This week's news

Haven Home Support

Last week at our Friday Community Café, St Patrick's Women's Group from Redfield together with Father Antonio who hails from Brazil, came to visit us with a special gift for Haven Home, the orphanage and school in India.... a massive cheque for £1,000!
We cannot thank them enough for their generosity.

Martyn Poole, who organises the café as well as aiding our links to Haven Home in India said: "The cheque from St Patricks for £1,000 was so very generous. I was blown over by the sum they raised by having a cake sale.
The sum of £1,000 here in UK is the equivalent of £10,000 in India! The cost of living is a lot less compared with the UK.
I was so pleased to hear that all our children at Haven Home passed their final exams and will be so surprised when they are told that, thanks to St Patrick's funding, they can go to college to study Nursing, Teaching and Engineering for the full time of their courses and accommodation at their chosen colleges. Their education, if they stay and practice in India, will never make them rich but will take them out of poverty.
Years ago St Augustine's chose Haven Home as their charity with the objective of building a 7 classroom school - this was achieved and we see the results every year of children being educated. A thing we take for granted in the UK.
If any of our Church Family would like to know more, I have DVDs showing what Haven Home is today all thanks to people's generosity."

Thanks, once again, to everyone at St Patrick's Church community who supported the Women's Group.

School day!

Can you help out out on Saturday 8th June (9-3) in our school grounds, to help tidy up and repaint some of the outdoor areas?
They would love to see you if you can spare some time...
Only 2 week's to go until our annual Summer event - St Augustine's Community Catch up!

Join us on Saturday 15th June from 11-3 in the school grounds.

WONDERFUL NEWS! We are delighted to announce that Kelly's Donkeys will be joining us at our Summer Community Catch-Up!
Come along and meet the team and the beautiful donkeys from Kelly Donkey Sanctuary to find out about their work with rescuing and caring for the donkeys. Their lovely animals are involved with many things, such as educational workshops, visits for children, attending local events, and providing therapy sessions for care homes & schools for special educational needs.
We are so pleased that they will be at our event - and the younger children will even be able to have a ride!

You'll be delighted to know that "
Sav's Super Whippy - Bristol’s Best" will, once again, be there to sell us all ice creams, ice lollies and their famous Super Whippy trays! (He is also donating a prize to our Tombola stall so look out for that!)
Great to have you on board again Sav!

See you all there - pray for hot, sunny, ice cream weather please!




Many many thanks to all who joined in our cream tea and planting session on Sunday, with a blessing for our parish on the Feast of St Augustine.
It was a great occasion and many plants have been nestled in among the buttercups by the garage.



Diocesan Day

This year’s Diocesan Day will take place on Saturday 6 July at St Bernadette’s Secondary School, Whitchurch, Bristol.
The focus of our day will be on Hope – especially in relation to the Jubilee Year ‘Pilgrims of Hope’.

All are invited to join Bishop Bosco as we explore the theme of Hope together. We will look at where our hope lies, as well as our experiences of pilgrimage and where we might journey as a Diocese in 2025.
The day will start at 9.30am with refreshments and will include Mass as a central part of our day. Please bring a packed lunch. We will finish by 4pm.

Everyone is welcome but places are limited, so please book early. To register for the day please click the Eventbrite link: https://cliftondiocesanday.eventbrite.co.uk
You will be most welcome.


Mary's Meals
Mary's Meals are asking for help with their campaign in Tigray, where right now, there are children working all day in the hope they’ll earn a piece of bread, but it’s not guaranteed because the person they’re begging from is starving too.

The horrors of the aftermath of war are still present. Services to help people deal with the trauma they have lived through are few and far between in a society where everything from homes to hospitals has been looted by soldiers.

But now, in this third year of catastrophic drought, the horror of starvation has the potential to be even worse.
Hunger doesn’t kill you quickly. It saps you of everything you have first, slowly. And communities are enduring this right now.
If you are in a position to help Mary’s Meals to reach more children in Tigray, please visit them online today: https://bit.ly/3wNL0yB

Thank you for your Reflections for Feast of Corpus Christi Year B Deacon Vincent.

1st Reading from book of Exodus 24: 3-8
Moses reads the Law (Torah) to the people who agree to observe all God’s words and decrees, and Moses seals the Covenant they make by sprinkling the people with the blood of the Sacrifices taken from the altar supported by twelve pillars (representing the twelve tribes of Israel). The First Covenant is sealed with the blood of animals at the foot of Mount Sinai. It is a precursor of the Covenant God’s son will make with the twelve Apostles in attendance, but the blood spilt will be Jesus’ own blood.

