ST OLIVER'S NEWS


Things You Didn't Know About Easter ...

Easter this year is  Sunday March 23 2008.

Easter is always the 1st Sunday after the 1st full moon after the Spring Equinox (which is March 20).

This dating of Easter is based on the lunar calendar that Hebrew people used to identify Passover. This is why it moves around on our Roman calendar. 

Based on the above, Easter can only be one day earlier (March 22) than it will be this year, and falling on March 22 is pretty rare.

This year Easter is the earliest any of us will ever see for the rest of our lives and only the most elderly of our population have ever seen it this early (95 years old or older) and none of us have ever or will ever see it a day earlier!

Here are the facts:
- The next time Easter will be this early (March 23) will be in the year 2228 (220 years from now).
- The last time it was this early was in 1913.
- The next time it will be a day earlier (March 22) will be in the year 2285 (277 years from  now).
- The last time it was on March 22 was in 1818



Front Page

Newsletter
Congratulations
The front and back pages were designed by Year 7 pupils from St Oliver Plunkett Primary School. Congratulations to Jamie Maguire (front cover) and to Anna McStravick (top left), Chloe McCann (top right), Zoe Callaghan (bottom left) and Claire McLoughlin (bottom right). The original pictures along with the additional pictures submitted by the Year 7s will be displayed in St Oliver Plunkett Church during Easter.
Pencils
An Appeal

 

Dear Fellow Parishioners

On behalf of the parish branch of the Young Priests; Society we are writing to every home in the parish to ask for your co-operation. As you know, there is a shortage of religious vocations at the moment, and the valuable service provided by our priests and nuns is in danger of being greatly reduced. Regular churchgoers are keenly aware of the problem. But even those of us who attend now and then would like to feel that there will always be a priest available for baptisms, confirmations, marriages and funerals. So I think it is fair to say that the problem concerns us all. On one ocasion Jesus said to His followersw: " Ask the Lord of the harvest to send more labourers into His vineyard." So he seems to have been telling us that vocations do not just happen automatically. Our co-operation is needed. Our prayer is needed. And since church attendance is low in these times, the prayers of churchgoers may not be enough. This is why the present appeal is being addressed to everyone in the parish. We are now asking you to make a small commitment which would not take much time or effort but would make a difference. Could you just promise to yourself, and to Jesus, that you will start to pray, or pray a little more often, for an increase in vocations. The prayer does not need to be a long one. A few words each time woul be enough. Like ourselves, you will sometimes forget the promise. But if you let every church on the road serve as a reminder, you will be able to say a quick prayer when passing or maybe drop in for a short visit.

Many thanks for your co-operation

Yours sincerely
Brendan Marron
St Oliver Plunkett Branch, Young Priests' Society.

 

Parish Office: Tel: 9061 8180 Fax: 9061 8282
Email: office@stolivers.org Website: www.stolivers.org


Front Page


Front Page


 
Servine A Community In South Africa and Mozambique
Monday 30th April 2007

SERVE is a voluntary organisation founded by Fr Gerry O’Connor a Redemptorist.

The object was to get young Irish people from all walks of life, between the age of 19-40 to go live & work voluntary, for 6-8 weeks with the poor & vulnerable in Developing Countries.

It started with one country and now approximately 100 volunteers go each year to 5 countries - Brazil, Thailand, India, The Philippines, South Africa/Mozambique.

Click here to read the full article

La Salle Ethiopia Project 2007
Thursday 26th April 2007

 

A group of teachers from La Salle Boys School will travel to south eastern Ethiopia for the third time this summer along with a group of past pupils.


Allemgahne School Children

The group will teach in a school which they helped build there and help in an orphanage run by the sisters of charity. The money raised this year will go towards improving conditions in the orphanage, provide assistance to the most needy of the area and towards developmental projects in the region.

The group would like to take this opportunity to thank the people of the parish of St Oliver Plunketts for their continued support over recent years. The money raised has:

built a school for over 1000 pupils in the village of Allemgahne

 

built science labs and a libraray for the school in Robe

 

provided relief in a neighbouring region affected by drought and helped the most needy of the area.

There will be a church door collection for
the Ethiopia Project on June 9th and 10th.
Please give generously - these wonderful children need your help.


