Sunday, 18 January 2026

Christian Unity Week 2026 in the Nenagh area


The Church of Ireland Nenagh Union of Parishes is joining the Catholic
Odhrán Pastoral Area to invite Christians of all traditions in the Nenagh area to an ecumenical prayer service for Christian Unity Week, in St Patrick’s Church, Puckane, on Thursday January 22nd at 7pm. All are welcome!

The service will be based on resources prepared by the faithful of the Armenian Apostolic Church, part of the Oriental Orthodox tradition, along with their brothers and sisters of the Armenian Catholic, and Evangelical Churches. Armenia became the first nation in the world to adopt Christianity as its state religion in 301AD, well before the Roman Empire’s embrace of Christianity. The resources have been distributed by Churches Together in Britain and Ireland.

The title of the service, ‘Light from Light for Light’, is inspired by the Nicene Creed, whose 1700th anniversary we commemorated last year. In it we declare Christ is ‘light from light’, and we add ‘for light’, because Christ shines God’s light into this troubled world, bringing us into loving communion with each other and with God. The service is adapted from the ‘Sunrise Service’, one of the daily prayer hours of the Armenian Church, compiled by their great 12th century patriarch St Nersess ‘the Gracious’.

We will share the light of Christ, as the flame is passed on from the Paschal candle to candles held by the congregation, filling the church with light. And we will affirm the faith we share by saying together the Nicene creed in its original form, before the ‘filioque’ schism.

Joc Sanders from the Church of Ireland Nenagh Union says: “God surely loves the diversity of our Christian traditions, just as he loves the wonderful diversity of life he has made. We do not all need to worship in the same way, nor even hold exactly the same beliefs. But when we gather to pray together as Christians of different traditions, I believe the Spirit urges us to the unity Christ prays for, which is unity in diversity. We have much to learn from each other. We need each other to be salt and yeast to build God’s kingdom in the world.”

Echoing him, Deborah O’Driscoll, Minister for Catechetics in the Odhrán Pastoral Area, comments: “God calls us to unity, not uniformity. Each of our Christian traditions has its own gifts to share, and when we come together, we enrich one another through the love of Christ. Let us celebrate the diversity God has made and recognize that, though we may worship differently, we are one family in faith. Unity doesn’t mean thinking the same way—it means walking together in love, listening, and learning from one another as we strive to build God’s kingdom together. We are better together than apart.”

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Who was Mary, the theotokos?

Mary Magnificat by Laura James

A reflection for Morning Worship with the Community of Brendan the Navigator on Tuesday 13 Jan 2026

The Magnificat which we have just heard, Mary’s great song of praise, is set in the lectionary in place of a psalm for this Tuesday. I’m not sure why, but it does give us us the opprtunity to reflect on who Mary really was.

The background to the Magnificat is this. Mary, pregnant with Jesus, has travelled to a hill town to visit her cousin Elizabeth, who is 6 months pregnant with John the Baptist. ‘When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the child leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit, and exclaimed with a loud cry, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb … For as soon as I heard the sound of your greeting, the child in my womb leaped for joy. And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfilment of what was spoken to her by the Lord”’.

And Mary responds with the Magnificat.

Most of us, I suppose, have grown up with a rather mawkish image of Mary as meek and mild, a demure teenager who couldn’t say boo to a goose. This has been reinforced in art, and in many of our favourite hymns and carols. ‘Then gentle Mary meekly bowed her head’, we sing in one hymn. ‘Mary was that mother mild’, we sing in another. Gentle Mary – mild, meek, the handmaid of the Lord, head bowed in reverence. Can’t you see her there in so many paintings, stained glass windows, and Christmas cards?

But this is not the real Mary that we meet in her own words. The Magnificat is no sweet lullaby - it is a battle cry, bold and defiant. Secure in her faith in God as her Saviour, she cries out, ‘From this day all generations will call me blessed; the Almighty has done great things for me and holy is his name’. She is certain that God cares for the poor, the powerless, the hungry, those with least in society, just as he cares for her: ‘The Lord has shown strength with his arm and scattered the proud in their conceit, casting down the mighty from their thrones and lifting up the lowly. God has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty’.

We short-change Mary when we idealise her as meek and mild. The real Mary was a fighter. Fierce to protect her first born son, Jesus, when she fled as a refugee with him and Joseph from the wrath of Herod. Fierce for God’s justice and righteousness to flow down upon ordinary people such as her.

This is how we should remember her. This is why we should revere her. And for this reason she is an example to us in these troubled times, when the powerful behave as if might is right and trample on the lowly.


