Dog on the run!

Dog on the run!

“I didn’t push him … honestly I didn’t”

I met Andy Moran briefly today and realised I’ve not posted anything here since before the All-Ireland Final.  I was, of course, disappointed Mayo did not win, but not to the point of never writing again!!

Last Thursday night I went to get something from the boot of my car and Alpha noticed the “open door” and took to his (whatever dogs take to) heels??  I followed him, knowing that he’d come back but not sure when.  We met each other briefly beside the church but he felt it wasn’t time to come home just yet.  “It’s not often I get out here without a lead and I’m not just ready to go back yet”!!  Though I understood his quest for a bit of freedom it was nearly 1am and I thought it was time to close down.  I called him gently “Come home you clown” but he seemed less than inspired by that!  From experience, I knew that if I went to the sacristy that he’d realise in time, “You know Sherlock isn’t that bad after all so I’ll wander in and see how he’s doing”.  I was ready. Well, I thought I was.

When I heard the pitter-patter of Alpha Feet I positioned myself behind the door so that I could close it when he came in, put on his lead and retrace our steps homeward.  In he came, I stretched to close the door and tripped …..

A week and dislocated shoulder later it’s still very vivid to me!!

Just renewed the licence for one year!! Could have gone “lifetime”

Ironically the request to renew Alpha’s licence came in the post two days later.  I looked at it for a while, then I looked at him and thought, “What’s another €20?” so he’s with me still.  Wouldn’t have it any other way.

So writing has been a bit slow but stick with me!!

It’s been a “ruf” week 🙂

 

Ger Regan, R.I.P.

Ger Regan, R.I.P.

Ger Regan 1971-2016, R.I.P.

Ger Regan 1971-2016, R.I.P.

I heard sad news earlier this evening.  Ger Regan died. May he rest in peace.  Ger is a few years younger than myself and I’ve known him for more than thirty years.  In recent weeks he had been unwell but I hadn’t foreseen his death.  I spoke with him last Friday evening, before going on holidays, and we talked about “catching up” when I’d get back.  I can’t fully take in the reality that will not now happen.

I read that Gospel passage on Sunday about not knowing the day or hour.  I believed it as I read it but it doesn’t always sink in.  When you say goodbye to someone that you think you’ll see again and that turns out not to be the case, it’s a soul searching moment.

Earlier today I took a photo of the Year of Mercy Door in St Agnes’ Cathedral.  At that stage I’d known that Ger had taken a turn for the worse but in taking the photo I was very much thinking of him.  He was hugely influential in the designing of the Door of Mercy in our own cathedral in Ballaghderreen and took great pride in it and the little prayer space that he helped set up at the back of the Cathedral. He had taken a huge interest in banners and trying to focus people’s attention on the year that’s in it.

The Door of Mercy, St Agnes Cathedral, Rockville Centre, NY

The Door of Mercy, St Agnes’ Cathedral, Rockville Centre, NY

The door is wide open, draped in colours of welcome and allows access to a Holy Place.  As I took the photo, I thought of Ger and hoped that the Eternal Door would be opened to him.  I prayed that it would and, as the news settles in my heart now, I have a feeling that he is indeed home and safe.  No more worries or wondering, the Lord will set his mind and heart to rest and enfold him in His lasting peace.

I will be thinking of his mother, family and friends in the coming days and will visit his grave in Kilcolman as soon as I can.

Never take a goodbye for granted …

________________________________

POPE FRANCIS’ PRAYER FOR THE YEAR OF MERCY

Lord Jesus Christ,

you have taught us to be merciful like the heavenly Father,

and have told us that whoever sees you sees Him.

Show us your face and we will be saved.

Your loving gaze freed Zacchaeus and Matthew from being enslaved by money;

the adulteress and Magdalene from seeking happiness only in created things;

made Peter weep after his betrayal,

and assured Paradise to the repentant thief.

Let us hear, as if addressed to each one of us, the words that you spoke to the Samaritan woman:

“If you knew the gift of God!”

You are the visible face of the invisible Father,

of the God who manifests his power above all by forgiveness and mercy:

let the Church be your visible face in the world, its Lord risen and glorified.

