Sunday, 20 November 2016

Ordinariate Lay Retreat



The Ordinariate Lay retreat will be held at the newly refurbished Dowry Retreat House on High Street, Walsingham (formerly the Sue Ryder Building) from 4pm on Friday 10th March finishing with lunch on Sunday 12th March. The retreat will be led by the Rev'd Dr Stephen Morgan and all are welcome. The cost of the retreat is £150 per person - full board. To reserve your place please send a non-refundable deposit of £20 (cheques payable to Ordinariate OLW) along with your name and address to:

Ordinariate Lay Retreat,
56 Woodlands Farm Road,
Birmingham B24 0PG.

The balance will be due by March 1st 2017.

Christ the King



Today is the feast of Christ the King. Before we begin Advent next week when Christ, the second person of the Trinity, prepares for the first coming, we firstly remember the result of the Incarnation cycle we have marked over the past year: man reigns in heaven with God. Christ is our King in fullness of man and God still bearing the wounds of his passion. At the end of today's Mass we will expose the Blessed Sacrament and rededicate the Human race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.



A unique King with a unique Kingdom: Jesus Christ still lives as King in thousands of human hearts all over the world. The cross is his throne and the Sermon on the Mount is his rule of law. His citizens need obey only one major law: "Love one another as I have loved you". His love is selfless, sacrificial, kind, compassionate, forgiving and unconditional. That is why the preface in today's Mass describes Jesus' Kingdom and a "a Kingdom of truth and life, a Kingdom of holiness and grace, a Kingdom of justice, love and peace." He is a King with a saving and liberating mission: to free mankind from all types of bondage, and to enable us to live peacefully and happily on earth and to inherit eternal life in heaven.

Sunday, 4 September 2016

23rd Sunday of the Year




“By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith, I am a Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world. As to my heart, I belong entirely to the Heart of Jesus. ”Small of stature, rocklike in faith, Mother Teresa of Calcutta was entrusted with the mission of proclaiming God’s thirsting love for humanity, especially for the poorest of the poor. “God still loves the world and He sends you and me to be His love and His compassion to the poor.” She was a soul filled with the light of Christ, on fire with love for Him and burning with one desire: “to quench His thirst for love and for souls.”


The whole of Mother Teresa’s life and labour bore witness to the joy of loving, the greatness and dignity of every human person, the value of little things done faithfully and with love, and the surpassing worth of friendship with God. But there was another heroic side of this great woman that was revealed only after her death. Hidden from all eyes, hidden even from those closest to her, was her interior life marked by an experience of a deep, painful and abiding feeling of being separated from God, even rejected by Him, along with an ever-increasing longing for His love. She called her inner experience, “the darkness.” The “painful night” of her soul, which began around the time she started her work for the poor and continued to the end of her life, led Mother Teresa to an ever more profound union with God. Through the darkness she mystically participated in the thirst of Jesus, in His painful and burning longing for love, and she shared in the interior desolation of the poor.


22nd Sunday of the Year


Confidence is something that Jesus never lacked; in this Sunday's gospel, we see him cheerfully going for one of the "disastrous dinner-parties" with which Luke adorns his gospel. The host this time is "one of the rulers of the Pharisees — and they were watching him". So we know that there is going to be trouble. As indeed there is, for Jesus heals a man with dropsy, but for some reason the compilers of our lectionary have omitted that bit. Instead (and would you invite Jesus to one of your dinner-parties?) the first thing we encounter is Jesus criticising his fellow-guests for wanting the best seats at the party, and encouraging them instead to go straight to the worst seats, on the perhaps slightly cynical grounds that it is better to find yourself summoned upwards from there. Then, in case things had not got quite uncomfortable enough, he turns on his host, and attacks him for inviting his friends. "Don't", he says, as we groan with embarrassment, "invite your friends or brothers and sisters or your cousins or your wealthy neighbours — otherwise they'll invite you back". Instead, it seems, the people we are supposed to invite to our parties are all the wrong people (those with whom Jesus was nearly always to be found): "the destitute, the crippled, the lame, the blind and then you'll be happy, [precisely] because they have no way of repaying you: for you'll get your reward at the resurrection of the just".