Psalm 115: 12-13, 15-18.
We continue the theme of the Cup of Salvation, the spilt blood, which has now been named as the Cup of Salvation. The Covenant with God is our means of Salvation, it is combined with the Lord’s name and the fulfilment of our vows, our covenant promises. This song rings out the wonder of the Covenant drawn up on Sinai, but again prefigures Christ’s covenant of his blood poured out for many.

2nd Reading from the letter to the Hebrews 9: 11-15.

This letter here is expressing how the blood of goats or bulls and a heifer were sprinkled on those who had incurred defilement to restore them to holiness. The author of Hebrews is saying that the blood of Christ is far more effective because he offered his very self as the perfect sacrifice for our redemption. We are continuing the interconnection with that first Covenant on Sinai and Christ’s sacrifice of himself for us. It was only required the once for our eternal redemption because we stand at the foot of the cross every time we celebrate the Last Supper with Christ in the Eucharist.

The Holy Gospel according to Mark 14: 12-16, 22-26.
Jesus here presents himself as the Passover Sacrifice, he is, in fact, the Lamb of God, who presents himself as our food and drink for the journey, by replacing the lamb of sacrifice with himself. The gift of the Eucharist is for our redemption and purification from defilement. It is a re-enactment of the sacrifice of Calvary, whereby he offers us himself, body, blood, soul, and divinity in this celebration of the Last Supper. We have the opportunity for an intimate encounter with the living Lord. This is a gift beyond all others, it is the source and object of the sacramental life of the Church. It is freely given to each and every one of us to make us a holy people for Jesus to present to the Father.

May God’s Spirit set us on fire with Love of Our Blessed Saviour. Deacon Vincent.


This week's news

St Augustine's Feast Day

Join us this Sunday (26th May) as we celebrate our Patronal Feast together!

Come along at 2pm to the Parish hall as our gardening group will be hosting a Cream Tea afternoon for us all, and get as involved with the planting afternoon as you wish.

O God, who by the preaching
of the Bishop Saint Augustine of Canterbury
led the English peoples to the Gospel,
grant, we pray, that the fruits of his labours
may remain ever abundant in your Church.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.
Amen


Bishop Declan

James Abbott from the Bishops' Conference has been lucky enough to be able to record a video with Bishop Declan Lang.

It was the evening before his successor’s episcopal ordination, and we were fortunate to side-step all the intense planning and preparation for the day to come, in order to sit down in the garden of the retiring Bishop of Clifton as the Spring sun gave out its last.

Metaphorically, the sun was setting too on Bishop Declan’s years of ministry as the ninth Bishop of Clifton – it was just a matter of hours before his handover to the incoming Bishop Bosco MacDonald. So, for this video, it seemed apposite to take a stroll with Bishop Declan to look back over almost a quarter of a century shepherding the diocese.

https://cliftondiocese.com/news/in-conversation-with-bishop-declan/


Thanks to Deacon Vincent for his Reflections for Trinity Sunday Year B


1st Reading from the book of Deuteronomy 4: 32-34, 39-40.
The book of Deuteronomy is one of the most influential books of the entire Old Testament. The set up is a second reading of the Law, given by Moses, and happens just before the People of God enter the Promised Land. It could be argued that the text constitutes Israel as People of God. The format is that of a treaty drawn up in the Ancient Near East between a potentate and their vassals. The text we have before us is describing how God has made a special choice of Israel as his own people. We hear the proclamation that the “Lord your God is God, there is no other beside him.” “He is God in heaven above and on earth beneath, and there is no other.” Moses encourages the people to keep God’s laws and commandments, as Moses delivers them to the people, so that the people and their children may prosper and live long in the land that the Lord your God gives you for ever. This is the preamble to the setting out of the treaty or Covenant, as we best recognise it. It really is an amazing document, forming the foundation of the relationship of mutual respect between the Lord God, his people and each other.

Psalm 32: 4-6, 9, 18-20.
It is almost a hymn in praise of the Lord for establishing the people of God. It emphasises the greatness of God and his Divine Mercy and love for us. Then that beautiful exclamation, “May your love be upon us, O Lord, as we place all our hope in you.” Bishop Declan was always emphasising how we need to be a people of hope. Bishop Bosco calls us not to be afraid, and this psalm tells us exactly why we need not be afraid.

