Thursday, 30 April 2015

ONLY THROUGH THEM

PRAYER MOMENT 


Friday 1 May 2015, St Joseph the carpenter


ONLY THROUGH THEM


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “The laity are called in a special way to make the Church present and operative  in those places and circumstances where only through them can she become the salt of the earth.” (Vatican II, The Church, #33)


Reflection. The dignity and purpose of work and the rights of workers were expressed and struggled for in the past century and the Church felt she should emphasise that all work also has a goal beyond what we can imagine and describe. The feast of St Joseph the carpenter was part of her answer; the other part was to flesh out her thinking in the documents of Vatican II. Men and women have a beautiful calling to co-operate with God in the building of the New Jerusalem, the City of God, which begins here. Lay people are called to show the light, the salt, of the gospel in their work.  


Prayer. Lord, we thank you for the creativity we can share with you in building a new heaven and a new earth. Help us to see our work in this way and help those whose work is drudgery to raise their eyes to you and your purpose. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Wednesday, 29 April 2015

THE GOD OF OUR ANCESTORS

PRAYER MOMENT 


Thursday 30 April 2015 (internet problems)


THE GOD OF OUR ANCESTORS


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Men of Israel, and fearers of God, listen! The God of our nation Israel chose our ancestors, and made our people great when they were living as foreigners in Egypt.” (Acts 11:13-25)


Reflection. The Spanish have a proverb which Ignatius of Loyola liked: ‘Go in their door and come out yours!” In meeting people he would find out their interests and motivation and gradually move the conversation towards things of the Spirit. Paul did this when he reached Pisidia. He spoke to the Jews of what they knew, their origins and so forth. Then suddenly he introduces Jesus as the culmination of all their longing. Some accepted.some didn’t. It is the same today. The church deeply appreciates the progress of nations but their comes a point where we are invited to go higher, so see where all this progress is pointing to and to sift out what is good and what is not good in that progress.


Prayer. Lord, we rejoice in all the progress our world has made in justice and development. Help us to sift our from all this what comes from you and what comes froom the evil one. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Tuesday, 28 April 2015

THIS SATISFIED THEM

PRAYER MOMENT 


Wednesday 29 April 2015 (This is Monday’s reading but the internet was inaccessible for two days)


THIS SATISFIED THEM


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “This account satisfied them, and they gave glory to God. “God”, they said, “can evidentlygrant the pagans the repentance that leads to life.” (Acts 11:1-18)


Reflection. The gospels tell us of the opposition of the Jewish leaders, the incomprehension of Pilate and the misunderstanding of the disciples. It is a relief to turn to the Acts and see the open mindedness of the Christianj leaders in Jerusalem. It was a big step for them to shift their mindset from ‘God’s message is only for the Jews’ to ‘God’s meassag is for everyone.’ We take it for granted but it was a major change for them. We look for such ‘shifts’ to day, that Jews would respect Palestinians, that Muslims would respect non-Muslims and that we too would rise to the challenges of respecting others that we face. It may take quite a shift but human beings are capable of it.


Prayer. Lord, open our eyes to accept one another, especially those who are difficult to love. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Saturday, 25 April 2015

