise.  There are those…

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  • Homilies,  Sanctoral

    Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, 1 January 2021

    One of the most significant lessons that I have learnt in life is about the necessity and power of paradox in our lives. Spiritual experience attends to sets of opposites; it does not seek to resolve them. In the paradoxes and the intersections of our life we are, as one writer puts it, we are “stretched out amid the opposites in [our] life, between hanging on and letting go, between involvement and surrender, between deep engagement and gentle detachment.  This is [our] crucifixion and [our] joy. It is [our] crucible in all its insecurity and beauty, fragility and possibility.”[1]   Our Christian spiritual framework lives and breathes irreducible sets of tensions – humanity…

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  • Homilies,  Year B

    Feast of the Holy Family 2020

    At his installation in 2013, Pope Francis reflected on the role of St. Joseph as protector. As the Pope recounted, the one who acts as the father to Jesus, is the one that: “From the time of his betrothal to Mary until the finding of the twelve-year-old Jesus in the Temple of Jerusalem, . . . is there at every moment with loving care. As the spouse of Mary, he is at her side in good times and bad, on the journey to Bethlehem for the census and in the anxious and joyful hours when she gave birth; amid the drama of the flight into Egypt and during the frantic…

  • Homilies,  Year B

    Christmas 2020

    In German, one word is often used to bring into summary an entire concept.  This is often achieved by the way in which German strings words together to what looks an impossibly long word to the English eye.  However, there is a relatively simple German word that describes one whole concept, and that is Zeitgeist.  It is the German for the idea of “the spirit of the times.”  The internet search engine Google has picked up on this and has commandeered the term for its own analysis of the top trending searches over the net. So, the Google Zeitgeist measures the terms that have seen the largest increase over the last year as well…

  • Homilies,  Year B

    Fourth Sunday of Advent – 2020

    When I once visited Nazareth, it was quite a delight to discover the Church of Mary’s Well. It is an Eastern Orthodox Church and is some distance, on the other side of the town, from the more familiar Basilica of the Annunciation. The reason why this Church of Mary’s Well was of such interest was because of the legend with which it is associated.  According to an ancient legend it was at the well, over which the church is built, that Mary first encountered the angel which had come to bear her the news of her pregnancy.  However, Mary had taken fright at this initial encounter and ran back to her home, where…

  • Homilies,  Year B

    Third Sunday of Advent – 2020

    Most of us are looking forward to New Year’s Eve when we can finally say goodbye to 2020 and all its challenges. In a period of history such as the one in which we have discovered ourselves this last year with the pandemic we glimpse the enormity of the movements in which we are enswirled, our fragility and insignificance before them, whilst at the same time we wonder about new beginnings, about something new emerging.  We have the sense that something is passing, we are leaving behind something.  We sense that we are crossing over into something unknown and new.  We feel both vulnerable and excited at the same time.  Fear and hope co-mingle…

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