2nd Reading from the letter of St. Paul to the Romans 8: 14-17.
St. Paul tells us exactly what the Spirit gives. It is a move out of slavery, fear and death, into freedom and adoption as sons and daughters of the Lord God. It stems from the Roman and Greek household whereby the eldest son usually inherited, but where there was no heir, the master could adopt a slave or a member of another family. Here we see Paul adapting that image to the Father, whose Spirit not only ransoms us but adopts us as heirs also. The Romans would have understood fully what Paul was trying to explain to them the function of this Holy Spirit moving through the Church.


The Holy Gospel according to Matthew 28: 16-20.
This is a very powerful scene with which to conclude this remarkable Gospel. It is noteworthy that there are only eleven disciples, a reminder that one of the intimate friends had betrayed the Lord. They follow the instructions and go to the mountain in Galilee, which has figured prominently throughout this Gospel. They show the proper response to the Lord and worship though like all disciples there is uncertainty. Jesus reveals a further clue as to his true identity, “all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” Then we have the instruction to, “go out into the world and make disciples of all the nations, baptising them in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” And teach them to keep everything that I have commanded you. Then we have this wonderful promise, “And look! I am with you always, yes, to the end of time.” What a wonderful way to conclude the Gospel of Life, with such an intimate presence of the Lord amongst us now and always.
May we never cease to thank the Lord for his Goodness to Us All. Deacon Vincent.

*I fully acknowledge the assist given me by Nicholas King’s Study Bible in this and all my reflections. For his insight into the books and writings of the Holy Bible. He has been my inspiration and insight into the wonders of Holy Scripture. *


This week's News

Just over 4 weeks to go until... St Augustine's COMMUNITY CATCH UP ~ 2024.
Last year's event was so fantastic that we are doing it all again!

*Please get the dates in your diaries and look out for ways you can help out before the event and also for what to expect on the day.* This week, we'd love donations of prizes for the Tombola - bottles, boxes of chocs, unwanted new gifts (all unopened and new items please)

The organising committee are working hard to bring you another lovely community day and we look forward to seeing you all there!


Don’t Forget the Holy Spirit (DFTHS) Ministries present:
Encounter (Worship. Teaching, Testimony and Prayer) on Saturday 25th May, 10am - 4pm, St Bonaventure's Catholic Church, Egerton Rd, Bishopston, Bristol BS7 8HP
Join us on the 25th of May at St Bonaventure's Church Bristol for a day of Encounter. Through worship, teaching and testimony, Fr Matt and Caroline Sadd will unpack the themes of Fr Matt's book 'Don't Forget the Holy Spirit'. The day will start with Mass at 10am and there will be an opportunity to attend the Sacrament of Reconciliation and experience prayer for Baptism in the Holy Spirit. There will also be separate groups for children during the day, so families are very welcome to attend. Refreshments provided, but please bring a packed lunch. To book a free place please go to:

The Not So Young Club took a very sunny trip to Sidmouth last week.
How lucky were they with the weather!
Chairman Mike Ryan said "It was a jolly day out for an equally jolly lot of not so youngsters!"
(Please note, ambulance in the background of the photo was NOT for one of the group! 🤣)


St. Nicholas of Tolentino RC Church
are hosting their monthly celebration of Mass for the LGBTQI+ community, family & friends on 19th May - See poster for details.

THE SUMMER PRIZE DRAW IS HERE!
You could win cash prizes & more - all in aid of the church, guides, school & pre-school.
*** Please note *** This year, the books have arrived with 5 tickets in them (for £2.50) not the usual 10 tickets for £5 - so please feel free to take 2 books!
Please return stubs & money or unsold books to the office by 13th June. The draw will be during coffees on Sun 16th June. Thanks for your support for our annual summer fundraiser!

No Mow May

Our churches are, once again, both taking part in 'No Mow May'. We are half way through and the amount of daisies and other little flowers and tall grasses coming up in the church grounds is really lovely to see.
Even on a grey day the colours looks so lovely. We hope the insects are enjoying it!
Anyone else doing No Mow May?

If you have a spare 3 minutes, please take a look at this lovely video about the benefits of being involved with this annual scheme, to help increase the wildlife, the plants, insects and.. grasses!

