Sunday, 29 June 2014

NOWHERE TO LAY HIS HEAD

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Monday 30 June 2014  


NOWHERE TO LAY HIS HEAD


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “Foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” (Matt 8:18-22)


Reflection. This saying of Jesus was in response to someone who said “I will follow you wherever you go.” Jesus said, “Fine. Come! But do you know what you are doing? Do you know that the proclamation of the kingdom of God requires urgency and commitment? You will have to put to one side your own comfort; where you stay, what you eat, how you travel. You will also have to put to one side your own plans, your ambitions – even your own view of who you are. “Seek first the kingdom and all these things will be added on.” We live in the shadow of the demands of the gospel. The more we approach its values the more we experience its freedom.  
  
Prayer. Lord Jesus, help us to seek to live by the gospel as our priority – and believe that if we do everything else will follow. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








The space between

The space between
We had a little guy in the community for people with intellectual disabilities, with which I am connected, who used to get mysteriously ill. Moses was severely brain damaged after being abandoned in the forest near Chinhoyi on the day of his birth. He could not speak or help himself in any way but he made his contribution as a thermometer of the health of the community.
We would take him to the doctor but the doctor could find nothing wrong. He just got ill without cause. Without cause, that is, until we discovered the cause. When people in the community were not getting on and there were quarrels or tension Moses would immediately pick it up. It affected him so much that he became ill. He could not express the tension within him in any other way. When it finally dawned on the community that this was the cause they took pains to settle their differences before they got out of hand. And Moses stopped getting ill.
There is an incident in the book of the Acts of the Apostles (3:1-10) where Peter and John go up to the temple and on the way meet a man who was crippled from birth. He looked to them for alms but Peter said to him, “I have neither silver nor gold but I will give you what I have.” Then he took the man by the hand and helped him to stand up. “Instantly,” we are told, “his feet and ankles became firm and he jumped up and went with them into the temple.”
The incidents are very different: Peter did one type of healing, Moses another. But they were both moments of healing. And healing is what people long for. The most obvious type is physical and modern medicine has made incredible progress in this area. It has also made amazing strides in mental health. There is a third area that resists healing: personal and national relationships, Cures abound but we do not want to try them.
Blaise Pascal once said, “The sole cause of man's unhappiness is that he does not know how to stay quietly in his room.” We are unable to be still, silent, alone. We are unable to enter into the depths of our spirit and listen to the voice that is there. We call that voice ‘conscience.’  And the Spirit of God moves there for those who are attentive. In that quietness we can go deeper than our hurts, our hatreds and our prejudices and recognise, with St Clare of Assisi that, “we are challenged to search the world and rediscover the presence of God in the space between people.” Healing takes place in that space. Do we want to enter it?
29 June 2014               Feast of SS Peter and Paul

Acts 12:1-11               2 Tim 4:6-8,17-18                   Matt 16:13-19  

HE HAS GRANTED US HIS LOVE

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Friday 27 June 2014, The Sacred Heart of Jesus  


HE HAS GRANTED US HIS LOVE


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “Shoulder my yoke and learn from me for I am gentle and humble of heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden light.” (Matt 11:25-30)


Reflection. I once watched a father talking to his dying son. The boy was just six. Their talk was of wild hopes of what they would do together. The father knew his son was dying and he adapted his words to give hope and joy to his child.  The infinite heart of God, so totally beyond our imagining, has adapted his Word so that we can grasp it. He has taken a human heart and become one of us in Bethlehem. He has “granted us his love”(Romans 8) so that we may love. He has opened a way for us so that love and joy makes all things easy and light, Today is the great festival of love, divine love and energy. “If anyone thirsts let him come to me!”
  
