Wednesday 31 October 2018

I SAW A HUGE MUMBER


PRAYER PAUSE


Thursday 1 November 2018, All Saints

I SAW A HUGE MUMBER

Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”After that I saw a huge number, impossible to count, of people from every nation, race, tribe and language.” (Revelations 7:2-11)


Reflection. November 1 is a moment to think about the nillions who have inhabited and will inhabit this earth. They are “impossible to count.” Theses are God’s people, destined to live with him in a way that totally fulfils their deepest lomgings.  We are that people and the Lord has given us a time and a place to live where we can prepare, personally and as a people, bound to one anotrhe,  We are to work at this astonishing project  and rejoice in the striving of millions so that we all achieve this goal.

Prayer. Lord, as we rejoice with those who have gone before us we ask that we too will be “of that number” and  will use our time now to prepare the way. Amen.

















Tuesday 30 October 2018

TRY YOUR BEST


PRAYER PAUSE


Wednesday 31 October 2018, Alphonsus Rodriguez

TRY YOUR BEST


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Try your best to enter byythe narrow dor.” (Luke 13:20-30)


Reflection. As Jesus journeyed steadily towards Jerusalem and the contest that awaited him thre, people were beginning to sense that the coming of the kingdom of God was not goig to happen easily.  Jesu reinforces this perception.  Many, he says, presume they can follow their own agenda and that somehow that will fit with God’s plan for his kingdom. Well, it might.  But then, again, it might not!. A person has to strive to test his or her way of life and see if it really does accord with the coming of the kingdom.  If it doesn’t, we are not going anywhere.  So, as Jesus draws closer t Jeusalem his message is: Do not presume. Test your way of proceding and see if it is aligned with the Spirit of God.

Prayer. Lord, help us to be sensitive to our own way of life and give us the courage to change where change is needed. Amen.

















Monday 29 October 2018

THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS LIKE YEAST


PRAYER PAUSE


Tuesday 30 October 2018, Dominic Collins


THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS LIKE YEAST


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”The kingdom of God is like the yeast a woman took and mixed with three measures of flour.” (Luke 13:18-21)


Reflection. Jesus gives us two simple parable: the kingdom of God is like a mustard seed or like yeast or leaven. Brief pictures packed with meaning. Once the woman starts mixing the yeast it disappears.  It becomes one with the flour and transforms the flour,  God’s action in the world is not easily seen.  It is there constantlytransforming people and society but you hardly notice it.  It is an image that gives us huge confidence.  Things often look pretty bleak.  We seldom turn from hearing the daily news with a feeling of elation.  Quite the opposite.  But despite it all, God is at work, silently transforming everything through the hearts of all those who welcome his mixing.


Prayer. Lord, help us to receive the leaven of you presence in our relations and actions. Amen.
















Sunday 28 October 2018

COME AND BE HEALED ON WEEK-DAYS


PRAYER PAUSE


Monday 29 October 2018


COME AND BE HEALED ON WEEK-DAYS


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”There are six days when work is to be fone.  Come on one of those  and not on the Sabbath.” (Luke 13:10-17)


Reflection. When the synagogue official said these words there must have been an outburst of laughter.  Imagine a notice at the entrance to a hospital COME ON WEEKDAYS ONLY. Luke is ridiculing the attitude of those who would not budge from theirstance of tight control of the social political order.  Any breach, any suggestion of change and the whole thing would come crasking down.  Jesus had not come to detroy but to help people change and see that their traditional ways were only a preparation fo something much better, something that would bring them true freedom.  But the controllers wouldn’t budge.


Prayer. Lord, help us break down the barriers in ourselves and in our society that oppose change and development. Amen.
