SHADOWS

SHADOWS
There is a moment in John, chapter 10, when Jesus says, “I know mine and mine know me.” Philosophers have sought to explore how we know and what we know. We are supposed to know things from school and the newspapers but often what we know, to borrow from Plato, is a shadow of what really is there. Shadows do not tell you much of the person. If the sun is high in the sky the person looks short. If it is low, they look tall. But it is the same person.
Migrants look different to those who read about them from a distance in the papers and to those for whom they are family members. But it is the same person. If we knew what a person is, behind the label ‘migrant’ or ‘Muslim’ or ‘Christian’, we would respect them. I heard someone’s description of a migrant last week as, ‘a visitor I have not yet met.’ The description immediately suggests a relationship, however it might be worked out.
Our knowledge of others – even those close to us – is like a shadow. The ancient Greeks used to talk of substance and accidents. Substance is the real thing which you cannot see. Accidents are the things you see: a person is tall or short, old or young, black or white. Plato imagined people sitting in a cave with their backs to the entrance, where the light came from, and looking at a blank wall in front of them. On the wall they saw the shadows of themselves projected. This is what we see in life – just the accidents, the shadows - not the real.
The real, the real person, is harder to see. What lies behind all that my eyes see and my ears hear? When the Good Shepherd says “I know my sheep” he is saying He knows us and there is nothing hidden. He knows the substance. He is not interested in the accidents: how I look, how tall I am, whether I am wearing a nice suit or a wig or the colour of my nail varnish. He knows the person in depth.
This might sound frightening but we should not be frightened. All that he knows about us is not matter he uses against us in judgement. He knows we are weak, but he also knows we are made in his image and are destined to share the fullness of life with him. He is not interested in our faults but in our efforts to follow the gospel, to live generously and truthfully each day. This is what interests him. Others may know a bit about us but he knows us completely.
And what is more he loves us as we are. He loves us more than we love ourselves. He has plans for us which we have no knowledge of. So the Greek philosophers were right. We live in a land of shadows. We do not see the reality. We do not know each other and so we see others as a threat to our way of life. We reject, sometimes even kill, each other, because we are migrants or Muslims or Christians. But He knows us and draws us to himself.
Our response depends on our knowledge. “My own know me.” How do we know Him? It is clear that Mary Magdalene did not know him at first; neither did the two going to Emmaus. They had to grow in their knowledge. So do we! Those early disciples came to know him through listening to him as he revealed the scriptures, touching him and sharing in the breaking of the bread. So do we!
26April 2015                                                   Easter Sunday 4 B
Acts 4:8-12                                                      1 John 3:1-2                                      John 10;11-18


Friday, 24 April 2015

THE LORD WORKING WITH THEM

PRAYER MOMENT 


Saturday 25 April 2015, St Mark


THE LORD WORKING WITH THEM


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “While they going out preached everywhere, the Lord working with them and confirming the word by the signs that accompanied it.” (Mark 16:9-20)


Reflection. The name ‘Nadal’ probably conjurs up for us the celebrated tennis star but it was also the name of one of Ignatius of Loyola’s closest helpers. Jerome Nadal did incalculable work to get the Jesuits on the road. The apostles too had star helpers and one of them was Mark. He understood Peter’s message so well he was able to write a stunning account of the mission of Jesus in which he highlighted the failure of people to understand his message. It was an extraordinarily brave thing to do and opened people’s eyes to see that if the early people got it so wrong at first we should not be surprised if it takes us time to penetrate the deep and life-giving message.


Prayer. Lord, open our eyes to relish the words of the gospel so that we discover its meaning for our lives. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Thursday, 23 April 2015

TRAVELLING TO DAMASCUS

PRAYER MOMENT 


Friday 24 April 2015


TRAVELLING TO DAMASCUS


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Suddenly, while he was travelling to Damascus and just before he reached the city, there came a great light from heaven all round him.” (Acts 9:1-20)


Reflection. Paul’s Damascus has become a figure of speech. We talk of ‘a Damascus moment’ meaning a sudden converson or insight. We probably have them more frequently than we notice. We suddenly understand something while reading or at work. We understand a person in a new way. Life is full of conversions and moments of grace. God longs to open our hearts to them all the time. The great conversions of history – Paul, Augustine, Francis, Ignatius – stand out for us as beacons, clear indicators of what it is for God to take over a person and make them a channel of his creative spirit. The four I mention were already searchers before God touched them in a dramatic way.   


Prayer. Lord, help us to be searchers, curious to know and understand. And come to us with your creative grace and love. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Wednesday, 22 April 2015

DRAWN BY THE FATHER

PRAYER MOMENT 


Thursday 23 April 2015


DRAWN BY THE FATHER


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “No one can come to me  unless that person is drawn by the Father who sent me.” (John 6:44-51)


Reflection. “Drawn by the Father!” You see two people in a class: one is interested in what is being taught, another is not. You find two people in an office; one is interested and wants to help; another is bored and examining her nails. What is it that lights a spark in some and not in others? Jesus had many hearers but few listeners. There seemed to be few who held on to his words and pondered them. Our churches may be full and people may flock to our prophets. But how many let the word penetrate their being and change their life? “Many are called but few are chosen.” Jesus used such words. It is mysterious, but true. Perhaps those few chosen have a great responsibility for the many? To represent them before God and draw them to him?   

