In today’s second reading, we heard part of the hand-written post-script, in which St. Paul rounds off and sums up his fiery letter to the Galatians. God forbid, he cries here, that I should boast except in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ!
40th Anniversary
Diocesan Pilgrimage Sunday 26 June 2022
Sunday 26 June saw a happy resumption, after a three year break, of the annual Diocesan Pilgrimage to Pluscarden. Perhaps because of this gap imposed by covid restrictions, or maybe in spite of it? the pilgrims came in great numbers. It was lovely to see so many, including lots of children and young people, and good representation from our Polish, Indian and Nigerian Catholic communities. The weather remained kind, so plenty of people were able to picnic in our grounds before the Mass, with the opportunity also for confession, or for adoration of the Blessed Sacrament exposed in the Lady Chapel.
Homily for Sunday 13C, 26 June 2022, Luke 9:51-62
But Jesus turned and rebuked them (9:55) We’re in the 9th Chapter of St. Luke’s Gospel. The beginning of this Chapter has Jesus investing the Twelve with power and authority, and sending them out to preach and to heal. In a very similar way, at the beginning of the next Chapter, Jesus will extend this delegation to Seventy Two others.
Homily for the Feast of the Holy Trinity, 12 June 2022 - DJC
On this solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity the Church gives praise to God simply that “He is”. God is Three Persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit in one Nature; each Person is distinct from one another; each Person is truly God yet this does not divided the divine Unity. God is one but not solitary. It is a mystery infinitely beyond human reason. God had to reveal this mystery to us:
2022 Pluscarden Pentecost Lectures
Homily for Pentecost, Year C, 2022
In days gone by there were very many sequences, but in the Missal of St. Pius V these were reduced to 3, for Easter, Pentecost and Corpus Christi, plus Masses for the Dead, if you count the Dies Irae as a sequence. Nowadays we sing it more often than in the past, as we use it as a hymn for the last week of the Church’s year. We also sing a variety of sequences, in whole or in part, at Benediction or under the guise of hymns. In addition, of course, as Benedictines we have a special sequence for the feasts of St. Benedict.
Homily for St. Margaret’s Forres, 29 May 2022, Eastertide Sunday 7C; John 17:20-26
Father: may they all be one (17:21 (x 2), 22, 23; 11). Just before entering into his Passion, at the end of the Last Supper, Jesus prays that his redeeming mission be perfectly consummated. What did he come for? Certainly, it was to take away our sins, and to save us from death. But that was, as it were, only the first necessary stage. The ultimate goal of Jesus was to bring us to God. That is, Jesus came to bring each of us individually, and also all of us together, to God.