Have a watch and let us know if you think we've got Yorkshire Fog, Sweet Vernal or Cox's Foot!
🐞🦋🦟🌱🌿☘️🌼


We are a 'LIVE SIMPLY' parish ~ as part of that, did you know there is a gardening group who help to rewild and plant up areas around the church grounds? They are holding a CREAM TEA & PLANT SHARING afternoon on Sun 26th May from 2pm, and invite you all to come along with any the spare plants from your garden, to make more wildflower areas, to plant in areas of the church garden by the garages, and enjoy a lovely cream tea after.
ALL WELCOME. Lets CELEBRATE LAUDATO SI week together,
Here is how beautiful some of the areas already are...

 

 


Growing Seeds of Hope - a message from The Clifton Evangelist.

We are delighted to let you know that the Dominican Sisters of St. Joseph will be returning once more to lead us in our exploration of how we form people in the Faith. Their knowledge and practical experience will help to guide and inspire us in our ministry as catechists. I hope it will also enable and inspire anyone who may not yet be a catechist but who cares about the formation of children, young people, and adults, not only for sacramental preparation but in all the in-between stages.
The day takes place on Saturday 13 July at St. John the Baptist parish centre, Trowbridge. Refreshments from 9.30am. Please bring a packed lunch. The day will end at 4pm. Registration is essential for this event - contact us by email at adult.education@cliftondiocese.com



This week's news

Examination Prayer

Please remember, in your prayers, all those who are about to start their exams.

For those about to begin these A level, degree year end, BTEC and GCSE and other exams and tests, here is a prayer that you can say yourself as you prepare:

Lord, I know you are with me and love me.
Give me peace of mind as I prepare for this time of study.
Help me to focus on my books and notes.
Keep me from all distractions so that I will make the best use of this time that is available to me.
Give me insight that I might understand what I am studying,
and help me to remember it when the time comes.
Above all, I thank you for the ability to be able to study
and for the many gifts and talents you have given me.
Help me always to use them in such a way
that they honour you and do justice to myself.
Amen


ORDINATION OF BISHOP-ELECT BOSCO MACDONALD

Participation in person with tickets only please.
You will be able to watch the Ordination of Bishop-elect Bosco live on the Diocesan website from midday, Wednesday 8th May 2024
We also give thanks for 23 years of devoted service to the diocese of Bishop Declan

Reflections for Seventh Sunday of Easter Year B from Deacon Vincent.

1st Reading from the Acts of the Apostles 1: 15-17, 20-26.
Peter is showing his leadership skills, which is not always apparent in the Acts. Here we have Peter initiating God’s choice of a successor to Judas. Notice the criteria for an Apostle, “Someone who has been with the Twelve the whole time that Jesus was travelling around with them, right from when John was baptising until Jesus was taken up from the Twelve – this person can act as a witness with the Twelve to Jesus’ resurrection.” The emphasis that they must choose a successor to Judas and his betrayal was foretold tells us that they believe they are being prompted by God in the Holy Spirit to select Judas’ replacement. To enhance the idea that this choice must not be influenced by their likes or choices they agree to let the Holy Spirit choose by the casting of lots over the two candidates found amongst the Disciples who met the required criteria, thus allowing God to select the desired replacement. As the lot falls to Matthias, he is selected to be numbered amongst the Twelve. Strange that Matthias is never heard of again. This whole episode illustrates that God is in charge and the Holy Spirit is irresistibly running the show by prompting Peter. We witness right from the beginning the influence of the Holy Spirit upon the Church’s appointed Vicar of Christ.

Psalm 102: 1-2, 11-12, 19-20.
This song is written in praise of God’s goodness. God is so good he removes our sins as far as the East is from the West. God’s forgiveness is totally abundant to those who choose to seek Him.

2nd Reading from the first letter of John 4: 11-16.
Once again, this letter echoes the language of the Fourth Gospel, as the writer links the God’s Spirit dwelling in us to showing our love to our neighbour, especially within our community, by accepting Jesus as Son, Saviour and Love. To live in love is to live in God, and God lives in them. Typical of John’s Gospel, we have this commandment; “the one who loves God should also love their brother and sister.” We have this assurance that, “God is \love.”


The Holy Gospel according to John 17: 11-19.
At this point it moves from being a discourse to almost a priestly prayer. In the selection we have today we concentrate on the people the Father gave Jesus from the world. “Keep them in your name.” Next Jesus warns us that the world will hate them. There follows a prayer for those whom they will reach out to, namely us. Jesus will pray that we will all be one. His followers will be consecrated in the truth just as Jesus consecrates himself in the truth. Jesus is praying that we will become like him. When we encounter Jesus in the Eucharist he continues to fashion us in his likeness. As stones in the Temple of the Lord must be chiselled and have their rough edges removed so we need shaping to fit into that spiritual temple with Jesus as the corner stone and ourselves honed into one, just as he requests the Father to make us one like Jesus is one with the Father.