Saturday 27 October 2018

ONE ZAMBIA


ONE ZAMBIA
It is Independence Day.  Zambians are celebrating 54 years of freedom. There is pride but also a knawing sense of unease.  Where are we now?  They have not been years of rapid advance. More like the lumbering pace of an unwieldy creature of the wild. Less like the stride of an impala. More like the waddle of a hippo. 
There has been progress – in education and health and those intangible things; confidence and identity. Yet there is also a feeling of helplessness.  People do not believe the government is there for them but for itself and its close associates. The people it was elected to serve do not feel they are served,
This is a diagnosis not only of Zambia.  It is a default position in much of the continent.  People have no sense of their power.  In other countries leaders, who do not listen to the people who chose them, are dismissed by the voters.
Yes, it takes time to develop civic leverage among voters. But 54 years?  What is that essential ingredient that fires up a government to deliver justice to its people? What is it that shifts a people from passivity to engagement?
Recently I walked to the local shopping mall. They are adding a filling station and the builders’ barrier encroach on a busy road.  A walker has to navigate between the rush of cars and the barrier.  In another country the builders would be brought to court.  But we shrug our shoulders and laugh at the hazards of walking in Lusaka.  We continue to “improve” our roads for vehicles and drainage. But the humble walker continues to negotiate the thin line between car and ditch.
There is a story in Mark’s gospel about a blind man sitting by the side of the road. He hears commotion and is curious. He is told to keep quiet but he refuses. “He shouts all the louder.” And he is heard.  Can we learn from him?
28 October 2018                     Sunday 30 B
Jeremiah 31:7-9                       Hebrews 5:1-6               Mark 10:46-52
     

Thursday 25 October 2018

INTERPRETING THESE TIMES


PRAYER PAUSE


Friday 26 October 2018


INTERPRETING THESE TIMES


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”You know how to interpret the face of the earth and the sky.  How is it you do not know how to interpret these times?” (Luke 12:54-59)


Reflection. The whole life of Jesus is one urgent drive to get across to people that a new age has come: an age of fulfilment of all their deepest hopes and desires. There is now an opportunity to bring to birth the hidden, unformed, confused longings  of the heart. “Our hearts are restles …” But,  “Come to me and you will find rest.”  Yet we are often satisfied with a superficial non-threatening interpretation.   What the saints do is to show us the radical nature of what Jesus is calling us to.  We cannot get there by our efforts alone.  He promises to show us the Way.


Prayer. Lord, help us to follow the way you are inviting us. Amen.
















Tuesday 23 October 2018

THE SERVANT OF CHRIST’S MISSION


PRAYER PAUSE


Wednesday 24 October 2018, Zambia Independence Day


THE SERVANT OF CHRIST’S MISSION


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”I have been made the servant of the gospel by a gift of grace from God.” (Ephesians 3:2-12)


Reflection. We are completely dependent for the Good News – or any good news – on the commitment of others to us.  In prison I meet people who seem to have no idea that there is another world other than the drudgery and fear which are their constant compamions.  Today is Zambia’s 54th Independence Day and the reflection naturally arises why does it take so long for the good news of freedom to enter the spirit of people? There is another bridge to cross before the external freedom gained on 24 October 1964  becomes rooted in a confidence that demands and struggles for a society that is truly just. Those of us who know something of the Good News are called to hasten that day,


Prayer. As we celebrate the gift of freedom,Lord, help us commit ouselves to creating it in reality in or society. Amen.
















Monday 22 October 2018

YOU TOO ARE BEING BUILT INTO ONE BODY


PRAYER PAUSE


Tuesday 22 October 2018


YOU TOO ARE BEING BUILT INTO ONE BODY


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”All grow into one holy temple in the Lord; and you too, in him, are being built into a house where God lives, in the Spirit.” (Ephesians 2:12-22)


Reflection. With historical hindsight it is clear that humanity is evolving towards unity.  500 years ago we hardly knew of other parts of the world, leave alone the people living there.  Today, we know everywhere and have contact, if we wish, with everyone.. And there is a political and economic dynamic towards unity.  Brexit and Trump seem abberations, and will be seen in time as temporary halts in the powerful trend towards unity. For those who believe in God’s plan, it is all written there in our DNA and our scriptures.


