Catholic Teaching and the Rights of Women

MANY of the centenaries we  have been marking in recent years have been pretty grim, often centred on the terrible events of the First World War. But this last week the country commemorated a positive and ground-breaking event – the passing of the 1918 Representation of the People Act, which

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Our International Day and Catholic Teaching

LAST WEEKEND, along with Racial Justice Sunday, we also celebrated on the Saturday our second International Day, with a special Mass at 12 noon and a very lavish party afterwards in the hall (shown here). In our last newsletter we reproduced a special Biblical reflection for the Sunday produced by

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Belonging – All are Welcome

TODAY IS RACIAL JUSTICE SUNDAY. In our parish we marked this particularly by this Saturday’s special International Mass and Celebration (many thanks to Sandy Misquitta for organising this) and we also have a special collection for CARJ, the Catholic Association for Racial Justice, together with our regular collection of items

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Carillion and Catholic Teaching

SOME of you may remember the teaching document which our bishops published at the end of 1996, shortly before the 1997 General Election, called The Common Good. Designed to guide Catholics in the election campaign, it gave a good and accessible introduction to the branch of Catholic theology known as

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Peace Sunday and Refugees

EVERY YEAR the worldwide Catholic Church keeps New Year’s day as a Day of Prayer for peace in the world, a custom begun by Blessed Paul VI fifty years ago this month. In this country we shift the observance to a Sunday later in January. We mark it in our

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Carry on Christmas

THE TABLET is by far the best of the weekly Catholic newspapers, and always worth reading. In the double Christmas issue there is a very powerful meditation by Pope Francis dating from when he was a priest in Argentina in the early 80s; there is also a hard-hitting column by

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ABBA, No. 1 this Christmas!

Imagine for a moment praying the Lord’s Prayer and saying the words, “Our daddy who art in heaven” instead of what we are accustomed and comfortable with, “Our Father who art in heaven”. To use the word ‘daddy’ when praying in private is one thing but to publicly proclaim it

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False Joy and True Joy

‘In a consumerist culture, the quest for happiness becomes a tyrannical force which makes us believe we must have it all. Having it all is what joy demands of us’. This is a quotation from a book by Professor Tina Beattie of Roehampton University. When I was reading it earlier

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Welcome to the Year of Mark

AS you may know it is now the custom in the Catholic Church to keep the Second Sunday in Advent as Bible Sunday, an observance borrowed from the Church of England, and a day to think a bit about the place of the Bible in our lives. It’s also a

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The Divine Presence in Us

A glance at the world situation could often leave us with the feeling that, God who brought the world into existence has deserted it. The turbulent situation prevalent in the world, the refugee crisis and other events deficient in human love and respect, could call us to question the God

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