Lord grant us faith and patience to become one with You.
Deacon Vincent

LENT HOUSE GROUPS:

7 groups met during Lent and the full report is shown, below, for you to read.

Click on each picture to zoom in

Here is a summary of the questions discussed:
Lessons post lockdown, how we feel about the Church & Mass, the role of women & fears about change, the riches of the church, youth & the issues of LGBT+ & the hunger & need for deeper catechesis, a desire to explore the challenges we face in our secular society & how we can live the Gospel convincingly.
~
Worries were expressed about change in the church as well as recognising the need for some kinds of change, but to continue to witness to a faith that is countercultural, while recognising the ways that Church teaching has hurt people.
Support for the Pope was expressed.
An overwhelming outcome was for better communication of what is going on, for the lay to take on more responsibility, for a better balance of roles of women & men in the church, better catechesis of young & adults, for us all to take our faith more seriously, & belief that the Holy Spirit will lead us into the future, into any changes, that the church will always stand for the unchanging truths of the Gospel while we all face undoubted change in our lives & in the world.
How do we discern the need for change or not?
What needs to be reimagined given the future lack of priests?
How we need to be missionaries of joy & hope?
This was a fruitful & interesting experience for all & we hope to repeat it from time to time in the next year, & for action to result.

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This week's news

PRAYERS FOR ALL OUR CHILDREN.

Over this past couple of weeks and for the next few days, we have a place, just inside the church, for prayer & reflection for all our babies & children whose loss, pain or difficulties we grieve.

Many people may have personal experience of losing a child whether through miscarriage or stillbirth, early infant death, or loss later in life. Or we may be dealing with troubles our children are facing in their lives.

This is an opportunity to tie a ribbon in the tree outside, or write a reflection, as a tangible expression of our love and prayer for these, our children.

On Sunday 28th April, at our 9.30am Mass, we will bring up to the altar the box containing your thoughts, names and reflections as we pray for our children.
We remember those tiny lives lost at any age or stage of pregnancy, loss of a child at the start of, or later in life, or for our children who may be dealing with their own difficulties - on that day we will pray as a community together.

For those souls in heaven we pray, through the mercy of God, may they Rest in Peace. Amen

Below we have included some links to some relevant pages for getting support or advice.

Life - Creating a world where no one faces pregnancy or pregnancy loss alone.

Gentle Footprints - Helping women and their families step forward after pregnancy and baby loss.
Samaritans - Support without judgement when you, or your children, are struggling or going through a tough time.


Action for Children - working to improve life for children in the UK, so every child has a safe and happy childhood - helping with down-to-earth parenting advice you can trust.



We just had to share this lovely post from our school's Instagram account with you all.
"Well done to everyone who handed in homework about our house saints or patron saint, St Augustine. As you can see, the finished art work was fabulous and takes pride of place in our foyer.
We have learnt a lot about St Patrick, St Brigid, St Joan of Arc, St Maximillian Kolbe and, of course, St Augustine of Canterbury."
#saintaugustineofcanterbury [StAugustinesPrimary on insta]


Cantonese Mass
Fr Bruno Lepeu from Hong Kong Diocese will be visiting Bristol and celebrating Pentecost Mass in Cantonese in our church on 19/05/2024. There will be the sacrament of reconciliation before celebrating the Mass and tea and coffee is served after the Mass in the Parish Hall. You are cordially invited to join the Sacraments.
For details, please refer to the attached Poster.

龐神父將於19/05/2024聖神降臨節到Bristol St Augustine’s Canterbury Church 舉行廣東話彌撒,彌撒前有收和聖事。彌撒後可於堂區中心作短聚。詳情見附件海報。有興趣嘅朋友可自行安排時間參與聖事。

Bishop Declan's retirement
Clifton Diocese have received a number of requests from individuals wanting to contribute towards a retirement collection for Bishop Declan. Therefore, they have set up an online donation point in case anyone would like to contribute.