Prayer. Lord, help us to welcome every movement that brings us together.  Teach us to be patient with one another on the way and open our hearts to welcome one another. Amen.
















Sunday 21 October 2018

I WILL PULL DOWN MY BARNS AND BUILD BIGGER ONES


PRAYER PAUSE


Monday 21 October 2018, John Paul II


I WILL PULL DOWN MY BARNS AND BUILD BIGGER ONES


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”I have not enough room to store my crops. I will pull don my barns and build bigger ones..’” (Luke 12:13-21


Reflection. Is it not astonishing how we sometimes allow wills to break our relationships with one another - especially in families?  A will is disputed and as a result people don’t talk to one another.  Jesus calls it avarice. One can think of softer words like”just claiming what is due to me.”  But it all takes us very far from Jesus other wrods, “Blessed are the poor in spirit,” where he wants us to be free of anything that gets in the way of reelationships. Money, land, houses can do that.  And these desires can sicken the soul and taint our whole life. 


Prayer. Lord, while we may have disputes  among us, may they never be allowed to break down realtinships between us. Amen.
















Saturday 20 October 2018


WILLINGLY

Why, suddenly, in October, do we have a Good Friday reading?  We have “done” Good Friday for this year.  We have put it behind us and got on with normal life.  Well, I am obviously being playful.  We are never “done” with Good Friday;  it follows us through the year.
The “offending” reading is, “The Lord has been pleased to crush him with suffering” (Isaiah 53).  I do not know what the original Hebrew says but the Lord is never “pleased” to crush us.  But he is pleased to see us win against the sting of suffering, to “measure ourselves against the obstacle.”  A priest friend of mine visited a sick person this week and, after anointing her, he asked her if she could offer her suffering in union with Jesus for the sake of others? “Willingly”, she replied. My friend was touched by her instant response.
God did not invent suffering.  Nobody really knows where it came from. The Adam and Eve story is hardly satisfying. What we do know is that it can be, if we can accept it in the right frame of mind, healing and purifying. Just this week people have been shocked by the apparent murder of an Arabian journalist and his alleged killers are scurrying around in an unseemly effort to explain it away.  But they are rattled and his death may have a profound effect for good in the end.
I was thinking of this recently when I heard from someone who knew John Bradburne well of his (John’s) fury when he first saw Mutemwa.  The people with leprosy were an appalling sight then (1969).  Yet John knew instantly that he would stay there with them and that it would lead to his violent death. Though there were bright moments, the next ten years were dominated by struggle, suffering, rejection and finally he was shot dead.  Since then countless people have been drawn closer to God through the witness of John.
We will never fully understand it but suffering releases something in us and opens us up – or can do – to the great reality with which we are surrounded (Hebrews 12:1) but which is often hidden from us. John could have walked awy that day in 1969 and we would have known him simply as a deeply spiritual man, nothing more. But he opted to stay, “willingly” though his nature rebelled against it, and in staying he opened the door to many.  And in the process he is now on the way to that honour the Church gives, for the sake of others, to her heroes of the spirit; public acknowledgement as a saint..<       
21 October 2018            Sunday 29 B
Isaiah 53:10-11              Hebrews 4:14-16           Mark 19:35-45

Thursday 18 October 2018

TREADING ON ONE ANOTHER


PRAYER PAUSE


Friday 19 October 2018, The North American Martyrs


TREADING ON ONE ANOTHER


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”The people were gathering in their thousands so that they were treading on one another.’” (Luke 12:1-7)


Reflection. The people were attracted to Jesus and came in large numbers to see him and hear him.  But he was not impressed.  He warns them sharply about the leaven of the Pharisees who enjoyed the honour of the people and wanted an external conformity to law and custom.  The Pharisees wanted a quiet world order where everything would go along nicely and their comfort would not be disturbed.  But Jesus had come to harrow the world and shake it up so that it attains its real purpose.  It would involve contradiction, suffering and death. The Pharisees wated none of this.  The North American martyrs, and every follower of jesus who triesd to live in his spirit, does,


Prayer. Lord, may we understand the fruitfulness hidden in our sufferings and willingly accept them when we have done all we can do to avoid them. Amen.
















