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Our New Icon in Esker,- St. Alphonsus de Liguori.

Our New Icon in Esker,- St. Alphonsus de Liguori, founder of the Redemptorist Missionaries.

This icon, designed jointly by Esker and the Redemptoristine Sisters in Drumcondra, Dublin, portrays Alphonsus de Liguori as a young man, proclaiming the Gospel. It includes also images of his music (actual notation from a mss in British Museum);  image of Santa Maria dei Monti, a statue in Scala near Amalfi, which dates from the 13th century: Alphonsus often prayed before this statue, seeking guidance; image of the town of Amalfi in Southern Italy; image of his apostolate of writing.  (Note: Santa Maria dei Monti’ or St. Mary of the Mountains, is the name of the new mission of the Irish Redemptorists, from both Dublin and Fortaleza in Brazil, in Mozambique & Malawi. The place of this new mission is in a very mountainous area in northern Mozambique, near the border with Malawi.)

Below are three photos, showing details of the icon in our community chapel in Esker. Thanks to the Redemptoristine sisters for writing a wonderful icon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Esker Family Festival Day 2014,- some photos.

See ‘Gallery’, or click here,  for Photos taken on the day of the Esker Family Festival, July 27, 2014.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A FEW PHOTOS FROM LAST YEAR!- click here for Gallery of Festival Day 2013 - or click here for Gallery of Festival Day 2012:

‘They’re off!’

 

 

'Putting your best foot forward'

The Village, in Esker.

 

 

 

'Well, aren't we a holy show!'

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Art Course,- with Chris Hughes: July 28-31, Mon-Thurs.

Art Course,- with Chris Hughes, tel. 087 9718405:

Dates:  July 28-31, Mon-Thurs. 10am -5pm.

For whom? For beginners and advanced.

What is involved?  Oils and acrylic painting class made easy. All equipment supplied, just turn up. Guaranteed a 20″ by 16″ canvas completed each day. The only thing you bring is inspiration!

Cost: €260 residential, €200 non residential.

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June 29th: Feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, Patron Saints of Esker Church.

Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, June 29th, 2014.

Pictures from the Church of the Martyrdom of St. Paul, south of Rome:

Pathway leading to Church at reputed site of beheading of Paul: at the Abbazia dell Tre Fontane, some miles south of Rome.

Martyrdom of Peter,- tradition says that he asked to be crucified upside down, as he was not worthy to die as his Master had done!

Esker Church is dedicated to these two saints, as is our Parish Church in Kiltullagh: this is because of the Dominican presence in Esker, and because their Priory in Athenry, built in 1242, was dedicated to Sts. Peter and Paul. The priory

The beheading of Paul, c.67AD: he was beheaded rather than crucified, because he was a Roman citizen by birth.

was eventually destroyed by Cromwell’s soldiers about 1650. In the late 1600′s, the few remaining Dominicans hid out in the woods around Esker,because there was a price on their heads. The local community protected them through the worst of times.

Found this passage below on website http://www.loyolapress.com/early-christian-martyrs.htm. There are many stories of martyrs singing hymns together even as they were being led to their deaths. They are an inspiration to ourselves today, as we face different challenges to our faith, especially the ridicule of colleagues or mates or our peers, as they might ask us ‘How can you be part of that church of sinners?’- forgetting that the Church/God’s people as always been a gathering of sinners called to be saints.

Early Christian Martyrs: (from website mentioned above)

Friends are friends no matter what, right?

Well, you sure hope so. You hope that your friends won’t let you down when you need them most. You depend on them to not reveal your secrets or make fun of you in a mean way.

Friendships can feel really strong and easy to keep in good times. But the test of a friendship happens when, for some reason, we’re tempted to betray our friends. If we can stick out the temptation, we know that our friendship is real.

It’s good to remember that faith is a friendship—a close, trusting friendship with God. We’re loved, supported, and helped by God all day long. We tell him our troubles and our joys. You and God go through each day together, and he will be with you for the rest of your life. That’s a friendship. That’s faith.

Sometimes you might be tempted to betray that friendship, just a little bit. You might be embarrassed to admit that you go to church or pray. You might think it wouldn’t be so bad to hurt someone else’s feelings—just this one time. You might stop reading the Bible or praying at night because you’ve got other things to do. You’re not the first to feel that way, you know. And you won’t be the last.

In fact, Christians have been tempted to betray their friendships with God ever since the beginning, in both big and small ways. And just like any friendship, every time we resist that temptation and stay faithful to that friendship, our faith grows stronger.

For the first three hundred years of Christianity, the followers of Jesus were under great pressure to betray their friendships with him. They lived in what was known as the Roman Empire, which extended from northern Africa all the way up to England at that time. For almost the entire period from A.D. 100 to 313, it was illegal to be a Christian in most of the Roman Empire.

That’s right, illegal—against the law. In our country, you can go to court and go to jail for things like stealing and killing. In the Roman Empire, you would go to jail for those things, too. But you could also be punished by the law if you were friends with Jesus.