This link will take you to the Diocesan donation page and there will be a button to click for 'Bishop Declan's gift'.

https://donate.mydona.com/clifton-diocese


CAFOD EMERGENCY APPEAL
Please read the message received from CAFOD this week about the Sudan crisis - if you are able to make a donation online or at Church this weekend in the retiring basket collection, please give what you can:
“Dear Father, the people of Sudan need our help urgently. We are launching an emergency appeal for donations to get aid to them on the biggest scale we can muster.
When violence broke out last year in Sudan between government and paramilitaries, most aid agencies evacuated. Now, humanitarian workers are struggling to get back into Sudan to help, meaning severe delays in getting aid to the people, and the challenges of getting into areas where fighting is still going on remain. Many borders are shut as the government say they need to keep weapons out.

But the Church and our local partners are still there. Please, stand with them today.
The situation has gone from serious to desperate very quickly. The UN is calling it ‘the world’s worst displacement crisis’. At least 8 million people have had to flee their homes; famine looms.
- “At least 25 million Sudanese need immediate, emergency help. Families are already going hungry and famine is looming. This crisis threatens to become the worst in living memory.” Telley Sadia, CAFOD’s country representative for Sudan.

Let us, as Cardinal Nichols and Bishop Swarbrick wrote recently to Cardinal Stephen Ameyu Martin Mulla, Archbishop of Juba and president of the Sudanese Bishops’ Conference, ‘extend to you the prayerful support of the Church in England and Wales and… express our solidarity with you in your current circumstances of profound distress. We have heard your cry in your recent statement, in which you reminded the international community of the need for support to bring about an end to the civil conflict and allow for immediate humanitarian access to alleviate hunger across Sudan.’
Our Caritas and Church networks are there when many aid agencies aren’t, where people are in a desperate situation. The Church in Sudan is already responding and asking us to help them do more. Even in this year of economic stretch for many people here, we know that the Catholic community will want to respond with compassion to help people facing famine.
Despite this overwhelming scale, you will have seen how media attention is limited. We are calling on the Catholic community of England and Wales to give the people of Sudan our attention, and our hearts.
I sign off with my deep gratitude for your ongoing prayers and support for all those we work with facing dire need.
Jo Kitterick
Director, Fundraising and Participation, CAFOD
https://cafod.org.uk/give/donate-to-emergencies/sudan-crisis-appeal


Congratulations to our winning team at the Quiz night last week and commiserations to the 'not winning' team who came over from St Joseph's Home, including Fr Frank 😄
It was a really fun night, all in aid of our 2 Parish Projects for 2024 -Brandon Trust and Little Sisters of the Poor St Joseph’s Care Home Bristol .
Thanks to Mike Ryan and gang and all who helped put on a great night and thanks to those teams who came out and supported the event. It raised a brilliant £612 for the charities.
Look out for news of the next Quiz soon!



Reflections for Sixth Sunday of Easter Year B from Deacon Vincent.

1st Reading from the Acts of the Apostles 10: 25-26, 34-35, 44-48.
This episode which is given to us today is one of immense importance in the Church’s history. The question of whether Gentiles could be admitted was a very difficult one which was not sorted out overnight and might have destroyed the Church at it’s very beginning. This passage gives us an account of what might be described as Peter’s conversion to the concept of accepting Gentiles into communion via Baptism. His vision of the forbidden foods being given to him to eat is the opener for Peter and then witnessing the Holy Spirit coming down on Jews and Gentiles without distinction convinces Peter and he orders Cornelius and his household to be baptised. There will be other trials within the community until it is convinced that Peter and Paul are acting on behalf of God’s Holy Spirit in going out first to the Jews and then the Gentiles. It enables the Gospel to spread throughout the world as Jesus had envisioned at his Ascension.

Psalm 97: 1-4.
This little song is proclaiming that the Lord is coming and the passage we have is extolling the glory and wonder of the Lord who is coming.

2nd Reading from the first letter of St. John 4: 7-10.
This reading proclaims the absolute centrality of Love. This is not the Romantic love, but the love that comes from God. If we love, then we are begotten by God and we know God. If we are cold and calculating measuring whether it is worth our while to love someone then we cannot know God. God’s love was revealed in Jesus Christ, God’s only Son. In the Gospel we have the vision of that true love that enabled Jesus to sacrifice himself to cleanse us from our sins. That is the love that is being written about, the completely unselfish love that enables us to live like Jesus and become God’s precious children destined to spend eternity in the glory of God’s kingdom, borne entirely on Love. The love we witness exhibited by Jesus in the Holy Gospels.