Prayer. Father, you draw us to yourself through your Son, Jesus. Help us to draw others to you.  Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















A BITTER PERSECUTON

PRAYER MOMENT 


Wednesday 22 April 2015


A BITTER PERSECUTON


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “That day a bitter persecution started against the church in Jerusalem, and everyone except the apostles fled to the country districts of Judea and Samaria.” (Acts 8:1-8)


Reflection. The honeymoon of the early church was soon over and the death of Stephen marked the beginning of the first persecution. 20 Ethiopians were beheaded or shot in Libya some days ago because they were Christians. This is the latest persecution. Today Jesuits all over the world are remembering this day as the occasion when Ignatius and his first companions bound themselves by solemn vows before an image of Mary into the community we now know as the Society of Jesus. The most treasured title of Mary is ‘mother.’ She is the Mother of Jesus and of all his disciples and of all who, consciously or unconsciously, follow his way. We are so numbed by constant terrible news these days we do not have time to grieve. But we can remember these 20, as she does in renewed sorrow, and with them all those who have died in current tragedies.

Prayer. Lord, your Mother still weeps at the foot of the cross for her suffering sons and daughters. Help us to be peacemakers where ever we are. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Monday, 20 April 2015

THE BREAD OF LIFE

PRAYER MOMENT 


Tuesday 21 April 2015


THE BREAD OF LIFE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “I am the bread of life. The one who comes to me will never be hungry; the one who believes in me will never thirst..” (John 6:30-35)


Reflection. Whether by accident or by design, the shape of the bread we use for the Eucharist is round. So is the world, our planet. Teilhard de Chardin (Google him!), meditating on the Eucharist, saw this world of ours, which we now know is evolving rapidly to ever higher states of consciousness, as gradually transformed into the likenss of God. The simple statement, ‘I am the bread of life,’ is heavily weighted with meaning. Bread stands for any food and food gives us life and growth. This bread takes that first life and growth to unimaginable levels which faith allows us to wonder at. Let us allow the Eucharist to deeply penetrate our being so that we and our society are transformed.


Prayer. Lord, you are the bread of life. Transform us and transform our world into your likeness. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Sunday, 19 April 2015

FOOD THAT CANNOT LAST

PRAYER MOMENT 


Monday 20 April 2015


FOOD THAT CANNOT LAST


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “You are not looking for me because you have seen the signs but because you had all the bread you wanted to eat. Do not work for food that cannot last but work for the food that endures  to eternal life.” (John 6:22-29)


Reflection. Jesus is not saying ‘change your work.’ He is saying do it in the belief that you are building something eternal. How can sitting at a receptionist’s desk answering calls and attending to people be building something eternal? Well, it can. It totally depends on the motive and the attention I give to my work. If all I think of is the money and what I will do this week-end, I am working for ‘food that cannot last.’ But if I do every small bit of my work with imagination, love and devotion, believing that I am contributing to the great plan of God in building his new creation – yes, even by how I answer a phone call, – then I am truly working for the ‘food that endures.’


Prayer. Lord, help us to work in such a way that we believe we are always doing your work with, in and through you so that the Father’s plan for his people, whom he loves, is fulfilled. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















INDEPENDENCE

INDEPENDENCE
Independence! 35 years ago we gathered at Rufaro Stadium to see the old flag hauled down and the new one hoisted. We joined in prayers and listened to speeches. The next day we started making choices.
Those choices have determined our history for 35 years. We cannot - must not - blame anyone else for what has happened over these three and a half decades. We made the choices. Some were good, some not so. If we look at our choices we feel uneasy. We see how many of them were based on self-interest. We scrambled for the fruits, forgetting that fruits only last for a season. The tree needs pruning, trace elements, water. Without them they die and the people with them.
Other choices were based on fear. I do not raise my hand. It is too risky. The consequences are too unpredictable. Better to just sit and wait. So I do nothing. Meanwhile the fear grows and those who perpetrate the fear find it works. So they keep it up. And I get used to being afraid. It is normal. I suppress my anger. I laugh instead. Laughter gives me relief. It numbs the pain. I sing too and I dance and go to church. They all help, help me to forget. 
But I know in my bones, I am just avoiding making true choices; choices that cost me something, choices that are risky. I know too that nothing will change until I find the courage to ask questions, to do something simple that has weight. Like the lady of Selma who sat in a bus.
I am getting used to my comfort. It’s nice. I know things are not OK. But that is other people’s problem. What can I do? I’m just me: one person in a crowd who trudge their way back and forth, back and forth. What difference can I make? Best to keep my mouth shut and get on with my own life. I know others are suffering but that is not my problem. I can’t do anything about it. I am just one person. And anyway it is too risky.
And so we go round and round in circles, going nowhere, persuading ourselves that is all we can do, for now. But what kind of independence is this? Do I rejoice today as I rejoiced all those years ago? Have I lived in the shade all these years, avoiding the sunlight? Avoiding the space to live and breathe and work and be human.      
Thirty five is half of seventy and seventy is some kind of biblical number. Now that we are half way there, is it a time to ponder deeply? Am I going to go on like this? Am I satisfied with what I am living? Is the halfway point a moment to choose again and celebrate Independence again? To celebrate by making choices, choices born of truth and courage?
18 April 2015                                     3rd Sunday of Easter B