Prayer. Lord Jesus, you give us a heart so that we may receive your love. You give us a heart so that we may love one another and find you in one another and one another in you. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Wednesday, 25 June 2014

A DEEP IMPRESSION

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Thursday 26 June 2014  


A DEEP IMPRESSION


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “His teaching made a deep impression on the people because he taught them with authority, and not like their own scribes.” (Matt 7:21-29)


Reflection. “To teach with authority!” I hope we can say that we can remember at least one teacher who made a deep impression on me. I can recall one who was fascinated by his subject and conveyed his own enthusiasm to me. You feel yourself drawn forward to new horizons; you expand your consciousness. The word ‘authority’ comes from the Latin ‘augere,’ to grow. A person in authority – any kind of authority; in the family, school, church, business or government – is there to help people to grow and expand their experience. The task is to touch that vital part in a person where energy is released and excitement is generated. Isn’t that what ‘making an impression’ means? The opposite is ‘control and power’ over people which suppresses that vital spark and leaves us less human.    


Prayer. Lord Jesus, we thank you for the people who have ‘made an impression’ on us in our lives. Help us, in our turn, to be so authentic and true that others pick up the spark of life from us. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








BY THEIR FRUITS YOU WILL KNOW THEM

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Wednesday 25 June 2014  


BY THEIR FRUITS YOU WILL KNOW THEM


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “A sound tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor a rotten tree good fruit … you will be able to tell them by their fruit.” (Matt 7:15-20)


Reflection. Sometimes Jesus used to say the most obvious things but still the message does not get through. A person may be pretty or handsome, qualified or powerful, but at the end of the day the question is what has she or he done? What effect have they had? Has anything changed as a result of their life? And this does not mean that a person should worry about the results, how things actually work out. They may end in disaster, as they did for Jesus. But is the tree sound? Is the person good? That is the question. Is he or she living their life for others, generously searching for ways of doing what they have to do each day in the most imaginative attentive way? That is all. The rest is not their business. Who eats the fruits is not the concern of the tree.


Prayer. Lord, teach us to be generous and not to count the cost or calculate the benefits. Let us do what we are called to do and leave the rest to you. Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Monday, 23 June 2014

TURN THE HEARTS OF FATHERS TOWARDS THEIR CHILDREN

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Tuesday 24 June 2014, St John the Baptist  


RENTURN THE HEARTS OF FATHERS TOWARDS THEIR CHILD


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “With the spirit and power of Elijah, he will go before him to turn the hearts of fathers towards their children and the disobedient back to wisdom.” (Luke 1:-17)


Reflection. Besides Jesus and Mary, John the Baptist is the only one who has his birthday celebrated. The gospels carry brief but powerful messages of his witness and we could choose for today this one about “turning the hearts.” It turns upside down the normal understanding of obedience – children towards parents. It basically says parents should be obedient to their children. The meaning is clear: parents have the task of handing on to their children the heritage they have received and John reminded his hearers in no uncertain terms what that was. An obvious modern instance is the environment. We are told the full effects of climate change will only hit people later this century – perhaps in eighty years’ time. Well, hardly any of us will be alive then so we needn’t worry. But our children and grandchildren will.  

Prayer. Lord, as we remember John, help us to think of our children and our children’s children. May we leave them the same beautiful planet that we inherited, or one that is even better. Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Sunday, 22 June 2014

LOOK FOR THE THINGS THAT ARE ABOVE

PRAYER MOMENT                           


Monday 23 June 2014,  


LOOK FOR THE THINGS THAT ARE ABOVE


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “Since you have been raised up to be with Christ, you must look for the things that are above.” (Col. 3: 1-4)


Reflection. Forgive me if I depart from the daily readings to reflect on a vision that underlay every aspect of the life of a friend who has just left us. Fr John Dove founded and nourished for more than twenty years a centre in Zimbabwe for adult education and development. He was meticulous in his attention to the daily details of organisation and the care of people while all the time he had this vision of our ultimate goal; “the things that are above.” He wanted to help people grow better crops but ultimately it was so that they could have better homes and better hearts. He was like a person going on a journey who has his eyes on his ultimate destination but all the while he is totally engaged in the daily events that are so many steps on that journey. To be a Christian is not to have a divided heart; it is to be intent on “the Way.”