How? Every person in the Roman Empire, no matter what their religion, was supposed to honor the Roman emperor as a god. If they would do that—once a year burn a little incense in front of a statue and say, “Caesar is god!”—they were okay and could go on home and mind their own business for another year.

But, of course, Christians refused to do this. They knew there was only one God, and to say anything or anyone else was a god would be a betrayal of their friendship with God. When they stood true and when they refused to honor false gods or the emperor as a god, the Christians got into trouble. Big trouble.

They were put in jail—dark, terrible dungeons. They were sent into exile to desolate islands where they were forced to work in mines. And worst of all, if they were really stubborn and still wouldn’t deny their friendship with Jesus, they were put to death.

The leaders of the Roman Empire did this because they really wanted to discourage others from following Christianity. They also wanted to provide entertainment for the ¬people of the empire. So when they executed Christians, they often did it in public, in the middle of huge crowds gathered in arenas. It was, believe it or not, like a big show.

There are many stories of the deaths of Christians that have come down to us over the centuries. These Christians who died for their faith were—and still are—called “martyrs,” a word that means “witnesses.” They’re called witnesses because that’s exactly what they were doing through their deaths: witnessing to their love for God and their friendship with him—their faith. Some of the more well-known stories of martyrs from those early years include the following:

St. Lucy, St. Agnes, St. Agatha, and St. Cecilia were all young women—perhaps in their early teens—who all suffered terribly for their faith at different times. The stories that have come down to us say that St. Lucy lost her eyes during her torture, St. Agnes was beheaded, St. Agatha was placed on hot coals, and St. Cecilia was suffocated and then beheaded.

St. Timothy and St. Maura were married only twenty days when Timothy, who was in charge of the sacred books of his Christian community, was ordered to turn them over. He refused, and his wife, Maura, was brought to the prison to try to convince him to give in. She wouldn’t cooperate, so both husband and wife were nailed to a wall of the prison, and, so tradition tells us, it took them nine days to die.

St. Marcellinus was a priest who was imprisoned during the last major Roman persecution, around A.D. 304. While in prison before his execution, he convinced many of the love of Jesus, including his own jailer.

There are hundreds—thousands—of other martyrs from these years who endured the most terrible pain. But the strange thing is, the stories that come down to us about their deaths, even those few stories recorded by the Romans who killed them, tell us that most of these women, men, and children who were killed for their faith died with peaceful hearts, sometimes even singing hymns as they were burned or dragged by animals in front of the cheering crowds. Their friendship with God was very, very deep.

Over the past two thousand years, many Christians have decided to die rather than betray their friendship with Jesus. Even today, Christians still suffer martyrdom in some countries. You will read about some of them in other chapters in this book.

All of these brave ¬people may speak different languages and wear different clothes, but they all have something important in common: They are best friends with Jesus, and they can’t imagine turning their backs on him, even if it means suffering.

You probably know how they feel—you can’t imagine turning your back on your own friends. When you’re tempted to, you probably just have to imagine how rotten you’d feel if you did, and that’s enough to set you straight.

Well, when you’re tempted to betray your faith—your friendship with God—remember that feeling. And remember the martyrs of early Christianity. Just imagine if they had all chosen to deny their friendship with God instead of staying true.

Would anyone else have bothered to even look into friendship with Jesus if the Christians had betrayed him? Would it have seemed worth living for, if it wasn’t worth dying for?

 

from Loyola Kids Books of Heroes © 2003 Amy Welborn

 

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Swallows about to leave their nest in Esker

Click here to watch the final day before five young swallows take flight. Filmed in Esker Monastery, June 24th, 2014. The nest was empty and they were all gone by early next morning.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6BzE-hvO-1s 

Two stills from the same day:

Mother feeding her young. June 24th 2014,- the day before they left the nest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bird on the ledge,- June 24 2014, before leaving next day.

 

 

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Swallows about to leave their nest, in Esker Monastery.

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Photos of Esker Novena 2014:

 

 

Click here to read the story of the icon of the Mother of Perpetual Help

“All with one accord, devoted themselves to prayer, together with Mary, the Mother of Jesus”- (Acts of the Apostles 1:14)

————–

FROM THE ESKER NOVENA OF 2014: 

This was our message in the Esker Novena, which went from June 3rd to June 11th: – and it’s the same in the other large Novenas, also:  ”The Novena, or nine days of prayer ‘together with Mary, the Mother of Jesus‘ (Acts 1:14), is for everyone, no matter who you are or where you are in your life or your search. Come as you are, not as you feel you ought to be! You can join in the Novena any time, even for a  few days of it.  Any time is the  time to come and enter into the experience. God’s blessings don’t need much time! Miracles of grace can happen in just one moment.”

Thanks a million to all who came to Esker to pray during the Novena. It has been a joy and a real blessing, an up-lifting of hearts of all involved. Here’s to next year’s Novena, please God,- due to begin on Tuesday June 2nd, the day after the June bank-holiday.