The Holy Gospel according to John 15: 9-17.
Jesus is explaining how God’s love works. We must imitate Jesus’ way of loving. As Jesus has loved us so we love him by keeping his commands, just as Jesus remained in his Father’s love by keeping the Father’s commands. Jesus’ command is easy if we really get close to him. It is simply, “Love one another as I have loved you.” A totally self-giving love, being selfless, putting others before our own interests. It is a love that can mean laying down our lives for our friends. The great Command is to “Love one another.” We need the help of the Holy Spirit to inspire us to realise that this love is not impossible, but it is only achievable with the help of prayer, sacrifice and God’s grace.

Lord guide us to Love as you Love by the power of your Holy Spirit. Deacon Vincent.


WHY GO ON THE GLASTONBURY PILGRIMAGE?

It is impossible to divorce modern Glastonbury from its history. When England was Mary’s dowry, Walsingham was England’s Nazareth and Glastonbury was England’s Jerusalem.
The story of Christianity in Glastonbury is steeped in myth and legend, some say that Joseph of Arimathea visited and brought the Holy Grail, others say Jesus himself came to Glastonbury and Saints Bride and Patrick both passed through. These stories are of course medieval tales, but it is irrefutable that when King Ina founded the Abbey of St Peter and St Paul in 658AD There was already a structure called, “The Old Church”.
The origins of this building were already lost to history, but we know it was dedicated to Our Lady. King Ina’s charter, published in 694AD mentions, “the wooden basilica, the Old Church of the Most Blessed Virgin” and refers to it as “the foremost Church in Britain, the fount and source of all religion.”
This ancient wooden building was destroyed by fire on 25th May 1184, the image of the Blessed Virgin miraculously survived the fire, and it was set up again when the rebuilt church was consecrated in 1188. The new church, which was still referred to as, The Old Church, was built on the same dimensions as the one it replaced, it was made of stone, but the stone was dressed to look like wood.
During the Middle Ages Glastonbury became the foremost Marian shrine in Northern Europe, the Abbey flourished and was one of the richest establishments in the realm, a fact not lost on King Henry VIII. In September 1539 Henry’s commissioners stripped the Abbey of its valuables and the last Abbot, Richard Whiting and two monks John Thorne and Roger James were hung, drawn, and quartered on Glastonbury Tor on 15th November 1539. All three martyrs were beatified by Pope Leo XIII in 1895.
With the demise of the Abbey. the Catholic Faith was almost eradicated in Glastonbury. The Society of the Sacred Heart set up a school in Glastonbury at the start of the twentieth century and there were only ten Catholic families in the area at that time. However, the emergence of the faith was gathering momentum
across the country and in 1895 to celebrate the beatification of the Glastonbury Martyrs the first modern pilgrimage took place. It was the largest movement of Catholics in England since the reformation.
The modern pilgrimage gained popularity and in the 1960’s as many as twenty thousand people thronged into the town, however, despite the growing number of Catholics in England, the Glastonbury Pilgrimage has dwindled to less than a thousand in 2023.
So, we are asking that the whole of Clifton Diocese works to revitalise this event which links us literally to the earliest Christians in England, by sending pilgrims from every parish to celebrate Mass in the ancient Abbey.
As well as the pilgrimage walk, there is plenty to see in the Shrine of Our Lady of Glastonbury. The High Street has several quirky shops and some excellent pubs and cafés. Parking for cars and coaches is available, but pilgrims who prefer a more traditional method, can join the Walking Pilgrimage from Clifton Cathedral.
We have formed a 'Guild of Glastonbury Pilgrims' and set up a Facebook Group for pilgrimage coordinators in all parishes throughout Clifton Diocese. The Facebook Group is a networking tool for facilitating the annual pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Glastonbury by Catholics from Clifton Diocese and beyond.

If you would like to join the Guild and be a contact point for the Glastonbury Pilgrimage in your parish, just search for 'Guild of Glastonbury Pilgrims' on Facebook.
Alternatively, please email the Guild at: glastonbury.pilgrimage@cliftondiocese.com.
More information can be found on the following webpages:
https://www.glastonburyshrine.co.uk/pilgrimage
https://cliftondiocese.com/pilgrimage/

Thank you

The Glastonbury Pilgrimage Committee

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INFORMATION FOR PILGRIMS ATTENDING THE GLASTONBURY PILGRIMAGE on SUNDAY 14th JULY 2024

The Pilgrimage theme is ‘Mary, Woman of Prayer’ and will have four main focal points:


The Shrine Church of Our Lady St Mary of Glastonbury will be a Chapel of Exposition and Silent Adoration and will offer
the Sacrament of Reconciliation until 3.00pm.
There will be a single tented Chapel for Private Healing Prayer opposite the Shrine Church, just inside the Abbey Gate.
The traditional Pilgrimage Procession will start in the Abbey grounds at 2.15pm.
The Pilgrimage Mass will be celebrated in the Abbey Grounds, as usual, at 3.30pm.
If you are able, please bring your parish and organisations banners to carry in the procession, and display near the Altar
during Mass. Afterwards, during Mass, they will be displayed at the side of the Altar.