Prayer. Lord, teach us to set our hearts on your kingdom and use all our energy and imagination in making it happen. Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Friday, 20 June 2014

SET YOUR HEARTS ON HIS KINGDOM

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Saturday 21 June 2014, St Aloysius


SET YOUR HEARTS ON HIS KINGDOM


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “Set your hearts on his kingdom first and all these other things will be given to you as well.” (Matt 6:24-34)


Reflection. Aloysius Gonzaga was born into a noble family and his father was furious when he announced as a teenager that he wanted to become a Jesuit. Aloysius waited until his temper cooled before making his move. He was still in his early twenties in the Jesuits when he died helping plague victims in Rome. John Dove, the founder of Silveira House Chishawasha, who died yesterday, was a military man and an insurance broker and he too sought his way to becoming a Jesuit and lived until he was a month from the age of 92. “Setting our hearts on the kingdom” will mean different things to different people. But the underlying call is to devote oneself to what life calls me to. In pursuing that I will find happiness: “all other things will be given.”


Prayer. Lord, teach us to set our hearts on your kingdom. Help us to turn from selfishness and give our heart and soul and strength to the great vision you have for your people. Amnen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Thursday, 19 June 2014

WHERE YOUR TREASURE IS

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Friday 20 June 2014


WHERE YOUR TREASURE IS


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.” (Matt 6:19-23)


Reflection. The question, “What do you want?” drew a confused answer from the first disciples (John 1:38). They did not know what they wanted. And I suppose if you asked the average church goer today what she wanted you might also get some strange answers. How would I answer the question? Jesus says, “What you do shows what you want.” There is no use saying pious things about love and heaven if, in fact, my energies are often focused on selfish gain. Jesus doesn’t say, “Where your heart is there will you treasure be.” No, he puts it the other way round, “What you actually do shows where your heart is.” And this can give us some confused and even embarrassing answers.  

Prayer. Lord, teach us to purify the intentions of our hearts so that they really reflect the coming of your kingdom. May we use our energy that all we do may begin in you and though you be happily ended. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Wednesday, 18 June 2014

OUR FATHER

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Thursday 19 June 2014


OUR FATHER


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “Elijah was sent to turn the hearts of fathers towards their children.” (Sir 48:1-14)


Reflection. In this striking phrase Ben Sira celebrates the achievements of Elijah and our gospel today (Matt 6:7-15) gives us the Our Father. Can we see a connection? Jesus often refers to “my Father” but after the resurrection it becomes “my Father and your Father” or more simply, as the weight of tradition gives it to us, “our Father.” What a small word, “our”! Yet what an astonishing message it conveys. Jesus is telling us God is not simply the almighty distant unknowable God but he is Father, Abba, Dad. In our families we learnt what a father is and hopefully in the great majority of families it was and is a good experience. A father wants the best for his children and our Father in heaven wants to share with us the fullness of life which he alone can bestow. He has turned his heart towards us in the person of Jesus who is one of us.  

Prayer. Our Father, who art in heaven. … Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








CHARIOT OF FIRE

PRAYER MOMENT           Wednesday 18 June 2014                   CHARIOT OF FIRE

“Now as Elijah and Elisha walked on, talking as they went, a chariot of fire appeared and horses of fire, coming between the two of them; and Elijah went up to heaven in the whirlwind.” (2 Kings 2:1, 6-14)

What are we to make of this dramatic scene of the ‘hand over / take over’ between Elijah and Elisha? Elijah is coupled with Moses in the New Testament as the two great figures of the old; one defining the identity of Israel in the desert and the other forcefully calling Israel to be faithful to that identity. The scene vividly manifests the connection between heaven and earth, between God and his people, and has echoes of the coming of the Son of Man at the end of time. But it also prompts us to reflect that today we are in contact with God all the time if we choose and we need no chariots of fire. We like a bit of drama but we don’t need it; the reality is there before us.

