[6] LENT 2024 | As I enter into prayer I ask for what I desire

Praying to discover what I truly desire will enable me to realise that even my desires are not totally of my own making – they are seeds planted in my heart by God himself, the one who made me in his image and likeness and with a natural attraction to what is good and holy. Like the two lovers of the Song of Songs, my heart seeks God and God seeks my heart.

Read more [6] LENT 2024 | As I enter into prayer I ask for what I desire

LENT ’23 [1] Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called children of God: a challenge for this Lent

As we receive our ashes, we hear the invitation to conversion, to believe in the gospel. One of our big challenges this year is to believe that praying for peace makes sense. Does my prayer make any difference? Can I be a peacemaker in a world so riddled with serious conflicts?

Read more LENT ’23 [1] Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called children of God: a challenge for this Lent

LENT ’23 [6] No peace without justice, no justice without forgiveness

Someone once said that no relationship is possible without forgiveness, whether it is within a small family or community or within the community of nations. This calls for true wisdom, and even love. Jesus did not regard turning the other cheek in the face of violence as a sign of weakness, but rather an affirmation that evil does not have the final word in human affairs.

Read more LENT ’23 [6] No peace without justice, no justice without forgiveness

LENT ’23 [9] ‘Unless you change your lives you will all likewise perish’: Peace with creation

We have to find ways to live in peace with creation, and do it with urgency. Perhaps the war against creation is the most serious war humanity is waging at present, silently but surely. It might also be the war we can do most about. Let us today pray for peace with creation, for the ability to be peacemakers in this area of life.

Read more LENT ’23 [9] ‘Unless you change your lives you will all likewise perish’: Peace with creation

LENT ’23 [10] Peace and the family

The family is the first and privileged place where we learn how to live in peace amidst our differences. It is where the couple grow in their mutual love, and educate their children to respect the worth of every person. These values, more than being “taught”, are learnt by example in a context of self-giving love capable of accepting those who are different, making their needs and demands its own.

Read more LENT ’23 [10] Peace and the family

LENT ’23 [11] ‘May we never lose the courage to say, “Lord, give us your peace!”’

(Traduzione in italiano ed albanese in fondo alla pagina – This blog post is also translated into Italian and Albanian – please scroll) [11] ‘May we never lose the courage to say, “Lord, give us your peace!”’ These words by Pope Francis really portray the challenge of praying for peace, for it is a prayer…

Read more LENT ’23 [11] ‘May we never lose the courage to say, “Lord, give us your peace!”’

LENT ’23 [13] Go in Peace!

The more I enter into the mystery of God’s unbelievable love for us, for me, the more I understand what Jesus means when he told his disciples, Do this in memory of me. Don’t ever forget my love, find in it your deep peace, discover that your strength lies in letting God’s will become your own.

Read more LENT ’23 [13] Go in Peace!

LENT ’22 [9] Faith and Justice

Does my faith influence my views and attitudes towards refugees and migrants who live and work in my country, on the rights of people of different sexual orientation? Do I accept as inevitable the present inequalities produced in our societies by market forces, or do I see in them something sinister and dangerous? What about my commitment to greater environmental justice?

Read more LENT ’22 [9] Faith and Justice

LENT ’22 [10] He saw and he believed…Blessed are those who believe without seeing (Jn 20: 8, 29)

(Traduzione in italiano ed albanese in fondo alla pagina – This blog post is also translated into Italian and Albanian – please scroll. [10] He saw and he believed…Blessed are those who believe without seeing (Jn 20: 8, 29) In the Gospel of John we never find the noun faith, but always the verb, to…

Read more LENT ’22 [10] He saw and he believed…Blessed are those who believe without seeing (Jn 20: 8, 29)

Conversion [2] The Pilgrim 

Pilgrims are those who move beyond the place they have reached towards a new destination. Not because they are not happy with where they have reached, but because they discover in their hearts this deep desire to go beyond themselves, seeking to discover and do God’s will more fully. We discover that this is what really fills our hearts.

Read more Conversion [2] The Pilgrim 

Conversion [6] To love and serve the Divine Majesty in everything

His conversion led Ignatius to found the Jesuit order which he immediately put at the disposal of the Pope, to be sent where the need was greatest. He was convinced that love ought to find its expression in deeds more than in words, for it actually consists in mutual sharing [SpEx 231]. We will show our love for God by loving and serving him in our neighbour.

Read more Conversion [6] To love and serve the Divine Majesty in everything

Be Reconciled [8] – Jesus, our peace, has broken down the wall of hostility

He took the breaking down of walls of hostility very seriously: he proclaimed that the Father sends sun and rain on everyone, good or bad; he praised the Samaritan as more capable of dealing with his neighbour in need than the priest and the levite. He said there is more rejoicing in heaven for one sinner who changes their ways than for ninety-nine who do not need to (or think they do not need).

Read more Be Reconciled [8] – Jesus, our peace, has broken down the wall of hostility

Be Reconciled [11] – The cry of the Earth is the cry of the poor: be reconciled with creation

Be Reconciled [11] – The cry of the Earth is the cry of the poor: be reconciled with creation  In Laudato Sii, his encyclical about the environment, Pope Francis argues that the ecological crisis is at the same time a social crisis: those who suffer most the effects of climate change and environmental degradation are…

Read more Be Reconciled [11] – The cry of the Earth is the cry of the poor: be reconciled with creation

Stepping Beyond [1] – Reading ‘Fratelli Tutti’ this Advent

This year’s Advent blog will be inspired by Pope Francis’ ‘Fratelli Tutti’, on fraternity and social friendship. We have called our blog ‘Stepping Beyond’, which is what the Pope is inviting us to do: let us step beyond our usual spaces, let us imagine a world where we are all brothers and sisters, friends even, and let us commit ourselves to bring it closer.