Sunday, 28 December 2025

Massacre of the Holy Innocents

Massacre of the Innocents, Rubens

What a horrid story St Matthew tells us in the Gospel reading set for today (Matthew 2:13-23)!

The lectionary has the reading out of order. The story comes after the wise men from the East, the Magi, have departed - but they will not arrive until Epiphany on January 6th!

The background is this. The wise men, as we all know, had been following a star to pay homage to a child, born to be king of the Jews. When they reached Jerusalem, King Herod directed them to search for the child in Bethlehem, where the chief priests said the Messiah would be born. Herod slyly asked them to bring word back to him, so that he too could pay homage - but Herod, afraid of a rival king to his dynasty, had other, murderous ideas. The wise men went on to Bethlehem, where they were overwhelmed by joy to find Jesus with Mary his mother and Joseph. They knelt down, paid homage and presented their gifts. But they were warned in a dream not to return to Herod.

Joseph too is a dreamer. But he is also a man of action, determined to protect his family. After the wise men leave, Joseph dreams that King Herod will seek to kill the newborn Jesus, so he takes Mary and Jesus and they flee to Egypt as refugees. He is right to be afraid. Herod is infuriated that the wise men had tricked him by not returning - he doesn’t know which child the wise men came to worship, which child to murder. So he orders the massacre of every child two years old and under in and around Bethlehem – every one.

Safe in Egypt when Herod dies, Joseph dreams again that it is safe to return, and he does so with Mary and Jesus. But in yet another dream he realises that Herod’s son Archelaus, who is now king of Judea, may harm them, so he settles the family at Nazareth in Galilee.

It is a nasty tale of brutal force and the massacre of innocent children, echoing the terrible events we have been seeing in Gaza. Why should we be asked to think about massacring innocents immediately after the joy of Christmas? Where is God in this?

The answer is that Christmas is not just about the joyful birth of a child, however special.

There is more to Christmas than the baby Jesus, with his soft skin smelling of milk, nursed by his young mother Mary, with Joseph close at hand. More than the choirs of angels prompting rough shepherds to come to the crib where Jesus lay and to glorify God. More than the Magi, the wise men from the East, led by a star to give homage to Jesus and present symbolic presents.

Christmas is about God made flesh in human form as Jesus Christ, the Son of God. St John calls him the true light, the ‘Word’: ‘The Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth’. But Jesus is born of Mary into a world in which great beauty is mixed with hideous ugliness.

The massacre of the innocents reminds us that Jesus Christ was born into a world just like ours, a world that is horribly broken. A world where deadly force is used to kill the innocent. A world where families are forced to flee as refugees, where they must rely on the kindness of strangers. A world where the greed of the rich and powerful impoverishes the poor and ravishes creation. A world in which Christ is crucified.

Jesus Christ came into this broken world to save it, and us.

By his life and ministry, death and resurrection, he shows us how to confront and overcome evil. He teaches us to listen to his good news. He assures us that if we repent, if we change our bad behaviour, God will forgive us. In the Christmas stories, he shows us signs that the kingdom of God has come near. In God’s kingdom, the broken world will be put back together to reflect the glory of the love of God. It is not fully with us yet, but it is near - we can see signs of it if we look with the eyes of faith, just as the shepherds and the wise men did.

Our task as Christians is to follow Jesus and work to make his kingdom, God’s kingdom, a reality. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit will be with us to help us and guide us. Like Joseph we must dream dreams to understand what must be done. And like Joseph we must act on those dreams.

I shall finish in prayer with a Collect of the Word

Almighty God, 
you have shed upon us the light of your incarnate Word:
may this light, kindled in our hearts, shine forth in our lives;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen

Tuesday, 9 December 2025

Trusting in God



An allegorical image depicting the human heart subject to the seven deadly sins,
each represented by an animal (clockwise: toad = greed; snake = envy; lion = wrath;
snail = sloth; pig = greed; goat = lust; peacock = pride)

Reflection at Morning Worship with the Community of Brendan the Navigator on Tuesday 9th December 2025

Psalm 56, which we have just heard, is set for this Tuesday in the Common Lectionary. It is an urgent plea for God to deliver us from our adversaries.

Heaven knows, there are all too many people in the world today who cry out with the psalmist, ‘My adversaries trample over me all the day long; many are they that make proud war against me’. Those in Ukraine, in the Middle East, in Sudan, and all the other war torn parts of the world, who shelter in terror, or flee in fear. Those in the United States of America, who dread armed and masked ICE agents placing a hand on their shoulder. For the most part we in peaceful Ireland feel safe from such violence, but even here immigrants on the street, and refugees in IPAS centres, fear attack by racist thugs. It is a harsh indictment of our broken world that so many are trampled over, assaulted, and oppressed.