Lord, you made our ancestors in the faith aware of your presence in their lives and dramatically revealed it at times. Help us to know that you are Emmanuel, always with us, and we can live in union with you at all times. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Monday, 16 June 2014

LOVE YOUR ENEMIES

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Tuesday 17 June 2014


LOVE YOUR ENEMIES


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “You have heard it said: you must love your neighbour and hate your enemy. But I say to you; love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” (Matthew 5:43-48)


Reflection. The command, ‘love your enemies’, is so contrary to our way of thinking it seems to be crazy. We look at Iraq and Syria, Kenya and even nearer home and ask what chance has such a command got of being followed. Yet the “craziness” of the gospel can break down barriers and bring peace. When the Christian world sent an army to wrest the Holy Land from the Muslims in the early thirteenth century Francis of Assisi was asked to go with them. But he did not play their game. He made his way unarmed into the presence of the Sultan and addressed him as a brother. The Sultan was deeply moved and recognised the hand of God in this gesture. If such gestures happened in our day and became contagious, they would shake up our world and open the door to fraternity among us.


Prayer. Lord, do not let us brush aside your command to ‘love our enemies’. Help us to see where it applies in our daily life so that we break down the barriers that separate us.  Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Sunday, 15 June 2014

BUT I SAY TO YOU

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Monday 16 June 2014


BUT I SAY TO YOU


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “You have heard it said: An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. But I say to you; offer the wicked no resistance.” (Matthew 5:38-42)


Reflection. We learn early to revenge. If another kid at school insults us or hits us we strike back. It’s normal! And we carry more subtle forms of retaliation into adult life. Revenge – and its more acceptable name ‘self-defence’ is our spontaneous response to any accusation or slight. Yet when Jesus was accused he astonished Pilate by remaining silent (Mark 15:5). What we have here is a breakthrough in human relations which characterises the coming of the reign of God. To be silent is sometimes the most powerful ‘defence’. It deflates the accuser. And when Jesus goes further – ‘if he strikes you on the right cheek offer the other as well’ – he seems to take his message to absurd lengths. Yet there is a nugget of gold here that could change the world.

Prayer. Lord, teach us to be patient in the face of hurtful words and actions against us. Let us not always rush into self-defence. Help us to carry our cross and know its life-giving power.  Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Friday, 13 June 2014

YES AND NO

PRAYER MOMENT                           


Saturday 14 June 2014


YES AND NO


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “All you need to say is ‘Yes’ if you mean yes , ‘No’ if you mean no; anything more than this comes from the evil one.” (Matthew 5:33-37)


Reflection. Jesus is describing the kingdom, the rule of God, the new values that would mark the new way he is announcing. As usual, he goes straight to the heart of the matter. If your life is led by the Spirit you will say what you mean. It may have consequences but you will have peace even if you have to suffer. On the night of the Passion Peter could not do this. He answered the serving girl, ‘No, I do not know the man (Jesus).’ It can be difficult to speak the truth. There can be unpleasant results. So we prefer to lie. We lie a lot. In fact it becomes a normal way of proceeding. Saying the truth would single me out. I would have to stand up for myself. I would be on my own, an easy target. No, it is easier to lie.


Prayer. Lord, imbue us with the values of the kingdom. Give us the courage to speak the truth in our relationships, in our places of work and in all our dealings with others.  Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Thursday, 12 June 2014

THE SOUND OF A GENTLE BREEZE

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Friday 13 June 2014


THE SOUND OF A GENTLE BREEZE


Pause. Be still with Elijah on the mountain in the presence of God.


Reading: “There was the sound of a gentle breeze and when Elijah heard this he covered his face with his cloak.” (I Kings 19:9-16)


Reflection. Unlike Moses surrounded by elders and leading a great crowd, Elijah felt he was “the only one left and they want to kill me.” But he knew that God was with him, not in the mighty wind, not in the earthquake and not in the fire. No, God came to him in a gentle breeze. Elijah’s mission was a hard one and I often think of the many people in Zimbabwe struggling each day “to survive,” especially now that it is cold and the sun is sometimes hidden. We, no more than Elijah, can expect to find God in dramatic manifestations of his power (though many people would like to see these) but in the gentle events of each day, however demanding they may be. We often feel the burden of life, particularly in a country where so few things work. Yet God is always there in his gentle presence.  