You willed that your ministers would also be clothed in weakness

in order that they may feel compassion for those in ignorance and error:

let everyone who approaches them feel sought after, loved, and forgiven by God.

Send your Spirit and consecrate every one of us with its anointing,

so that the Jubilee of Mercy may be a year of grace from the Lord,

and your Church, with renewed enthusiasm, may bring good news to the poor,

proclaim liberty to captives and the oppressed,

and restore sight to the blind.

We ask this through the intercession of Mary, Mother of Mercy,

you who live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit for ever and ever.

Amen.

A decent man …

A decent man …

Save us, Lord, while we are awake; protect us while we sleep; that we may keep watch with Christ and rest with him in peace.
 
Now, Master, you let your servant go in peace.
You have fulfilled your promise.
My own eyes have seen your salvation,
which you have prepared in the sight of all peoples.
A light to bring the Gentiles from darkness;
the glory of your people Israel.
 
Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,
as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be,
world without end.
 
Amen.
 
Save us, Lord, while we are awake; protect us while we sleep; that we may keep watch with Christ and rest with him in peace.

In 1992, my second year in Collooney parish, there was a change of priests.  Tommy Johnston was appointed Parish Priest in Mullinabreena bringing to an end one of the most enjoyable years I had in ministry - enjoyable in the sense that Tommy and I worked very much as a team, going places together, sharing ideas and trying to put them into action.  We had good fun along the way.

Tommy's transfer brought me into contact with Joe Spelman who was appointed Parish Priest of Collooney.  I'd known Joe for years but in a different setting,  He was a Professor in Maynooth, a very intelligent man and we moved in different circles.  My mother used to have an expression that spoke about a person's good qualities, she'd say "He'd never close his eye on you". I came to see that as a huge compliment, speaking to a person's character and, in particular, the truth that the person would always notice and acknowledge you. Joe fell into that revered category. I remember him walking "Joe's Square" in Maynooth and no matter who he was with, he always gave that smiling nod as you walked past in the opposite direction.  Words, though sometimes used, were not necessary.  Joe was saying "hello" in his own way and letting the other know that was the right thing to do.

In Collooney, our relationship was somewhat different.  The "Professor" had become a priest in a parish, as had the student five years earlier.  Now we were on the same pitch, wearing the same colours and walking in the same direction.  Joe was very aware that it was his first taste of Parish life.  He had retired from Maynooth's staff earlier in the year and came to Collooney, not to retire but to engage with a new phase of life.  No more than myself, he was finding his feet in ministry and was not afraid to acknowledge that.  "If it's not broken", he told me, "don't fix it".  What he was saying centred on his belief that whatever was working well in the parish, whatever Tommy and I had set in place and was seen to be working would continue.  He wasn't there to stamp authority or do it "his way" but to journey with people in the hope we were on the right road.

Bishop Flynn appointed Joe as Vicar General of the Diocese and with that came the title "Monsignor".  Joe took the role seriously and was a very good Vicar General of Achonry.  He took the title less seriously and never attached to himself any of the trappings or shades of the office. There was something strangely comforting about this. There was nothing surprising about it.

We had three years together and, when I moved to the Marriage Tribunal in 1995, I was sorry to be leaving Joe.  I enjoyed his ways so much.  He had a droll voice and an equally droll sense of humour but, and for me equally important, a sharp mind and the ability to dispense (without you knowing you were in the dispensary!) solid advice.  One of my favourites was around a letter I had written about something that hurt and bothered me.  I showed the letter to Joe.  He read it carefully, handed in back to me and said; "Vincent, that's an excellent letter. What you say is true and you've every right to say it but if you take my advice you won't send it."  Then he added "I've never regretted a letter I didn't send but I've regretted a few I did".  It took a few minutes for it to sink in but the letter became pieces and the pieces were left in Joe's dustbin.  The pieces led to peace!  