Disco at Allemgahne
Children in the orphanage
   

Reflections Of A Parent
Wednesday 17th April 2007
REFLECTIONS OF A PARENT

I gave you life,
but cannot live for you.
I can give you directions,

but I cannot be there to lead you.

I can take you to church,
but I cannot make you believe.
I can teach you right from wrong,
but I cannot always decide for you.
I can buy you beautiful clothes,
but I cannot make you beautiful inside.
I can offer you advice,
but I cannot accept it for you.
I can give you love,
but I cannot force it upon you.
I can teach you to share,
but I cannot make you unselfish.
I can teach you to respect,
but I cannot force you to show honour.
I can advise you about friends,
but I cannot choose them for you.
I can tell you about alcohol and drugs,
but I cannot say ‘No’ for you.
I can tell you about lofty goals,
but I can’t achieve them for you.
I can teach you about kindness,
but I can’t force you to be gracious.
I can pray for you,
but I cannot make you walk with God.
I can tell how to live,
but I cannot give you eternal life.
I can love you with unconditional love
all my life…

His Holiness Benedict XVI
has sent us a special message for Lent 2007
 
Ash Wednesday
21st February 2007

 

“They shall look on Him
whom they have pierced” (Jn 19:37)

Dear Brothers and Sisters!

"They shall look on him whom they have pierced" (Jn 19: 37). This is the biblical theme that this year guides our Lenten reflection. Lent is a favourable time to learn to stay with Mary and John, the beloved disciple, close to him who on the Cross, consummated for all mankind the sacrifice of his life (cf. Jn 19: 25). With a more fervent participation let us direct our gaze, therefore, in this time of penance and prayer, at Christ Crucified who, dying on Calvary, revealed fully for us the love of God. In the Encyclical Deus caritas est, I dwelt upon this theme of love, highlighting its two fundamental forms: agape and eros.

God's love: agape and eros

The term agape, which appears many times in the New Testament, indicates the self-giving love of one who looks exclusively for the good of the other. The word eros, on the other hand, denotes the love of one who desires to possess what he or she lacks and yearns for union with the beloved. The love with which God surrounds us is undoubtedly agape. Indeed, can man give to God some good that he does not already possess? All that the human creature is and has is divine gift. It is the creature, then, who is in need of God in everything. But God's love is also eros. In the Old Testament, the Creator of the universe manifests toward the people whom he has chosen as his own a predilection that transcends every human motivation. The prophet Hosea expresses this divine passion with daring images such as the love of a man for an adulterous woman (cf. 3: 1-3). For his part, Ezekiel, speaking of God's relationship with the people of Israel, is not afraid to use strong and passionate language (cf. 16: 1-22). These biblical texts indicate that eros is part of God's very Heart: the Almighty awaits the "yes" of his creatures as a young bridegroom that of his bride. Unfortunately, from its very origins, mankind, seduced by the lies of the Evil One, rejected God's love in the illusion of a self-sufficiency that is impossible (cf. Gn 3: 1-7). Turning in on himself, Adam withdrew from that source of life who is God himself, and became the first of "those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong bondage" (Heb 2: 15). God, however, did not give up. On the contrary, man's "no" was the decisive impulse that moved him to manifest his love in all of its redeeming strength.

The Cross reveals the fullness of God's love

It is in the mystery of the Cross that the overwhelming power of the Heavenly Father's mercy is revealed in all of its fullness. In order to win back the love of his creature, he accepted to pay a very high price: the Blood of his Only Begotten Son. Death, which for the first Adam was an extreme sign of loneliness and powerlessness, was thus transformed in the supreme act of love and freedom of the new Adam. One could very well assert, therefore, together with St Maximus the Confessor, that Christ "died, if one could say so, divinely, because he died freely" (Ambigua, 91, 1956). On the Cross, God's eros for us is made manifest. Eros is indeed, as Pseudo-Dionysius expresses it, that force which "does not allow the lover to remain in himself but moves him to become one with the beloved" (De Divinis Nominibus, IV, 13: PG 3, 712). Is there more "mad eros" (N. Cabasilas, Vita in Cristo, 648) than that which led the Son of God to make himself one with us even to the point of suffering as his own the consequences of our offences?