Prayer. Lord, help us to have a firm faith in you who are always present in our lives no matter what the circumstances. Let us look for you in gentleness not in anxiety. Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Wednesday, 11 June 2014

GO AND BE RECONCILED FIRST

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Thursday 12 June 2014


GO AND BE RECONCILED FIRST


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “If your brother has something against you, go and be reconciled first and then come back and present your offering.” (Matt 5:20-26)


Reflection. The sudden escalation of civil war in Iraq yesterday is a sharp reminder of what happens when problems are left unresolved. They fester like an unattended wound which eventually causes serious illness. In the new kingdom which Jesus is announcing issues have to be dealt with as soon as they arise. Do not let the sun go down on your quarrel! We see what has happened in Syria and South Sudan and now in Iraq again. And it is the same in our families, in our work places, our country and in our own personal health. How often have we heard of people who “left it too late.” So in the new kingdom do not allow the weeds to grow in your garden. Otherwise you will come out one day and see the wilderness and say, “Ah, it is normal.”   


Prayer. Lord, teach us to have the courage to look ahead and foresee problems before they happen, or at least deal with them as soon as they happen. Amen..
David Harold-Barry SJ








Tuesday, 10 June 2014

HE WAS A GOOD MAN

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Wednesday 11 June 2014


HE WAS A GOOD MAN


Pause. Be still in the presence of God.


Reading: “For he was a good man, filled with the Holy Spirit and with faith.” (Acts 11:21-26)


Reflection. What happens when a great leader leaves the scene? Often his successor struggles. When Alex Ferguson eventually retired from managing Manchester United David Moyes struggled to fill his shoes, failed and was sacked. How do your fill the shoes, or sandals, of Jesus? Or of Paul? How do you take over from someone full of confidence, competence and charisma? The easy answer is you don’t try to copy them. You do it your way. But you make sure you do it. Barnabas is one of those interesting early apostles who was not overawed by Paul. He had a mind of his own and he did things his way. Yet he was faithful to the tradition and shines in the story of the early church as much as any of the founders.
 


Prayer. Lord, help us to be true to what we have received. But teach us also to have confidence to do things our way. To be creative, imaginative and courageous. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Monday, 9 June 2014

SALT OF THE EARTH

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Tuesday 10 June 2014


SALT OF THE EARTH


Pause. Be present on the hillside with Jesus and the crowds.


Reading: “You are the salt of the earth. But if salt becomes tasteless, what can make it salty again?” (Matt 5:13-16)


Reflection. When I was growing up I often heard good people referred to as “the salt of the earth.” It is a powerful image of a person who makes a difference. Our ancestors travelled great distances in search of salt. Now we just go to SPAR. But we know what food is like without salt. It is a struggle to finish it. Jesus uses this image as he introduces the kingdom. True, people are alive and walking around about their business. But where is the energy? Where is the sparkle? The quality that makes a difference? Life can easily become tasteless drudgery. It is not supposed to be like that. The gifts of the Spirit are, “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness …” (Gal 5:22). The one who witnesses to these in his or her life is truly the salt of the earth.


Prayer. Lord, help us to overcome our fear. Help us to witness to your kingdom. Help us to be the salt of the earth. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Renew the face of the earth