We feebly try to imagine what the mood was like around the dinner-table after this speech; but if you are making a mental resolution not to put Jesus on your guest-list, then just ask yourself: suppose it is really true that we are happiest if we make a priority of those whom society ignores? Suppose that we are dealing with a God who prefers those on the margins? Can we cope with this unexpected God of ours?


Sunday, 14 August 2016

The Assumption of our Lady



Today we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady's Assumption. Privately we scratch our heads about this feast, and wonder whether it is really "in the Bible", but it may be I, helpful to remember two things. First, all feasts of Our Lady are always celebrations of her Son; and secondly, no city, anywhere, has ever claimed to have her bones. So the celebration is an ancient one, and no matter how difficult we may find it it is all about Jesus, whose mother had to be different, not because of what she had done, but because God had prepared her for the unique task that she had to fulfil, as Mother of God. In addition to that, the fact that she is, in our belief, now utterly present to God, is a sign for us of where we shall be when our story is finished.



It is not an easy business, being the Mother of God; and nor is it easy being a ;disciple of Jesus, as the first reading for next Sunday reminds us. We are halfway through the Book of Revelation, with its account of what is going on in God's world, with a vision of the Ark of the Covenant, which often stands for Mary in Scripture, and then "a great sign". This "sign" is "a woman clothed in the sun, and the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars". This sounds very grand, but we then learn that this woman is not only in her labour-pains, which is bad enough, but menaced with a thoroughly unpleasant-sounding dragon, which stands before the woman who is about to give birth, "in order to gobble up her child when she gives birth". The child is, quite clearly, Jesus, "who is going to shepherd all the Gentiles with an iron staff', and (to our relief) is snatched up to God's safety. Nothing so congenial for his mother, however, who has to "run away nto the desert, where she has a place prepared from God".

Birmingham Pilgrimage



The final national event of the Ordinariate year is a national pilgrimage to the Shrine of Blessed John Newman in Birmingham. We have been offered use of the Birmingham Oratory on the day nearest to Cardinal Newman's feast day. The pilgrimage begins at St Chad's Cathedral on Friday 7th October, with Sung Evensong and Benediction at 6:30 pm —the Cathedral Choir providing the music. This will be followed by a reception and a talk on Blessed John Henry Newman by Father Ian Ker, who has written several books on Blessed John Henry Newman.

On the Saturday we meet at the Birmingham Oratory. Coffee will be available in the Cloister Hall from 9:45. Confessions from 10:15 in preparation for Mass at 11am followed by veneration of the relics. Packed lunches may be eaten in the Upper Cloister Hall where at 2:30 there will be an address by the Rev'd Dr. Stephen Morgan and a talk on Newman and the Oratory by the Provost.

Friday, 5 August 2016

18th Sunday of the year


The parable of the rich fool, Rembrandt

What are the things that really matter in life? That is the uncomfortable question that the readings for this Sunday pose to us. The first reading comes to us from Qoheleth, or Ecclesiastes (“the Preacher”) as his Greek nickname goes, with the well-known refrain that goes “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity”. Then (leaping into his second chapter, for some reason), this deep and radical thinker offers an example of this “vanity”: “a person who has expended effort and wisdom and expertise and skill – and he leaves his portion to someone who has not put in the effort. This is also vanity and great wickedness”. Some scholars point out that Qoheleth hardly ever mentions God; but you can do God’s work without speaking of the Almighty, and the task of the Preacher is to expose the foolishness of the pursuits to which we normally give our energies, in order that we may find our way to God.

That is a point made more explicitly in the Psalm for this Sunday, setting the folly of human pursuits against God’s greater purposes (“You turn human beings back into dust, and say, ‘Go back, sons of men’.”) and different perspective (“In your eyes a thousand years are like a single day, yesterday...a dream in the night”). So for God, all our passionate human endeavours are “like grass that flourishes in the morning – in the evening it withers and fades”. So we need God’s perspective, to find out what really matters: “Teach us to number our days that we may gain a wise heart”, and then, in a prayer that comes from the heart, “fill us in the morning with your love”. It is God, and God alone, who can “prosper the work of our hands”.