I remember him writing to me the first Christmas I was in Galway.  He told me bits and pieces about the parish, what was happening and how people were keeping. Before signing the letter he concluded with the words "I miss you".  I was taken by those words because he could have pushed it out a little from himself and said "you're missed" or "the people miss you" or "it's not the same without you" but no, he made it personal "I miss you".  I hope he never regretted writing those lines!!  I never regretted reading them and they continue to console me in times of self questioning.  His lines remind me that I have made a difference in people's lives.

Joe died on Thursday morning, June 23rd after a few years journey with the uninvited guest of "Parkinson's Disease"  It took away much of the man's character, slowed his movement and perhaps most sadly of all, dented that great intellect with which he had been so clearly gifted.  I visited him a few times in Dublin though not often enough. The more recent visits were difficult because there was no recognition and I found it difficult to see him like that. I had no sense of him knowing me or remembering anything of the road we travelled and shared.  Hopefully I remembered for both of us.

At his Funeral Mass yesterday (June 25th) in Collooney, Bishop Brendan went back beyond Joe and opened his words to us with memories of Joe's mother who had been a teacher in Coolavin N.S. (Monasteraden). After her death in 1982 a past pupil wrote a tribute to her in a local paper.  For thirty years she'd taught the junior classes and the writer said when they left home to go to school for the first time Mrs Spelman held out a hand that was "warm and welcoming". She, the writer recalled, taught the children "all we were able to learn" and she "etched" in their hearts a lasting love for God as she prepeared them for the Sacraments.  I loved the line "all we were able to learn" - today they'd call that "differentiation" where the child's abilities are centre stage and teaching takes place in accordance with how much a child is able for.  Mrs Spelman seems to have been ahead of her time.  As Bishop Brendan introduced us to her, there was a sense of a woman who knew what she was about and who made a lasting impression. He concluded "I think her son carved a good niche too in the hearts of many people…" 

So he did.  He moved with people at their pace, prayed with people as they could pray and stayed for as long as he was needed. He was a good priest, a role model and thankfully a friend.

Back to that Christmas Card of 1995 and hoping he won't mind me stealing his words:

(Joe) "I miss you".

R.I.P.

(Click here for Full Text of Bishop Brendan's Homily)

_____________________________________

I included Horses and Plough as the Featured Image for this post.  I did so because I've been thinking again of Kavanagh's great poem, "To the man after the harrow" which, I'm told, he wrote for a neighbour who was being ordained a priest.  I love the idea that Kavanagh used his gift to create a gift for a neighbour's son. I am not 100% sure about this though I met a group of priests at a retreat one time and some of them knew the man the poem was written for.  I'd hate to think the ordination was not the reason for the poem but whatever the reason, the words are great. I think, had it been written for Joe, Kavanagh would be happy  that his advice was heeded.

_____________________________________

harrow

To The Man After The Harrow

 

Now leave the check-reins slack,
The seed is flying far today -
The seed like stars against the black
Eternity of April clay.

This seed is potent as the seed
Of knowledge in the Hebrew Book,
So drive your horses in the creed
Of God the Father as a stook.

Forget the men on Brady's Hill.
Forget what Brady's boy may say.
For destiny will not fulfil
Unless you let the harrow play.

Forget the worm's opinion too
Of hooves and pointed harrow-pins,
For you are driving your horses through
The mist where Genesis begins.

Fr Leo O’Sullivan R.I.P.

Fr Leo O’Sullivan R.I.P.

Fr Leo O'Sullivan S.P.S.

Fr Leo O’Sullivan S.P.S.

I heard yesterday (January 4th) of the death of Fr Leo O’Sullivan.  A native of Dingle, Leo was a Kiltegan Missionary Priest.  In or around 1968, when I was about 5, going on 6, years of age, he came to spend some time in our parish at home.  It may even have been earlier than that as the priest’s house in Cloonloo was not built (as far as I recall) and Fr Leo lived with a local family while he was in our parish. He was a joy!

I remember my family going to Kerry with him the day he left Cloonloo.  We went to an early Mass in Cloonloo Church (there’s a photo of that day at home.)  Leo celebrated Mass on the Wooden Altar that was in the church at that time.  Afterwards we went with him to Dingle.  I remember him telling me, as we looked to the Atlantic off the coast of Kerry that New York was the next parish!!  I believed him and, in my childish mind, wondered what it must be like there.