Renew the face of the earth
Psalm 104 is a moving description of the wonders and beauty of our planet. Generations have reflected on the gifts the earth provides for our life and prosperity. St Francis saw the sun and the moon and all creation as brothers and sisters.  As the psalm runs its course it concludes, “All of these look to you to give them their food in due season.”  But this is not enough; “You hide your face and they are dismayed; you take back your spirit and they die.” Then comes the verse the church never ceases to utter; “You send forth your spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the earth.”
What is this spirit? We speak of ‘Pentecostals’, ‘born again Christians’ and even ‘Spirit churches.’ Sometimes the underlying message is that there are fast-track churches and slow track, or perhaps off the track, churches! Today is Pentecost and it is moment when we can reflect what really do we mean when we talk of the Spirit.
St Irenaeus, in the second century, likened it to the moisture a woman mixes with the dough and the flour to make bread. Or, he says, it is like the rain from heaven that falls on the dry wood to make it bear fruit. In other words, it is the Spirit that gives life, and here we get into well-worn phrases if we are not careful, phrases that we are so used to that we do not pause to consider them.
What is this life that makes all the difference between a dead body at our feet and a person standing and chatting with us? We call it life and get used to presuming that is a sufficient answer. Jesus spent more than thirty years building on the beauties of psalm 104 to bring out their full meaning. “Life to the full”, another phrase of Irenaeus though he probably got it from St John, does not mean ‘quick fixes.’ We often pray that God will ‘fix’ this or that for us; an illness, a drought, a strained relationship, a violent situation.  But God does not engineer short cuts. We want God to solve our problems but we don’t want the patient daily struggle we have to engage in to do our part in solving those same problems.
To be fully alive, as Raphael Nadal, would no doubt tell us is to struggle against an opponent. To be fully alive is not to be free of tears but to experience joy in the tears. To be fully alive is not to be free of darkness but to experience the light in the darkness. The be fully alive is not to avoid all the little deaths we have to die every day – and the big one that will eventually come – but to find life in death. That is the message of Jesus. The giving of the Spirit was the final act of his mission on earth. The disciples, together with Mary, longed for it in the upper room. We too in our weakness and darkness are to pray for this gift. It is not something we can merit or presume. It is a gift and we have no right to it. It comes from the overflowing kindness of our God who wants to share his life with us.   
8 June 2014                 Pentecost

Acts2;1-11                  I Cor 12:3-7, 12-13                 John 20:19-23

Friday, 6 June 2014

STAY TILL I COME

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Saturday 7 June 2014


STAY TILL I COME


Pause. Be presence with Jesus and Peter at the lakeside.


Reading: “If I want him to stay behind until I come, what does it matter to you? You are to follow me.” (John 21:20-25)


Reflection. We come, finally, to the closing verses of the Acts and of John. Both speak of waiting for the end; Paul in Rome and John wherever he was. So we reach the end of Easter time with Ascension and Pentecost. And we too are left waiting. We can think of the old people we know who spend much of their time waiting. I have an old cousin who wrote to me as she turned 90, “I am crumbling away peacefully and happily.” For most of us in our active years “waiting” is more like the waiters in hotels and restaurants who pay attention to what is happening around them and are ever ready to respond to the demands of the moment. One of the psalms speaks of our life as like a handmaid with her eyes on her mistress, attentive to her call. So our “waiting” today is filled with active attention to the needs of the world around us.


Prayer. Lord, make us attentive and alert to every movement within us and outside, ever intent on responding to your call. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Thursday, 5 June 2014

WHERE YOU WOULD RATHER NOT GO

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Friday 6 June 2014


WHERE YOU WOULD RATHER NOT GO


Pause. Be presence with Jesus and Peter at the lakeside.


Reading: “When you were young you walked where you liked; but when you grow old someone else will take you where you would rather not go.” (John 21:15-19)


Reflection. Ideally, children are free to wander and discover as they wish and young adults are free to choose their path in life. Having made a choice a person finds their earlier freedom restricted and progressively narrowed until choice all but disappears and they are “bound” to the task they have chosen. So it was with Peter as his confusions were resolved and he gave himself totally to the Lord’s business. So it is with us when we focus totally on the life we have chosen. We can describe it as an erosion of our freedom. The fact is it is the opposite. It is the flowering of freedom. To choose and then be utterly bound to that choice is the fulfilment of freedom. We see it in marriage and we see it in the commitment of any professional to their chosen field. It is true of every walk of life.    


Prayer. Lord, teach us to fully engage in the task we are in. Whether it is ideal or not it is my life. Let me find my fulfilment and the coming of your kingdom right there. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Wednesday, 4 June 2014

MAY THEY ALL BE ON

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Thursday 5 June 2014


MAY THEY ALL BE ONE


Pause. Be presence at the last supper.