Read more Stepping Beyond [1] – Reading ‘Fratelli Tutti’ this Advent

Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [4] – The heavens belong to the Lord, but he has given the earth to all humanity. (Ps 115:16)

(Traduzione in italiano ed albanese in fondo alla pagina) Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [4] – The heavens belong to the Lord, but he has given the earth to all humanity. (Ps 115:16) The first page of the Bible tells us that the earth is God’s gift to us, a gift not to be…

Read more Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [4] – The heavens belong to the Lord, but he has given the earth to all humanity. (Ps 115:16)

Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [6] – Ecological conversion is urgent: what will I change?

(Traduzione in italiano ed albanese in fondo alla pagina) Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [6] – Ecological conversion is urgent: what will I change? Conversion without a change of behaviour is not real. Jesus said that saying ‘Lord, Lord’ without putting those words into practice would be building our house on sand, so that…

Read more Ecological conversion: Why should I change? [6] – Ecological conversion is urgent: what will I change?

Pierre who? – [3] Pierre Favre, Contemplative in Action

‘There came to my mind the manifold afflictions of men: their diseases, their sins and their obduracy, their moods of despair and their tears, disasters, famines, plagues, woes, and other trials… Then with great fervour and a totally new awareness, I wished and petitioned that I might at last be allowed to become the servant and the minister of Christ, who consoles, helps, delivers, heals, liberates, saves, enriches, and strengthens.’

Read more Pierre who? – [3] Pierre Favre, Contemplative in Action

Pierre who? – [4] Pierre Favre, builder of bridges based on love and esteem

His advice is very relevant to our own own times, which often feel as turbulent as the 16th century. We seem to believe that the best way to solve differences is to build walls…. Pierre Favre’s attitude is completely different: the only starting point is love, in deed and truth. Tolerance is not enough: he speaks of having a real esteem for the others.

Read more Pierre who? – [4] Pierre Favre, builder of bridges based on love and esteem

Discernment – [3] The context: the desire ‘to be able to love and serve His Divine Majesty in everything’

One of the first questions I must ask myself is what lies in my heart. Who is at its centre, is it only me, or are the others there too, especially those who suffer and are in need of my help, the ‘little ones’ Jesus identified himself so clearly with? Can I ever discern properly if my heart is closed to migrants?

Read more Discernment – [3] The context: the desire ‘to be able to love and serve His Divine Majesty in everything’

‘This, then, is how you should pray…’ [15] Father, Your Kingdom has come, Christ is Risen!

The women were told that the Risen Jesus was not where they expected him to be but in Galilee, the place of their normal activity. For us too, the Risen Jesus is no longer in the tomb, nor in the Temple, nor in church, but in our Galilee, in our everyday life, in my family, at my place of work, my believing community, my political world.

Read more ‘This, then, is how you should pray…’ [15] Father, Your Kingdom has come, Christ is Risen!

Jesus wept

Cracking the Beatitudes – Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

‘Who cried for the people who lost their lives on a boat? For the young mothers who travelled with their children? For those fathers who were seeking a better future for their families? ‘ This was the ringing challenge to the world’s conscience sounded by Pope Francis from the island of Lampedusa in July 2013.

Read more Cracking the Beatitudes – Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

Cracking the Beatitudes – Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven

Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven I am writing this blog from Albania, a country which was ruled by one of the harshest Communist regimes anywhere, the country which prided itself to be the first to define itself as an atheist state in its constitution.…

Read more Cracking the Beatitudes – Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven

GC36 – (3) The Ignatian leader

Just before Fr Arturo Sosa, the new Jesuit General, starts the celebration of his thanksgiving mass at the church of the Gesu’ in Rome, he will visit the room where the first Jesuit General, St Ignatius, lived for nearly 18 years. There he will listen to the portrait Ignatius himself composed in the Jesuit Constitutions…

Read more GC36 – (3) The Ignatian leader

GC36 – (5) “One cannot give good news with a sad face…ask insistently for consolation”

Last Monday (24th October) Pope Francis, the first Jesuit Pope, addressed the 36th Jesuit General Congregation meeting in Rome. In the next blogs we will reflect on the three ways he suggested the Jesuits can choose to carry out their mission nowadays. The original speech, in Spanish can be found on https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqrK938BBPg with the English…

Read more GC36 – (5) “One cannot give good news with a sad face…ask insistently for consolation”

St Ignatius, Man for others

Ignatius was born in very exciting times. When he was a few months old, Columbus arrived in America, and his conversion in Loyola in 1521 coincided with the first circumnavigation of the globe by Magellan. It was also the time of the Reformation in the Church, set in motion by Martin Luther in 1517. At…

Read more St Ignatius, Man for others

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Longleat-maze.jpg

4. Free to choose well

There were once three groups of persons, who had a considerable sum of money, but they were not sure whether they could keep it. All realised they needed to take a decision, but each group went about it in a different way. The first group were really determined to decide, but somehow never got down…

Read more 4. Free to choose well