There was a kindness in him.  I recall one Christmas him arriving in at home with presents for us.  Among them a train set that was for sharing.  I spoke recently about Fr John Casey bringing presents to my mother and her brothers on a Christmas morning in 1930 and, though the circumstances were thankfully different, there was something in Fr Leo’s train set that stayed with me.  Indeed when I hear that Christmas ad for Barry’s Tea and the man recalling a train set he got from “Santa” when he was a child, there’s a connection there too.  “Doesn’t that beat Banagher?”

I remember Leo calling in home shortly after I was ordained.  He was back in Africa at that stage and I gave him my “blessing” on the street outside our house at home.  Again, a photo of that (when/if I find , I’ll include here).

Through the years we kept in touch.  Sometimes he helped me to fulfil my Mass requests and arranged for Missionary Priests to offer Masses that time didn’t allow me say.  I’m glad we kept in contact.  There were a few – too few – visits to Kiltegan.  My parents loved to see him and I’m happy that I was able to bring them a few times to catch up and renew their friendship.

There was a priest from Gurteen, Fr Ciaran Needham, whose name I’d heard many times but never met.  One of the times we visited Leo, we had the chance to meet Ciaran too and my father and mother were so pleased to see him.  I was too.  These were great men.

Bill, Fr Ciiaran Needham, Fr Leo and my mother. RIP all!

Bill, Fr Ciaran Needham, Fr Leo and my mother. RIP all!

Myself, Ciaran, Leo and Mary

Myself, Ciaran, Leo and Mary

A sharing that lasted for decades. Leo and Bill, R.I.P.

A sharing that lasted for decades. Leo and Bill, R.I.P.

The next time we visited, things had changed a little.  My mother’s balance wasn’t great and Leo got a wheelchair for her.  Sadly, wheelchairs are all too common in Kiltegan, with many retired Missionaries there now.  It made it a bit easier to bring her around but Mary wasn’t overly impressed to be in “the chair”.  Other changes included the death of Fr Ciaran Needham.  I left my parents with Leo and visited his grave.  May he rest in peace.

Fr Ciaran's Grave. R.I.P.

Fr Ciaran’s Grave. R.I.P.

2008 – my parents with Fr Leo in Kiltegan

Leo was a character and, wherever he went, there are stories about things he said and did.  Someone told me that in one parish, he asked a nun “Who’s your man in the picture?  I see him so many places and I didn’t want to ask in case I should know”  “It’s Pope Paul VI”, the nun whispered and Leo thanked her for the update!!  In our own parish too, there were moments of fun when he’d talk to people and have them (us) fooled to the eyeballs!!  He limped, I’m told, one time into a hospital in Drogheda and when a nurse asked what was wrong he told her he had “woodworm” in his wooden leg!!

For all the messing, he loved his Missionary life and his heart seems to have very much remained there.

The last time I saw him was about two years ago.  I had a baptism in Carlow and decided to go to see him.  I found the man in his room but Leo wasn’t there.  I was saddened to see him so vulnerable and confused.  I’m not sure whether or not he knew me.  I had a feeling he did but he never mentioned my parents or their deaths. Neither did I.  I felt he didn’t know they’d died and, if he did, he’d forgotten. I came away with a heavy heart.  There was another link with my past, slipping away.

I was so sorry not to have heard of Leo’s death in time to attend his funeral.  I would like to have been able to do that much to say thanks to him, not just for an old train set, but for reminding me that good humour has a central place in ministry.  Much is achieved through laughter.  Leo O’Sullivan taught me that much!  I’m grateful.

This year I had arrangements made to go to Kiltegan and thought I’d see Leo there.  I was prepared for him not knowing me but looked forward to standing with him for a little while.  I will visit him of course, but like Ciaran Needham and another man I always admired, Kevin Brehony, it will be in the place where the daffodils grow.

kiltegan

The final resting place for those who made it home to Ireland. God rest these Missionary men.

May they rest in peace.  Amen.

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