Acts 3:13-19                                       1 John 2:1-5                                        Luke 24:35-48 

Friday, 17 April 2015

YOU MUST CHOOSE

PRAYER MOMENT 


Saturday 18 April 2015


YOU MUST CHOOSE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “It would not be right for us to neglect the word of God so as to give out food; you must choose from among yourselves seven men of good reputation, filled with the Spirit and with wisdom; we will hand over this duty to them.” (Acts 6:1-7)


Reflection. Today is Independence Day in Zimbabwe. It is a moment to celebrate and recall how we rejoiced that day 35 years ago when we gathered at Rufaro Stadium at midnight to watch the new flag raised, prayers said and hopes expressed. The next day we started to make choices – some good, some not so good. We have lived with those choices for 35 years and where are we now? This is not a time to moan and recall all the bad choices but to strive from now on to make good ones. I am conscious of one I made when I chose comfort rather than risk. The early church had no explicit instructions from Jesus. They had to make their own choices and live with them. So do we.


Prayer. Lord, help us to make good choices so that the next 35 years will be filled with justice and progress. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Thursday, 16 April 2015

GLAD TO SUFFER

PRAYER MOMENT 


Friday 17 April 2015


GLAD TO SUFFER


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “An so they left the presence of the Sanhedrin glad to have had the honour of suffering humiliation for the sake of the name.” (Acts 5:3-42)


Reflection. The notion of being happy to suffer sounds untterly foreign to us. Yet a mother will rise as often as necessary at night to attend to her teething baby. It was not so different with the disciples in our teething church. It was painful to be flogged and humiliated by the Jewish leaders but the apostles knew this was the way they treated Jesus and he had often said they would fare no better. So we are told they were glad and Paul, in 2 Corinthians 11,  even boasted of the many trials that he endured. Yet when an unexpected trial comes we panic. Our first reaction is; why this? Or; why me? Let me quote words I read recently:          “the logos, (the Word) that gentle non-violent force for truth and reasonableness which took human flesh in Jesus Christ and whose destiny, revelation shows, is not to thrash the world into submission but to suffer all the malice and opprobrium thrown at it and yet rise again, vindicated as God's Truth ... (is) work(ing) through the intricate brokenness of the world, the twistedness of human iniquity, slowly and deliberately carrying out its mission ..."  (Damian Howard, The Tablet, 14 Feb 2015)

Prayer. Lord, help us to see our sufferings bring healing to us and to our world. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Wednesday, 15 April 2015

FACING THE SANHEDRIN

PRAYER MOMENT 


Thursday 16 April 2015


FACING THE SANHEDRIN


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: When the officials had brought the apostles in to face the Sanhedrin, the high priest demanded an explanation.” (Acts 5:27-33)


Reflection. It is relentless. First, Jesus faces the Sanhedrin and gives clear witness before them about who he is and what he has come to do. Now the same is happening to the apostles and they likewise follow in the Lord’s way. Our joy at Easter is the joy of our knowing that we are in this tradition. While we engage with the daily struggles we face we know we are part of the the great movement that is God’s plan for our world. I am called to understand where that point of engagement enters into my life. I cannot be satisfied with greetings; ‘the Lord be with you.’ I have to explore where is the Lord with me and in what precise activities am I following his way and that of the apostles who became lights for the world.