Wednesday 17 October 2018

THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS NEAR TO YOU


PRAYER PAUSE


Thursday 18 October 2018, Luke


THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS NEAR TO YOU


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Te kingdom of God is near to you.’” (Luke 10:1-12)


Reflection. Who was Luke and how did he get into the action? Answer: the same way as we all do.  He was drawn to the words of the apostles and joined them and at some point became part of Paul’s staff. He had a amazing talents, Not only did he give us his gospel and the Acts but he did so in a way that enriches our understanding of God’s plan in a unique way. He draws out the link with the Hebrew scriptures  in the figures who introduce the gospel – Zechariah and Simeon and the others – and he follows through into the future with all the characters in Acys culminating with Paul’s arrival in Rome.  And his writing is full of the compassion of God, his forgiveness and healing and he teaches us what it is to be a disciple starting with Mary. It is an astonishing legacy from and otherwise unknown Greek./


Prayer. Lord, as we thank you for the gift of Luke, help us too to use all our gifts in the service of your people. Amen.
















Tuesday 16 October 2018

IF YOU ARE LED BY THE sPIRIT


PRAYER PAUSE


Wednesday 17 October 2018, Ignatius of A|ntioch


IF YOU ARE LED BY THE sPIRIT


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”If you are led by the Spirit no law can touch you.’” Galatians 3:15-25)


Reflection. The letter to the Galatians is like a shout of Paul at his contemporaries: ‘Wake up! The Spirit can change you.  Stop looking back to the “security” of your childhood, your home, your “Egypt” where you were satisfied with the “fleshpots”.  Realise that God has announced in Jesus  a new world where men and women can achieve the fullness of their own personal lives, their gifts and value!’  The ‘safety ‘ of sticking to secure ways, of accepting things as they are, is so strong for us .  The ‘losing oneself’ in order to find oneself seems so risky. So we settle down for a second class life, comfortable and secure. “Are you Galations so much out of your mind,” Paul cries at one point, that you abandon the inheritance won for you by Christ?


Prayer. Lord, teach us the joy of Christian freedom. Amen.
















Sunday 14 October 2018

OLD TATI REVISITED


OLD TATI REVISITED
It was an emotional experience for a Jesuit to be part of the Francixtown diocese celebration at Old Tati, the site of the first Jesuit mission of the 1879 venture to the lands bordering the Zambezi. Anold Moyo and I were selected to respond to the invitation of Bishop Frank Nubuasah to be representatives of the descendants of the two Jesuits buried there.  The bishop wants to honour them as the first missionaries to arrive to preach the gospel, celebrate the Eucharist and open a small school.
The mission lasted just six years but this fragile start to evangelisation with the apparent casualness of the two deaths – Fr Charles Fuchs (40) died of malaria before he did anything and Fr Anthony de Wit (59) was jerked from a horse in a freak accident and broke his neck – did nothing to dampen the spirits of the hundreds who made the journey there on the 13th of October.
Parishioners from all over the diocese and visitors from neighbouring countries came together in the bush. We followed tracks wandering through the thickets of vicious thorns without a homestead in sight. An industrious retired army man has started a market garden in the vicinity and there is a primary school not far away but these were the only visible settlements in what looked like a desolate land.
Anold and I were asked to say some words to mark the Jesuit connection and Rob Burret, archaeologist, historian and one time teacher at St George’s College Harare, gave a brief explanation of the site emphasising we had pitched our tent unknowingly at the very site of the former Jesuit chapel. Later he took a few of us to see the place where the old Jesuit residence stood and I picked up a few shards of coloured glass and some rusted nails as evidence.
The Emeritus 91 year old Bishop of Gaborone, Boniface Setlalekgosi, was also there and spoke movingly, as nearly every speaker did, of the sacrifice of those early men who left home and security for a land they did not know and a people who were strangers.
I sensed a great desire, especially in Bishop Frank, to affirm the link with those early efforts.  They were fruitless to the human eye but they were the seed which dies. At the time the rulers of both the Tswana and the Ndebele were not interested in the gospel, at least as preached by Catholics,  and, in Botswana, they had to wait another forty or more years before the Society of the Passionists arrived. But none of this mattered in October 2018.  The key fact was the starting of a mission by men sent by Pope Leo who wanted the Tswana and the Kalanga to be included fully, as they had long been in preparation, among the people of [D1] God.