"Him whom they have pierced"

Dear brothers and sisters, let us look at Christ pierced on the Cross! He is the unsurpassing revelation of God's love, a love in which eros and agape, far from being opposed, enlighten each other. On the Cross, it is God himself who begs the love of his creature: He is thirsty for the love of every one of us. The Apostle Thomas recognized Jesus as "Lord and God" when he put his hand into the wound of his side. Not surprisingly, many of the saints found in the Heart of Jesus the deepest expression of this mystery of love. One could rightly say that the revelation of God's eros toward man is, in reality, the supreme expression of his agape. In all truth, only the love that unites the free gift of oneself with the impassioned desire for reciprocity instils a joy which eases the heaviest of burdens. Jesus said: "When I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw all men to myself" (Jn 12: 32). The response the Lord ardently desires of us is above all that we welcome his love and allow ourselves to be drawn to him. Accepting his love, however, is not enough. We need to respond to such love and devote ourselves to communicating it to others. Christ "draws me to himself" in order to unite himself to me, so that I learn to love the brothers with his own love.

Blood and water

"They shall look on him whom they have pierced". Let us look with trust at the pierced side of Jesus from which flow "blood and water" (Jn 19: 34)! The Fathers of the Church considered these elements as symbols of the Sacraments of Baptism and the Eucharist. Through the water of Baptism, thanks to the action of the Holy Spirit, we are given access to the intimacy of Trinitarian love. In the Lenten journey, memorial of our Baptism, we are exhorted to come out of ourselves in order to open ourselves in trustful abandonment to the merciful embrace of the Father (cf. St John Chrysostom, Catecheses, 3, 14ff.). Blood, symbol of the love of the Good Shepherd, flows into us especially in the Eucharistic mystery: "The Eucharist draws us into Jesus' act of self-oblation... we enter into the very dynamic of his self-giving" (Encyclical Deus caritas est, n. 13). Let us live Lent, then, as a "Eucharistic" time in which, welcoming the love of Jesus, we learn to spread it around us with every word and deed. Contemplating "him whom they have pierced" moves us in this way to open our hearts to others, recognizing the wounds inflicted upon the dignity of the human person; it moves us in particular to fight every form of contempt for life and human exploitation and to alleviate the tragedies of loneliness and abandonment of so many people. May Lent be for every Christian a renewed experience of God's love given to us in Christ, a love that each day we, in turn, must "re-give" to our neighbour, especially to the one who suffers most and is in need. Only in this way will we be able to participate fully in the joy of Easter. May Mary, Mother of Beautiful Love, guide us in this Lenten journey, a journey of authentic conversion to the love of Christ. I wish you, dear brothers and sisters, a fruitful Lenten journey, imparting with affection to all of you a special Apostolic Blessing.

From the Vatican, 21 November 2006

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

 

What in the World?
Series on RTE1 Thursdays at 10.45pm


A new six-part series for RTE on Globalisation, Poverty and Human Rights starts tomorrow Thursday 22nd February at 10.45pm.

Three Years, Eight Months and Twenty Days in Kampuchea

RTE1 Thur 22nd February 10.45pm

The first in a new series visits Cambodia to uncover the legacy of the genocide waged by the Khmer Rouge regime between 1975 and 1979

Black Death in Dixie

RTE1 Thur 1st March

Racism and the death penalty in the United States

Fish and Ships in Senegal

RTE1 Thur 8th March

Globalization and the fishing industry in West Africa

Coca: Leaf of Life?

RTE1 Thur 15th March

Forced eradication of the coca leaf in the Andes

Dam Corruption in Kenya

RTE1 Thur 22 March

Western complicity in African corruption

Not so Sweet

RTE1 Thur 29 March

Globalization and land reform in the Philippines

 

If You Love Somebody ...
Sunday 28th January 2007

 

One of the themes of today's Mass of Sunday 4C was love.

Kahlil Gibran once said:

If you love somebody, let them go,
for if they return, they were always yours.
And if they don't, they never were.