But our adversaries are not just wicked human beings. They include the economic forces that damage this God given, fruitful planet, and the social conditions that engender the poverty and disadvantage that mar our society.

And our adversaries are not just outside ourselves. They are also within us: the seven deadly sins of lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, and pride. Perhaps my own most pernicious adversary is self-pity, as my aging body and increasing frailty limits what I would wish to do to resist the evil forces that ‘assault and oppress me’.

But our loving Father God does not will any adversary to cause pain to any of his children, and is faithful in his love for us. Through the eyes of his Son he sees our distress, and his Holy Spirit gently wipes our tears away. He ‘counts up (our) groaning, puts (our) tears into his bottle’, in the psalmist’s words.

The psalmist declares, ‘To you, O God, will I fulfil my vows; to you will I present my offerings of thanks, for you will deliver my soul from death and my feet from falling, that I may walk before God in the light of the living’. When we place our trust in God, his Holy Spirit will lift our spirit up, so that we can endure any assault, and so overcome any adversary.


Wednesday, 12 November 2025

Resurrection

The Resurrection at Cookham Churchyard, Stanley Spencer, 1924-6

The reading we have just heard (Luke 20:27-38) is set for last Sunday, the 3rd Sunday before Advent. We did not hear it then because it clashed with Remembrance Sunday. I have chosen to use it today, as I think there is something important we can learn from it.

At the time of Jesus there were several different religious traditions within Judaism, among them the traditions of the Sadducees and the Pharisees. There still are different Jewish traditions, just as we have many Christian traditions today. One of the points of difference then was about resurrection from the dead. As we’ve just heard, the Sadducees said there was no such thing, death was final. The Pharisees on the other hand believed that the righteous would be raised to eternal life at a time when God would vindicate his people and restore Israel.

Jesus himself believed in resurrection, so it is not surprising that a group of Sadducees should seek to undermine him by asking him a trick question. The law of Moses required, or at least encouraged, the brother of a dead man to marry his childless widow to raise up children in his name. So, they ask, if a woman marries 7 brothers successively, each of whom dies childless, whose wife would she be, when they all rise from the dead? It was unthinkable for Jews then, as it is for us now, for a woman to have more than one husband at the same time. They would catch Jesus out whatever he answered, or so they thought. Either he would have to say the resurrected woman was married to all 7 of them when they were all resurrected - unthinkable! - or he would have to agree with them that there was no resurrection.

But Jesus sidesteps their trick question. He declares that the resurrected ‘neither marry nor are given in marriage… They are like angels and are children of God, being children of the resurrection’. He points out to the Sadducees that Moses himself spoke of ‘the Lord as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’, after their deaths. And he declares, God ‘is God not of the dead, but of the living; for to him all of them are alive’.

Now, I know that I am mortal. I know I shall die, though not soon I hope. Just as my parents did, and theirs, and so back through the generations. I do not believe that I shall be resurrected in the sense that my physical body will somehow be put back together after it has returned to dust. That would be against the God-given laws of nature. But Jesus does not believe in resurrection like that either. My hope, in Jesus’s words, is to live in God’s eyes as an angel, a child of God, a child of the resurrection.

But how can that be? As a child of this age, I can only see my life and my destiny through the prism of the 4 dimensions of Einstein’s space-time continuum.

My life is like a thread winding through Space-time, beginning at my conception and ending at my death. Along the way my life-thread encounters, touches, curls around the life-threads of other people and of other creatures. My loving Father is not constrained by the 4 dimensions of space-time. I believe he perceives my whole life as one piece, just as he does the lives of each one of us. In his eyes, I am alive even though I die. And my worthiness is a function of the love I have shown to others and to him, integrated over my whole life-thread. His Son Jesus shows me he forgives me my lack of love at times, if I am contrite and change my ways. And his Holy Spirit works with my God-given conscience to guide me on the way.

I believe I shall abide after my death in the sight and close presence of God as a child of the resurrection, outside the four dimensions of space-time, as will those I love and every other person. God loves me for all my human flaws, as he loves us all. He knows me from the inside out, from my very beginning to my final end. 

I am somewhat apprehensive about the process of dying, but I do not fear death. And neither should you! 