*St Mary’s Shrine Church–Silent Chapel of Exposition*

-Rosary: 11.30am
You are invited to visit the Shrine Church of Our Lady St Mary of Glastonbury, to join the Rosary, starting at 11.30am,
followed by Exposition and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and the Sacrament of Reconciliation until 3.00pm.
-Simple Benediction and Reposition of the Blessed Sacrament – 3.00pm.

*In the Abbey Grounds*
-Pilgrimage Entrance - Magdalene Street Gate – Entry Badges and Programmes. Gift stall in the grounds.
Adhesive badges, which you must wear to gain entrance to the Abbey grounds, and programmes containing full details of the
procession and the Mass in the Abbey grounds, can be obtained at the Magdalene Street Gate to the Abbey, which is the
designated entrance for the Pilgrimage. An entrance fee towards Pilgrimage expenses is requested. (£3 per adult is suggested)
Badges can also be obtained from the stewards on duty at the coach set-down point, where programmes are also available.
Rosaries, postcards, prayer cards, candles and other gifts may be purchased from stall in the Abbey grounds.
-Sacrament of Reconciliation and private Healing Prayer – 12 noon until 3.00pm
The Sacrament of Reconciliation with visiting priests is, this year, being offered in the Shrine Church, from 12 noon until
3.00pm.
A tented chapel for private Healing Prayer will be situated opposite the Shrine Church, just inside the Abbey Gate. Members
of the Shrine Healing Ministry will be available for private Healing Prayer for those who would like to receive it.
-The Rosary Procession – 2.15pm
Pilgrims wishing to take part in the procession should assemble in the Abbey grounds at 1.45pm – 2.00pm, to prepare for
the procession which will start at 2.15pm. The procession will walk around the Abbey grounds, exiting via the Abbey House
Gardens and will process through the centre of Glastonbury via Chilkwell Street, High Street, Magdalene Street, and
returning to the Abbey through the Magdalene Street Gate, opposite the Shrine Church, at about 3.00pm. Priests are invited
to join the procession.
-Mass in the Abbey Grounds – 3.30pm
At 3.30pm the Pilgrimage Mass will be celebrated by the Bishop. Some seats at the front (left side) will be reserved for the
Civic Dignitaries, who are our guests. Areas near the centre aisle will be set aside for the disabled and near the front for those
with impaired hearing for whom an induction loop system will be available as well as a sign language lectern. Please be
guided by the stewards during the distribution of Holy Communion, when yellow and white umbrellas will indicate the
positions of priests giving Communion. Gluten-free hosts will be available from the priest at the red and white umbrella. An
offertory collection will be taken during Mass, towards the upkeep of the Shrine of Our Lady of Glastonbury. Collections
may also be taken at the gate as you depart after Mass, for those who missed the opportunity during the offertory.
-Stewards’ assistance – three key locations
On arrival in Glastonbury there will be stewards present at three locations: the coach set-down point in Magdalene Street,
the Magdalene Street Gate entrance to the Abbey opposite the Shrine Church, and in the Abbey grounds. Identifiable by the
gold ‘Stewards’ armbands or Knights’ collars, they will be happy to answer any queries you may have.
-Refreshments, toilet facilities and safety
Light refreshments, sandwiches, hot and cold drinks, will be available from St Mary’s Tea Tent in the Abbey grounds, until
half an hour before the Mass commences and again directly after the Mass. Toilet facilities will be available for all in the
Abbey grounds. An Ambulance and First Aid staff will be on duty in case of emergency.
-General consideration
As you will be guests of the Trustees of Glastonbury Abbey, will you please treat their property with respect, leaving it in
good order and free from litter. Thank you.

NB: Entrance Badges and Programmes must be obtained at the Pilgrims’ Entrance immediately inside the Magdalene Street gate to the Abbey. There will be no stalls outside the Shrine Church.