Prayer. Lord, may your Holy Spirit assist me to see where I ‘face the Sanhedrin.’ May I know the moments when I am called to engage in the struggle against evil in myself and in the world. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















AT THIS VERY MOMENT

PRAYER MOMENT 


Wednesday 15 April 2015


AT THIS VERY MOMENT


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Then a man arrived with fresh news. “At this very moment,” he said, “the men you imprisoned  are in the Temple. They are standing there preaching to the people.” (Acts 5:17-26)


Reflection. Three years ago I heard a talk from Fr Ladislaus Orsy, then 91, who told us not to lose heart. “The energy released by the Second Vatican Council is still at work. It cannot be stopped.” The Jewish leaders tried to stamp on the new fire released by Easter but there was no way they could succeed. That energy is at work in us, in the church and in the world today. The early disciples met resistance and people today who struggle for justice meet resistance. We have only to think of our faltering steps to face global warming. But the days of Easter give us courage and hope. There is a divine energy at work and we are called to tap into it. It cannot fail.  


Prayer. Lord, help us to know the energy at work in our world. Help us to lend our strength to the struggles around us for justice and truth by doing whatever we can. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Monday, 13 April 2015

BORN FROM ABOVE

PRAYER MOMENT 


Tuesday 14 April 2015


BORN FROM ABOVE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Do not be surprised when I say: ‘You must be born from above.’ The wind blows wherever it pleases; you hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes form or where it is going. That is how it is with all those born of the Spirit.” (John 3:7-15).


Reflection. In these forty days of Easter we go back to the early chapters of John and retrace his steps. John speaks of a new world ‘from above’ which we now read in the light of our remembrance of the Passion where it clashed with the world ‘from below.’ It is one year today since the girls were abducted in NE Nigeria. What kind of thinking was it to abduct them in the first place and hold them against their will? What right do their captors have to interfere in their lives and possibly ruin them permanently?  This is a dramatic instance but we know the line between ‘from above’ and ‘from below’ runs right through society and right through each of us. We are darkness and light. Our prayer in the Easter season is for the light to overcome the dark.


Prayer. Lord, we rejoice in sharing in your birth ‘from above.’ May it become ever more real in our lives. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Sunday, 12 April 2015

WHY THIS USELESS MURMURING?

PRAYER MOMENT 


Monday 13 April 2015


WHY THIS USELESS MURMURING?


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Why this tumult among the nations, among the peoples this useless murmuring? They arise, the kings of the earth, princes plot against the Lord and his Anointed.” (Psalm 2).


Reflection. The early Christians (Acts 4: 23ff) reflect on the reaction of the Jewish leaders to Peter and John’s cure of a cripple. They become acutely aware of the futility of the leaders’ efforts to block the plan of God – first in the time of Jesus and now in their time. So they quote psalm 8 – “He who sits in the heavens laughs.” They may face all sorts of difficulties and persecutions but the work of God will succeed. The grace of Easter is to recognise that we are part of this work. Just a day or two ago I met a woman I know who is astonished how God is working through her. In the face of enormous difficulties she just shrugs, “This is his work.” She is always cheerful and I think this realisation is the reason. We tend to torture ourselves with worry sometimes. There is no need to do this.


Prayer. Lord, give us the bold confidence that you are with us. ‘The wind blows where it will.’ Help us to listen attentively to your word in other people and in our hearts. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  















Saturday, 11 April 2015

THE HESITATION OF THOMAS

THE HESITATION OF THOMAS
Thomas is an interesting character in the gospel. He seems so impulsive and speaks his mind spontaneously. As the Americans say, ‘what you see is what you get.’ When a threat hangs over the plan of going to visit Lazarus Thomas says, ‘Let’s all go and die with him (Jesus)!’ We admire such enthusiasm and like it when we find it in ourselves.
But the trouble is it didn’t go very deep. When the crunch came all of them, including Thomas, fled and left Jesus alone.  And when the news came that he had risen from the dead and been seen by several people, Thomas was having none of it.
Then the moment comes when Jesus gently chides him and says, ‘put your finger here and see my hands and my side.’ Thomas is overwhelmed by this and has a profound moment of belief and understanding. Our eyes turn to Jesus and we note the gentle way he rebuilds his friends. They were all scattered, physically and mentally, and now he gathers them into a new community. They felt a new unity so strongly that they started to share everything they had.
We pause for a moment to wonder if we, in our time and in our politics, could also have this new moment? Is it possible for us to put our finger into the suffering wounds of people today, to touch the pain of people who are struggling? The first person we want to ‘touch’ is ourselves. One of the key people in the Easter story was Peter who had touched his own miserable, as he sensed it, weakness and denied ever knowing Jesus. He went down into the pit of his own personal psyche and there he met the eyes of Jesus, who ‘turned and looked at him.’ This moment sparked something new in Peter and we next hear of him ‘standing up’ and announced the good news to the people without fear.
Today there are many people who have done this. They stop and allow the pain others suffer to enter into them. Dorothy Day, who died not so long ago, was one such. She was touched by homeless people in New York and their misery during the Great Depression.  She opened a house of welcome for some of the worst victims and over the years her work spread. She used to write about the condition of the workers and went to prison several times for protesting about the immorality of developing nuclear weapons when there was so much poverty and inequality in the world.
She put her finger into the wounds of Jesus.
12 April 2015                         Easter Sunday 2 B