Sunday, 19 October 2025

The exciting life of St Luke the Evangelist

An image of St Luke in the C6th Augustine Gospels,
held in the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge

An address given at Templederry Church on Saturday 18th October 2025, the Feast Day of Luke the Evangelist, and at St Mary's Nenagh the following Sunday 19th October 2025

Today we are celebrating the feast of St Luke the Evangelist.

‘Evangelist’ is the title the church gives to the four Gospel writers, of which Luke is one of course.

When I first sat down to write this sermon, I decided to explore who this man Luke was, and who he wasn’t. I looked up scholarly resources, and many less reliable resources, such as Google. And I began to write a sermon filled with references and quotes. I realised I was just showing off my own less than scholarly erudition. Those of you in this family service who are older would have found it dry as dust, and those who are younger, dull as ditch water.

So I started again, trying to paint a vivid picture of Luke as a vibrant and interesting person, who lived a truly exciting life in the service of his God, of Jesus who rose from the dead, and of the rapidly developing and growing fellowship of believers of which he was a part.

So here goes…

Luke grew up in a Greek-speaking family, probably in the city of Antioch in ancient Syria.

Antioch was a big and important city, the capital of the Roman province of Syria, which grew rich on the spice trade with the East. Before then it had been the capital of the Seleucid Empire, founded by Seleucus, one of Alexander the Great’s generals, for some 300 years.

Antioch must have been an exciting place to grow up in. As a Greek-speaking capital city, it was full of arenas and theatres, schools and libraries. And it was a multi-cultural melting pot, the streets filled with visiting traders in foreign clothes, speaking strange languages. A bit like London, or New York today, perhaps.

In Luke’s time, Antioch was a centre for Greek-speaking Jews of the Diaspora. We do not know for sure whether he was a Jew or a gentile, but we do know Luke was highly educated. No doubt he attended one of the many schools, where he learned to write excellent Greek, better than the other Gospel writers. His books show he was familiar with Greek literary texts. We also believe he studied to be a medical doctor, because St Paul calls him ‘Luke, the beloved physician’.

Luke wrote two books of our New Testament, his Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles.

We know this because the language used in both, and the underlying theology, are so similar that they must have come from the same hand. Both are addressed to the same person, perhaps his patron, Theophilus, meaning lover of God. And all the early church writers agree Luke wrote both.

These books are works of history, in the style of the time, and Luke was no mean historian. There is little reason to believe he was ever an eyewitness to Jesus’s life. But in his Gospel he carefully collected and set down the story of Jesus’s life, drawing on different sources, including the earlier Gospel of Mark, a lost collection of the sayings of Jesus shared with the Gospel of Matthew, and some other eyewitness accounts unique to himself.

The Acts of the Apostles traces the story of how the primitive church grew and developed after Jesus’s resurrection up to the time of Paul’s imprisonment in Rome. The first part deals with the life of the church in Jerusalem, and the second part with St Paul’s ministry journeys. It reads like an exciting, adventure story, as the new church rapidly spreads, starting from a small group of frightened disciples in an upper room in Jerusalem, right across the Roman empire, to Rome itself. Do take down your bible at home and read it from start to finish to experience that excitement.

In Acts, Luke draws on many sources of evidence for his story, but for some of it, Luke himself is clearly an eyewitness.

Luke travelled with St Paul on some of his missionary journeys.

We know this because some of the later parts of Acts are written in the 3rd person plural as ‘We’. For instance, Luke writes, ‘After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave for Macedonia’, and We put out to sea and sailed straight for Samothrace’.

So it is not surprising, that Paul refers to Luke by name in some of his epistles. In Philemon (1:24), Paul describes Luke as ‘a fellow worker’. In 2 Timothy (4:11), as we heard in today’s 1st reading, Paul, awaiting death in prison in Rome, says, ‘Only Luke is with me’. In Colossians (4:14), Paul speaks of ‘Luke, the beloved physician’.

Here a word of caution is due - many modern scholars believe 2 Timothy and Colossians were not written by Paul himself, though Philemon is universally recognised as Paul’s.

Today’s 2nd reading, from Luke’s Gospel, tells the story of 70 disciples Jesus sent ahead of him in pairs to prepare his way in places he planned to visit.

It is the pious belief of the Eastern Orthodox Church that Luke was one of these 70 disciples, all of whom they name. They celebrate Luke not just as an Evangelist, but also as an Apostle of the Seventy.

Epiphanius, bishop of Salamis in Cyprus in the late 4th century, is the first recorded to say he was. I am doubtful. If Luke really was one of the 70, why does he not signal his presence, as he does in the Acts of the Apostles? But the fact is, we really don’t know one way or the other. We should be slow to criticise the pious beliefs of other brothers and sisters in Christ.