 [D1]Ikly of God.

Thursday 11 October 2018

ALL THE PAGANS WILL BE BLESSED


PRAYER PAUSE


Friday 12 October 2018


ALL THE PAGANS WILL BE BLESSED


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”God said to Abraham, ‘In you all the nations will be blessed.’” Galatians 3:7-14)


Reflection. It is rare for one of us to make life choices before we are out of our teens.  Paul calls this early part of our life “the law”. It is true for each of us and true for humanity.  People – and the Jews were representative- go through life with a code of rules, disobedience to which carried expternal sanxcions..  Paul now in his letter to the Galations explainsd what Jesus did for us in terms of our growing up, making choices, choices that bring freedom, maturity and happiness.  Pope Francis calls it the “Joy of the Gospel” – as distinct from the fear of the law..  Our daily readings constantly call us to make a choice for the gospel over and over again until it becomes part of us and then true freedom and happiness is ours.


Prayer. Lord, help us to choose the gospel as our way to freedom. Amen.
















Tuesday 9 October 2018

HALLOWED BE YOUR NAME


PRAYER PAUSE


Wednesday 10 October 2018


HALLOWED BE YOUR NAME


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Our Father, you who are in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come.” (Luke 11:3-4)


Reflection. When Jesus was giving us the Our Father why did he not say, “Our Father, who are in heaven teach us to know you and  love you in all things.” Maybe it was because love is shown in action and he went straight to this: may your reign come. This can only come about through love and forgiveness and so this concise Christian prayer simply consists of praise, prayer for the coming of the kingdom, strength and courage to bring this about and fogiveness of one another along the way.  That is enough.  None of this can be achieved without love and the striving to achieve it is an expression of our love.


Prayer. Lord, grant us the courage and imagination to bring about your reign. Amen.
















Monday 8 October 2018

MARY SAT DOWN AT THE LORD’S FEET


PRAYER PAUSE


Tuesday 9 October 2018


MARY SAT DOWN AT THE LORD’S FEET


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Martha welcomed the Lord into her house.  She had a sister called Mary who sat down at the Lord’s feet and listened to him.” (Luke 10:38-42)


Reflection. Implicit in the mission of Jesus was his desire that men and women  would “enjoy life to the full.” People before his time could only develop their humanity to a certain level. Jesus opened out, in his person, the possibility for people to become fully human.  We sense it in Mary, his own mother.  We also sense it here in this woman who reached beyond the everyday cares, which fill our lives, to something beyond which is there as a capacity in each of us but which we often never develop..  Jesus himself was “so human that he was divine” (Ruth Burrows) and he longs to share this complete humanity with us.  We can reach it if we too “sit at his feet and listen.”  


Prayer. Lord, help us to desire to sit at your feet and listen to what you want to say to our hearts. Amen.
















Sunday 7 October 2018

THEN A SAMARITAN TRAVELLER CAME BY


PRAYER PAUSE


Monday 8 October 2018


THEN A SAMARITAN TRAVELLER  CAME BY


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”A Samaritan traveller who came upon him was moved with compassion when he saw him’”(Luke 10:-25-37)


Reflection. It was shocking to his Jewsih listeners that Jesus chose foreigners as witnesses of the coming kingdom of God. Here it is a Samaritan. At other times it was  a Syro-Phonician woman or a Roman soldier.  The reign of God breaking into the world would remove the barriers between people and announce the community of humankind.  We are still struggling to absorb Jesus’ message.  We still “pass by on the other side” when he hear of the poor, the migrants, people living with disabilities or those whose lives are terminated before they are born,  But there are many sogns too of great compassion and heroic efforts to reach out to those suffering.  The struggle continues to live the parables of jesus.