Acts 4:32-35                           1 John 5:1-6                            John 20:19-31   

Friday, 10 April 2015

WE CANNOT DENY IT

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Saturday 11 April 2015


WE CANNOT DENY IT


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “What are we going to  do with these men?” they asked. “It is obvious to every one in Jersualam that a miracle has been worked through them in public, and we cannot deny it. But to stop the whole thing spreading any further …” (Acts 4:13-21).


Reflection. The early Christian writers seemed intent on describing how difficult it was for their contemptaries to believe Jesus had risen from the dead. The Jewish leaders in the Acts behave towards the apostles as they did towards Jesus. They don’t deny the miracles they just close their minds to the implications. But even his disciples have a hard time opening their minds and hearts to the new reality. Mark, the earliest gospel, is insistant on their incredulity and we are invited to think about this. Is it really so easy to believe in the resurrection? Should we not allow our hearts the astonishment and reluctance to believe of those early ancestors of ours in the faith? It is so easy to sing alleluia. The reality of what happened is something else.      


Prayer. Lord, let us believe slowly and deeply about how you have transformed the world and our lives. Do not allow us to live by slogans and easy words. May your word penetrate deep into our being. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














Thursday, 9 April 2015

I’M GOING FISHING

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Friday 10 April 2015


I’M GOING FISHING


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: It happened like this: Simon Peter, Thomas called the Twin, Nathaniel from Cana in Galilee, the sons of Zebedee and two more of his disciples were together. Simon Peter said, “I’m going fishing.” They replied; “We’ll come with you.” (John 21:1-14).


Reflection. What are we to make of John chapter 21? It is ‘tacked on’ to the gospel which had already been concluded. It looks like the disciples had gone back to their old life. Had they abandoned their mission? The fact that they were still together gives us a clue. They had not given up hope. Perhaps they were waiting for clarity about what to do next? What strikes me was that they were getting on with their ordinary tasks and it was in the midst of these that Jesus comes to them and confirms them in their mission. They seem to have been expecting him to come and were overjoyed when he did. As the days of Easter go by we are invited to ponder what it all means and notice Jesus coming to us in our ordinary lives.  


Prayer. Lord, you come to us in the midst of our tasks. Help us to recognise you – ‘it is the Lord.’ Help us to be sensitive to your coming. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














Wednesday, 8 April 2015

WHY ARE YOU SURPRISED?

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Thursday 9 April 2015


WHY ARE YOU SURPRISED?


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: When Peter saw the people he addressed them, “why are you so surprised at this? Why are you staring at us as if we had made this man walk by our own  power or holiness?”. (Acts 3:11-26).


Reflection. Jesus himself seemed surprised at the disciples’ reaction when he appeared to them. “Why are you so agitated, and why are these doubts rising in your hearts?” (Luke 24:37). We are not surprised that they “could not believe it” and were “dumbfounded.” The whole Easter event was astonishing to them and to us. Yet it opened up a whole new space in their lives and does so in ours too. Peter’s speech summarises the history of Israel and gives meaning to the events the people were winessing. Easter is a call to us to welcome the opening up in our lives of the space for the new life the ancient promises announced, promises that were made for us.


Prayer. Lord, help us to welcome the new horizon, the new life, opened up for us by your resurrection. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














JUMPING AND PRAISING GOD

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Wednesday 8 April 2015


JUMPING AND PRAISING GOD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Instantly his feet and ankles became firm, he junped up, stood, and began to walk and be went with them into the Temple, walking and jumping and praising God. (Acts 3:1-10).