Children Learn what they live
Monday 22nd January 2007

 

Children Learn what they live
if children live with criticism, they learn to condemn
if children live with praise, they learn appreciation
if children live with hostility, they learn to fight
if children live with kindness and consideration, they learn respect
if children live with fear, they learn to be apprehensive
if children live with security,
they learn to have faith in themselves and in those about them
if children live with pity, they learn to feel sorry for themselves
if children live with encouragement, they learn confidence
if children live with ridicule, they learn to feel shy
if children live with approval, they learn to like themselves
if children live with jealousy, they learn to feel envy
if children live with sharing, they learn generosity
if children live with shame, they learn to feel guilty
if children live with acceptance, they learn to love
if children live with tolerance, they learn patience
if children live with recognition, they learn it is good to have a goal
if children live with honesty, they learn truthfulness
if children live with fairness, they learn justice
if children live with friendliness,
they learn the world is a nice place in which to live.
Tithing
Wednesday 17th January 2007


In the first reading from the Mass of Wednesday of the second week of Ordinary Time from the Letter to the Hebrews, there was a reference to Abraham giving a tenth of his belongings to Melchizedek.

For more information on tithing, please click here

 

World Day of Migrants and Refugees
Sunday 14th January 2007

On Sunday 14th January, for World Day of Migrants and Refugees, Pope Benedict VXI gave an address on the theme of the Migrant Family.
For the full text please click here

Press Releases

Date Title Read
4th October 2005 “POWER FROM ABOVE!”
St Oliver Plunkett Church Plugs in the Sun

Click to read

"Power From Above!"
St Oliver Plunkett Church Plugs in the Sun

St Oliver Plunkett Church in West Belfast today received a boost from the heavens at the official launch of the church’s new solar energy system. The environmentally aware church at Glenveagh Drive has “Plugged in the Sun”, installing solar photovoltaic panels (PV) on the south facing roof. The 4.6kWp system, which was funded by the Energy Saving Trust, Northern Ireland Electricity’s Smart programme and the church itself, will produce around 4000 units of eco friendly electricity each year.

Parish Priest Fr Martin Magill said: “I’ve been encouraged by the response from people in the parish and I’m especially pleased that some people are interested in installing panels on their own homes. I chose today the feast of St Francis of Assisi for the launch because of his love for creation; churches need to be giving an example of practical ways of caring for God’s world.”

Delta Hamilton, NIE Energy Services says this is an inspirational project for the whole community. “Substituting solar power for fossil fuel use makes very good sense. This project demonstrates how easily renewable energy sources can be integrated onto any building. Renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies have the potential to substantially reduce the amounts of greenhouse gas CO2 in the atmosphere, helping to prevent climate change. This system will reduce the CO2 emitted into the local environment by two tonnes each year. It is hoped that supporting this type of non-polluting energy source will help develop the market and encourage other homes and businesses to invest in sustainable energy solutions.

“Up until recently, there were few installations of PV in Northern Ireland. Since NIE developed a top-up fund, up to 25%, for the existing EST DTI Solar Grant of 50%, there has been a massive increase in interest, especially from schools.”

Speaking at the event Fr Seán McDonagh, a well known author who has written several books on the environment, said: “Global warming is one of the most serious ecological problems facing the planet today. It arises mainly from burning fossil fuel which releases C02 into the atmosphere. The consequence for many people, especially the poor could be terrible. In 1990 the late Pope John Paul II wrote that working to protect God's creation was a central part of our Christian faith. The best way to teach is by example. That is why the initiative taken by St Oliver Plunkett Parish in West Belfast to install photovoltaic panels thereby cutting down on carbon emissions is so important. To the best of my knowledge it is the first church to take such a step. May many others follow their good example.”

Noel Williams, Head of the Energy Saving Trust in Northern Ireland, manages the DTI’s Solar Grant initiative in Northern Ireland. He has been working with utilities, schools and housing bodies to develop the use of renewable technologies. He says: “The beauty of a photovoltaic system is that you do not need a sunny climate to have a significant impact on home, school or business energy costs. Even on cloudy days in Northern Ireland there is a huge amount of light and photovoltaic cells still generate electricity. We welcome the increased adoption of renewable energy sources and hope more businesses will take a lead from St Oliver Plunkett Church and install alternative energy sources in the future.”

Fr Magill extended his thanks to Ursula Toman at Community Action Renewables who helped guide the project and local company Stothers M & E who installed the system.

To find out more about renewable energy solutions for your home or business check:

NIE Smart website www.niesmart.co.uk,
EST website www.est.org.uk
Community Action Renewables www.actionrenewables.org
or freephone 0800 512 012.

 



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St Oliver Plunkett Parish
27B Glenveagh Drive
Belfast
BT11 9HX
Tel: 028 9061 8180
Fax: 028 9061 8282
E-mail: office@stolivers.org