Prayer. Lord, give us a compassionate heart to stop and reach out to those who are suffering. Amen.
















Saturday 6 October 2018

EQUALITY YES, BUT NOT YET


EQUALITY YES, BUT NOT YET
The Nobel Peace Prize has just been awarded to Denis Makwege and Nadia Murad for what they have done to alert the world about the use of rape as a weapon of war. Makwege is a Congolese do­­­­­­­­­­ctor from Bukavu who has helped countless women who were not only raped but also brutally mutilated by soldiers from all sides in the wars of the Great Lake region.  It is a grotesque abomination to use sheer force in this way on women.
Physical violence of this sort is an extreme example of an attitude that is full of hatred for others and has lost all sense of our common humanity and our common home.   There are those today who deny the existence of hell. Well, this is hell.  We may look at it from a distance and say it has nothing to do with me, but we are all contaminated.
In our modern age of reason and enlightenment nations have reflected on their beliefs. The French proclaimed liberty, equality and fraternity (community of men and women). And the Americans wrote: “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all are created equal.”  Yet our high ideals often remain only ideals that are ignored.    
The good news is that the truth about our equality is pushing forward every day. Huge numbers of Americans who watched their Senate Judiciary Committee last week heard allegations of sexual violence against a women by a man who wants to be a Supreme Court Judge.  And recently I was in Ireland where Pope Francis’ was encouraging people to live the values of family life against the background of outrage in the media about clerical abuse of vulnerable people, most often children, and the subsequent cover up.
It is good that so much that is hidden is coming into the open. It is painful and it will get worse as revelations emerge in countries where the truth is still hidden. When it does happen it will be horrible but it will also be purifying and wholesome.  The pope himself is the visible focus of much anger simply because he is pope.  He is also the focus of all those who have hope that this agony in the garden will lead to new life for the Church and for society everywhere.  He carries the pain and the hope of many. The tsunami is only beginning. What will it be like when the waters of devastation subside?  This week I heard a bishop compare what is happening to the Reformation in the sixteenth century when the Church was torn asunder by her own members.
In all of this the Church is a sign.  At the moment it is a sign of confusion and despair – like the disciples who ran away during the passion and deserted Jesus.  It is also a sign of something new arising from the blindness and mind-set that pushes back against any effort to expose them. 
In the midst of his passion Jesus stood there before Pilate who announced, “Ecce! Behold the man!”  Little did he know what he was saying, “This is the One.”  This is the One who gives the way to a lost world. “In the beginning God made them male and female,” he says, “and they are one.”
An interviewer said of Mukwege, “For someone who has witnessed so much cruelty and suffering, Dr. Mukwege could be forgiven for not having a very hopeful view of our world. But when I met him in New York last year, I was struck not only by his warmth and gentleness, but also his incredible optimism.  ‘What is keeping me going,’ he said, ‘is really the strength of women. I discovered how women are strong, how women can rebuild, and give hope for our humanity. They have taught me a lot about how we can make our world better, by not only thinking about yourself but to think about other people.”

7 October 2018                                    Sunday 27 B
Genesis 2:18-24                       Hebrews 2:9-11                       Mark 10:2-16



Friday 5 October 2018

FILLED WITH JOY


PRAYER PAUSE


Saturday 6 October 2018, St Bruno


FILLED WITH JOY


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”It was at that time that, filled with joy by the Holy Spirit, Jesus said, “I bless you Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for hiding these things fromt the learned and clever and revealing them to mere children’”(Luke 10:-17-24)


Reflection. We are familiar with Jesus, the man of sorrows and our world is full of sorrows.  But we also get glimpses in the gospel of him fllled with joy.  Here is one occasion and he looks into the future and sees the fruits of the germinating of the faith of his few disciples.. This cause, this mission, is begun. It will not be stopped.  It will grow until in includes all creation in the joy of fulfilment that Jesus now senses.  All the images of seeds and grain sof wheat point to a time where God’s kingdom will be revealed.  As we look around today we see plenty to mourn.  But we also see much to be excited about, much to rejoice over..