Reflection. It seems everyone has their story about how the resurrection touched their lives. Here we have a cripple from birth, who never knew the joy of walking and running. Peter and John ‘looked straight at him’ and healed him. Jesus had ‘looked at Peter’ when the cock crew and ‘healed him.’ Two disciples, giving up on Jesus, headed for Emmaus. Jesus caught up with them and their hearts ‘burned within them.’ All these instances involve a connection, a relationship. The healing depends on a response. Our experience of the resurrection calls on us to ‘look.’ ‘This generation looks for signs and signs will not be given to them.’ Jesus looks for relationship and that is what gives life.


Prayer. Lord, help us to open our eyes and see you risen from the dead and coming towards us to give us healing, hope and joy. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














Monday, 6 April 2015

CUT TO THE HEART

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Tuesday 7 April 2015


CUT TO THE HEART


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Peter spoke to the Jews: ‘The whole House of Israel can be certain that God has made this Jesus whom you crucifid both Lord and Christ.’ Hearing this they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the apostles, ‘Brothers, what must we do?’ (Acts 2:36-41)


Reflection. ‘Cut to the heart’ is an expression that conveys a sense of stunning discovery. It is a reaction we constantly meet in the time after the resurrection. Here the ordinary Jews are astonished and moved to repentance and a new way of life. In the accompanying text for today in John 20 Mary of Magdala is equally dumfounded and clings to Jesus in longing and love. These are the fruits of Easter and we want to welcome them into our hearts, always remembering that we do this for ourselves but also for the ‘whole House of Israel,’ that is, for all the people, especially those among whom we live  and who we meet each day in our ordinary lives. Our joy is to be visible and give witness to our hope.     


Prayer. Lord, we truly rejoice in this ‘rising up’ that you lead us into at Easter. Help us to witness joyfully to this new life among our contemporaries and friends. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














PETER STOOD UP

PRAYER MOMENT 


Easter Monday 6 April 2015


PETER STOOD UP


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Then Peter stood up with the eleven and addressed them in a loud voice, ‘Men of Israel, listen to what I am going to say.’  (Acts 2:14, 2-32)


Reflection. This is an astonishing change. There was Peter cowed and broken during the passion and now full of courage speaking to the Jews. What has happened? There is one word for it; Easter. We can describe the passion. We know all about suffering. But we have no idea about the resurrection. We have no experience, no parable. Matthew and Mark record that Jesus said, ‘you will see me in Galilee.’ Galilee stands for the ordinarfy business of life, work, family and community. You will see me when you recall my words and actions there. You will understand their veiled message of liberation. You will know that each one of us has gifts. We grow and flourish insofar as we use these gifts. We become human. We become alive. We experience Easter.    


Prayer. Lord, help us really rejoice in Easter. You touch our lives as you touched the lives of the first disciples. Teach us to welcome your appearance in our lives in the way we live and use our gifts. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














Saturday, 4 April 2015

MAY HE EASTER IN US!

MAY HE EASTER IN US!
As the commercial world bends Easter to its use – Easter bargains and the like – perhaps some will pause and ask, ‘What is Easter?’ Perhaps a child will ask her mother, or a visitor from China will question a local. Easter is a seismic jump in the consciousness of the world. It shifts us out of a familiar life we can ‘manage’, where our expectations are conceivable, to another level we cannot imagine. It expands the human heart, exploring new terrain never even dreamt of. It pushes out the boundaries of what it is to be human until they touch the divine.
In many countries with a Christian heritage it is a holiday week-end and there are football matches and horse race meetings on Good Friday. There is nothing particularly ‘wrong’ with that. What does one do anyway when it is holiday time? Still the call remains for anyone touched by the Christian mystery to ponder for a moment what it is that we are celebrating.
There is a moment recorded in the Acts of the Apostles (11:15) when Peter was drawn to the house of a Roman army officer. He was reluctant to go as the man was not a Jew and Peter and his companions were still working on the assumption that the message of Jesus was for Jews only. Can we imagine how mind-blowing it was, then, when he arrived and ‘had scarcely begun to speak when the Holy Spirit came down on them in the same way as it came on us at the beginning’? Two thousand years of history cracked up in a moment.
This thing was now out of control! It had jumped the categories in which it was supposed to function. The beautiful thing to ponder is how the early church went along with it. ‘Who am I to stand in God’s way?’ Peter’s critics in Jerusalem were ‘satisfied’ and bent their thinking and hopes to the new situation. They opened up their plans to include the whole world.
The challenge to us today is to open up our minds to new opportunities. We know how we love the familiar ways, the ways we are accustomed to. But there are moments in history where our minds are blown open. One was the tearing down of the ‘iron curtain’ that divided east and west in 1989. Another was Nelson Mandela walking free from prison in 1990. A recent one only this week was the lifting of the cloud of hopelessness from Nigeria through their recent elections – the results of which were accepted by all sides. The country is now filled with hope for the future.
These are the great events we all share. The challenge is to welcome the personal events that knock on my door. Opportunities come all the time. The Lord always wants to ‘easter’ in us, to use the poet Hopkins’ expression. Only yesterday I found myself reacting unreasonably to a perfectly reasonable situation! It was quite hard to say to myself, ‘you are all worked up by something that just happened and has a simple explanation.’ Why do we cling to our comfortable views? Why do we resist Easter?  
Easter Day                                          5 April 2015