Reading: “Holy Father, I pray not only for these, but for those also who through their words will believe in me. May they all be one.” (John 17:20-26)


Reflection. As Jesus bids farewell to his disciples he prays that they may “be true” and he also prays that they “be one”. He knew that when people set up anything – a church, a political party – divisions soon enter and energies are spent fighting each other rather than focusing on the goal. We know this. Yet in our concrete situations there are divisions amongst us that we can do something about! They may be in our work place, or our church or in our family among our relations. Just this week I have come across good people who cannot work together. Unity means sometimes giving way to others. It always calls for patience and when Paul describes love (in I Cor 13) the first thing he mentions is patience.  


Prayer. Lord, letus answer your call to unity. Help us to sometimes give way to others and always be patient. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








KEEP THEM TRUE

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Wednesday 4 June 2014


KEEP THEM TRUE


Pause. Be still in the presence of God


Reading: “Holy Father, keep those you have given me true to your name.” (John 17:11-19)


Reflection. As Paul bids farewell to the elders of Ephesus at Miletus (Acts 20:28-38), he tells them, “Be on your guard for yourselves and for all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you the overseers.” He echoes the words of Jesus at his farewell to his disciples, praying that the Father will “keep them true to your name.” The call to be true to the original inspiration of the founder is something every church and every religious community has to face. The Jesuits, for instance, struggled with this after the death of Ignatius. But it is the same for each of us as individuals. We have learnt much. But have we internalised, owned it, so well that we can “be true” even when the going gets tough and the heat is turned up. That is when people waver and become “Christians in name only.”


Prayer. Lord, keep us true to your name. But not to your name only but to all that your name really stands for. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Monday, 2 June 2014

YOU WILL NOT SEE MY FACE AGAIN

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Tuesday 3 June 2014, St Charles Lwanga and the other martyrs of Uganda


YOU WILL NOT SEE MY FACE AGAIN


Pause. Be still in the presence of God


Reading: “I feel sure that none of you among whom I have gone about proclaiming the kingdom of God will ever see my face again.” (Acts 20:17-27)


Reflection. The Ascension period is marked not only by the withdrawal of Jesus but, as we move towards the end of the Acts, by the withdrawal of Paul. I once stood on the spot at Miletus where Paul said farewell to the elders of Ephesus and we read this passage. It was a moving moment. You sense you are part of a huge drama reaching backwards to those days and into the fuure when the “kingdom” will be revealed. And the young Christians of Uganda, in the mid-1880s,  were part of this drama. They too “withdrew” despite all the entreaties of their families, and were never seen again. These days the veil that separates us from God is penetrated and we are encouraged to have a lively sense of how close God is. As the Irish say, “He is no further than the door.”


Prayer. Lord, as we celebrate the martyrs of Uganda so close to Africa Day, draw us closer to the mystery that you reveal, that our life is “hidden in God”. Grant that all the peoples of Africa may draw ever closer to You and find peace and unity in You. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ








Sunday, 1 June 2014

SCATTERING AND GATHERING

PRAYER MOMENT                          


Monday 2 June 2014


SCATTERING AND GATHERING


Pause. Be still at the last supper of Jesus and his friends


Reading: “The time has come when you will all be scattered, each going his own way and leaving me alone.” (John 16:29-33)


Reflection. During the Passion all the disciples scattered. It had happened before in Israel when the people were exiled to Babylon. The people of Syria today are scattered and their children are in trauma. We, each of us, have been “scattered” in our thoughts and way of living and working. Which of the poets was it who said, ‘Human kind cannot take too much reality’? Total engagement in our life tasks, a whole hearted living of the message of the gospel, seems beyond us. Yet Jesus has come to gather the lost sheep of the House of Israel, to gather together the scattered people of God. It is the work of His promised Spirit; to gather the disciples with Mary in the upper room at Pentecost and to gather us, in our thoughts and our scatteredness, into the focused vision of the reign of God.
Am I building relationships in my family? In my community?  Or am I scattering people by my unfocused energy?    


Prayer. Lord, I so easily scatter myself all over the place without focus, without purpose. Help me to gather my thoughts and my energies into creative work for your kingdom. Amen.
David Harold-Barry SJ