We know little else for sure about Luke’s life.

A much later 8th century tradition maintains that Luke was the first person to paint icons. This is doubtful, but Luke is widely recognised as the patron saint of artists. He is said to have painted a picture of the Virgin Mary and child, known as the Madonna of Constantinople. Although it is now lost, many copies exist and are venerated by the Orthodox churches. The art critic A I Uspensky says that other icons attributed to Luke himself display a Byzantine style not seen before the 5-6th centuries, so could not have been painted by him.

What did Luke do after his time in Rome with St Paul? We know nothing at all about it. 

However, a later tradition says that he died aged 84 in Boeotia in Greece, crucified by pagans on an olive tree. We may make of that what we will.

What an exciting life Luke had!

He played a prominent role in the rapidly growing Jesus movement, the primitive church spreading like wildfire across the Roman Empire. We do well to celebrate him on his feast day!

I finish in prayer with a Collect from the Episcopal Church.

Almighty God, who inspired your servant Luke the physician
to set forth in his Gospel the love and healing power of your Son:
Graciously continue in your Church this love and power to heal,
to the praise and glory of your Name;
through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, 
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 

Monday, 13 October 2025

The Last Supper was a Jewish Seder meal

The Last Supper, c. 1520, Andrea Solari (after Leonardo da Vinci)

Reflection at Morning Worship with the Community of Brendan the Navigator streamed on Tuesday 14th October 2025

The reading we have just heard is Mark’s short account of the Last Supper (Mark 14:12-25), at which Jesus instituted the Eucharist. It is clearly a Jewish Seder meal, presided over by Jesus in the company of his disciples. The Seder meal is an annual ceremony at which Jews, both then and now, remember the Passover, how God led them out of bondage in Egypt on a 40 year trek through the wilderness. The Seder is celebrated not in a Synagogue or Temple, but in the home, where the family is gathered. Through the ceremony, children are taught the story of how God saved the Children of Israel and led them to the Promised Land.

This reminds us that Jesus and his disciples were Jews. Antisemitism, hatred of Jews as a distinct people and religion, has been a stain on humanity for centuries. Jesus was a Jew, and anyone who hates Jews must hate Jesus too. As Christians we must be very clear that antisemitism is incompatible with our Christian faith. 

Antisemitism resulted in the Holocaust, the genocide of 6 million Jews during WW2. People of good will swore it would never happen again. But antisemitic views have been increasing again in recent years. This is largely due to the actions of the racist Zionist Israeli state, which expelled hundreds of thousands of Palestinians when it seized power in 1948, and has been denying rights to Palestinians ever since. This is the background to the foul attack on Israel by Hamas two years ago, followed by the equally foul genocide Israel has been perpetrating on Palestinians in Gaza. Zionist apologists attempt to equate any criticism of the Israeli state with antisemitism, but we must be careful to distinguish between antisemitism and anti-Zionism. It is not antisemitic to oppose the racist and genocidal actions of the Zionist Israeli state.

Jesus was a Jewish Rabbi, but he was unafraid to criticise the Jewish leaders of his day, and the encrusted traditions of their faith, when he saw that they were incompatible with the lovingkindness of the God he called his Father. So at his Last Supper, knowing full well what his fate would be at the hands of his enemies, he modifies the Seder liturgy.

In the Seder liturgy, the host breaks the unleavened bread in half and says, “This is the bread of affliction our fathers ate in the wilderness.” Instead, Jesus breaks it and says, “Take; this is my body.” Over the blessing of the third cup of wine, the host at the liturgy is supposed to say, “This is the cup of redemption from bondage in Egypt.” But Jesus makes another substitution and says, “This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many”.

By doing so, Jesus institutes our Christian Eucharist, which we still celebrate in his memory. He offers his whole being, his body and his blood, as a sacrifice for the sins of the world. He commands us to celebrate it in his memory. When we do so, we participate in an acted parable, that shows us how to confront evil, receive God’s forgiveness, and be united with him in the eternal life of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

The Seder meal concludes with a beautiful blessing, said together by those who are present. It goes like this.


Blessed are You, Lord, our God, King of the universe,
who, in His goodness, feeds the whole world with grace,
with kindness and with mercy.
He gives food to all flesh, for His kindness is everlasting.
Through His great goodness to us continuously we do not lack food,
and may we never lack it, for the sake of His great Name.
For He is a God who feeds and sustains all, does good to all,
and prepares food for all His creatures whom He has created,
as it is said: You open Your hand and satisfy the desire of every living thing.
Blessed are You Lord, who provides food for all.