Prayer. Lord, fill us too with the joy of the gospel as your purpose reveals itself day by day. Amen.
















Thursday 4 October 2018

WHO LISTENS TO YOU.


PRAYER PAUSE


Friday 5 October 2018


WHO LISTENS TO YOU.


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Anyone who listens to you listens to me’”(Luke 10:-13-16)


Reflection. It is alarming that Jesus hands over his work to us, to me.  He relies on me..   There is no one else.  If I succeeed, he succeeds.  If I fail, he fails.  We end our prayers, “through Christ our Lord.” And it is true:.everything we do is through his grace.  But we do it. The Lord says to us, “£through you”. “I am the vine but you are the branches and it is the branch that bears the fruit – not the vine.. We are locked into a covenant with one another to help each other to travel the way or we hinder each other so that some trip and fall.

Prayer. Lord, may we be instruments of your peace. Amen.
















Wednesday 3 October 2018

VERY NEAR.


PRAYER PAUSE


Thursday 4 October 2018, Francis f Assissi


VERY NEAR.


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Cure those in it who are sick and say, ‘the kingdom of God is very mear to you’”(Luke 10:-12)


Reflection. Francis of Assissi made a huge impact on his contemporaries as shocked them into realising the force of these words of Jesus we read today. John Bradburne did something similar in our own time.. Francis did not tell the people of his time something new.  It was all there already in the revelation of the gospels.  But he lived it in such a vivid way that they sat up and connected the words they had often heard with the experience of seeing someone living these words. It amazed them.  And today’s celebration of Francis invites us to share that amazement and to live that nearness of the kingdom.


Prayer. Lord, may we have a deep sense of the nearness of the kingdom. Amen.
















Tuesday 2 October 2018

THE FOXES HAVE HOLES.


PRAYER PAUSE


Wednesday 3 October 2018


THE FOXES HAVE HOLES.


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”Foxes have holes and the birds of the air their nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” (Luke 9:57-62)


Reflection. Jesus gives us three short dramatic images today to underline the urgency of giving ourselves to being the presence of God in the world and “soeading the news of his kingdom.”. To be baptised is to commit oneself to this work and sometimes we are given dramatic examples to light our way – though not necessarily to literally follow.  Only yesterday I heard  a description of how John Bradburne arrived at Mutemwa for the first time in 1969, driven there by Heather Benoy, and his his protest to her that he knew he must now forget everything else and devote his life here.  He was horrorfied by what he saw there but he knew that God was granted a wish that was deep down within him even if  - on the surface – he was repulsed by what he saw.


Prayer. Lord, help us, each in our own way, to embrace the call you give us, even if itt seems very like the cross you carried.  Amen.
















Monday 1 October 2018

THEIR ANGELS.


PRAYER PAUSE


Tuesday 2 October 2018, The Guardian Angels


THEIR ANGELS.


Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading ”I tell you their angels in heaven are constantlyin the presence of my Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 18:1 ,,,10)


Reflection. In the days bridging September and October we have two feasts of angels: the archangels on the 29th and the Guardian angels on the2nd.  I suspect I am not the only priest who finds it hard to say something helpful on these occasions. A symbol of this occurs to me in that the angels on the wall at either side of the altar in my primary school chapel have, I noticed on a recet visit, flown away. The ancients of the Church spoke of them as messengers of God but how do we make sense of that?  Belief in them is well attested in scripture and the Church has always honoured them.  Perhaps we can simply say our ancestors wanted to be concrete about the constant action of God in our lives, inspiriing and forwarning us and that our guardian angel is the particular way in which Gd loves and guides each oneof us in our particular journey.


Prayer. Lord, may we always be attentive to your voice in our conscience. Amen.