Acts 10:34-43                                     Colossians 3:1-4                                 John 20: 1-9

Friday, 3 April 2015

THEY TOOK NOTE OF WHERE HE WAS LAID

PRAYER MOMENT 


Holy Saturday 4 April 2015


THEY TOOK NOTE OF WHERE HE WAS LAID


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Mary of Magdala and Mary the mother of Joset took note of where he was laid.”  (Mark 15:47)


Reflection. The women’s love for Jesus survived the trauma and loss of his death.They would be coming back. Their plan was to wait through the Sabbath and come as early as they could the next morning to anoint his body according to custom. It would be a long wait, the wait of a woman giving birth. This would be a new birth not from a womb but from a tomb. They had no idea what would happen. They just waited in trust and longing. Perhaps they had some inkling that all this suffering could not just end there. We join in their wait. It is the wait of the women of Syria, Iraq, Somalia and now Kenya.


Prayer. Lord, as we keep vigil through this day fill our hearts with hope for our world and help us make our plans to anoint our world with the balm of your Spirit. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  














Thursday, 2 April 2015

HERE IS THE MAN. HERE IS YOUR KING.

PRAYER MOMENT 


Good Friday 3 April 2015


HERE IS THE MAN. HERE IS YOUR KING.


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Jesus then came out wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. Pilate said, “Here is the man. … Here is your king.” (John 18:1-19:42)


Reflection. When Lord Edward Fitzgerald, not a noticeably religious person, lay dying in prison, betrayed, his wounds unattended, he turned to the passion story in John’s gospel. He had been a member of the ruling class but had a political conversion and became a leader of the rebellion in Ireland against Britain in 1798. His is one of countless instances where a person struggles to follow the truth whatever the consequences. On Good Friday we remember the betrayal and death of Truth himself. Jesus entered into this human struggle for authenticity, for truth. He lived his whole life witnessing to the truth, showing the compassion of God for all those who were victims of the opposite of truth; falsehood in all its forms.


Prayer. Lord, on this Good Friday, we want to spend time with you on Calvary. We weep for ourselves and the world today. Give us a new heart to struggle against the evil in ourselves and in the world. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  













DO YOU UNDERSTAND?

PRAYER MOMENT 


Holy Thursday 2 April 2015


DO YOU UNDERSTAND?


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “When he had washed their feet and put on his clothes again he went back to the table. ‘Do you understand,’ he said, ‘what I have done to you?’” (John 13:1-15)


Reflection. This day used to be called Maundy Thursday and, in a way, I wish it still was. The word comes from the Latin ‘mandatum’, English ‘mandate’, meaning the day when the Lord gave us a command to ‘wash each other’s feet.’ Washing the disciples’ feet was a sign of everything God had done since the Passover in Egypt up to this moment when he was about to enter his Passion. It has often been noted that John places this act where the other writers place the institution of the Eucharist which itself is the New Covenant, the fulfilment of the Passover. The new Passover would release an energy that sent the disciples all over the world. It is an energy, a mandate, that is still alive and with us today.


Prayer. Lord, teach us to ‘wash each others’ feet’ by serving one another, especially the weakest and poorest and all our ‘enemies.’ Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com