May Our Lady’s prayers be with us all, in all ways, through the year. We prayed here each day to her to help us through the trials and disappointments of life. Help us not to lose heart. May we share with you and your Son the joy of having courageously faced up to all the challenges of life. AMEN.

PHOTOS FROM DAY 9, JUNE 11, 2014:

Redemptorists gathered to sing their antiphon, at end of each session on Day 9: our Thank You to all who have come to make the Novena! Mile buiochais.

'The Ballinasloe Three',- regulars to the Novena: Breda Darrane, Jo Scannell, Maura Loughnane.- sneaking away from Ballinasloe! Fr. Garvey,please note!!!

Day 9,- and their first day of the Novena- all the way from Kerala!- via Ardrahan: Densil Joseph, Smith Mathew & Dionn Densil (age 3), Robin & Rosemi. Their language is MALAYALAM, and young Dionn can say the entire 12 minutes of the novena prayer in his own language,- with a few hymns in between!

 

The REDS have it! Rachel Kelly, Emma McKeogh, Padraig Kelly, after an evening session on Day 9.

 

Ciara Tuohy, Leah O'Brien, Catherine Tuohy- 2 sisters and a friend. Day 9, after 4pm session.

Day 9: 10am: Molly Brady, with her Granddaughter Elaine Mulry, and her Great Grandchildren Emma 1, Anna 3.

Day 9: 10am: Writing Petitions and Thanksgivings, at the Shrine of the Mother of Perpetual Help.

Day 9: 10am Session: Cian Loughrey (2), did the whole nine days!- with his Mom, Martina.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PHOTOS FROM TUESDAY, DAY 8, JUNE 10, 2014:

Day 8: 8pm Session: 'No room at the Inn'- full to capacity.

Day 8: 8pm Session: all the way down the corridor in the Monastery.

 

 

Day 8: 8pm Session: in old Community Common Room.

Day 8: Liliana (age 3), with her Mom, Sandra King.

 

Chloe Finerty (3+) with her Grannie, Nancy Flynn, after 10am Mass.

Day 8,after 10am Novena: Teresa Boyle (Esker), Margaret Conneely (Beal Easa in Mayo and Kilcolgan), Coleman Newell (Rosmuc & Kilcolgan). Coleman's prayer at the Novena is that he will find his 'lost' son, David Newell, somewhere in the USA!

DAY 8: Three generations of one family,who have done the Novena each day: Clare Smyth, Chrissie Cunningham, Carmel Smyth.

 

PHOTOS FROM MONDAY, DAY 7: JUNE 9TH 2014

Erin Spellman (2+), with Phyllis McInerney, Grandmother:Monday 9th, 10am.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

'Not so sure!' - Ronan McDonagh (18 months) with Debbie, his Mom. Monday 10am- waiting for the rain to stop!

'Gimme a break!'- Darragh Faherty (10 months), after the 10am Novena: while the rain poured outside.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PHOTOS FROM SUNDAY DAY 6: JUNE 8TH, 2014.

 

Sean Monaghan (5) blesses his little brother Joseph (age 7 weeks), as Mom Helena watches on.

 

Fr. Tony Rice, Redemptorist, blesses Cathal (6), Anna (4), Lorna (2) Redmond, and their cousin Ruth Flaherty (3)

 

Donncha Redmond (6 months) doesn't get left out, as Dad Sean looks on.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fr. Tony Rice blesses baby Brendan Gardiner, as Mom and Dad, Josephine & Gabriel, look on.

 

Sunday, Day 6: Alannah & Micheal Lyons playing at 10am Mass.

 

Never to early to do the Esker Novena!- Baby Aoife O'Connor (8 weeks) with John, Deirdre, and her sister Niamh.

Sunday Day 6: From the Esker Music School,- Edel Coughlan (with harp), Shauna Barrett (7), Saoirse Dempsey (8), and Ewen Callan (7),- at 12 noon Mass.

 

PHOTOS FROM DAY 5, SATURDAY JUNE 7TH, 2014:

Day 5: 10am Session: Catherina Kelly, Padraig 12, Reitseal 9, Caoimhe 7, Saoirse 4.

Day 5, June 7, 2014: Brendan & Maureen O'Donnell, Keith (12), Tim (8) Leonard.

Grace's First Novena: Deirdre Finnegan, and Grace (9months) on Day 5, June 7th, 2014.

Day 5, June 7, 2014: after 4pm Session: Honnie Brannelly, Cormac (5), Eadaoin (8), Anita Corcoran.

Photo from Day 4 of Novena, Friday June 6th, 2014 (‘D’ Day for Normandy Landings 1944).

D Day! I'm Darragh Dunleavy. I'm aged 6 months. This is my very first Novena in Esker. Thanks, Mom, for bringing me here- I'm loving' it!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photos from Day 3 of Novena, Thursday June 5th 2014:

Kate's Lally's first Esker Novena at 9 weeks old! With sister May, and Mom Joan. 10am Day 3.

 

 

 

Day 3 of Esker Novena: after 4pm Session:

Mom, Sinead Hardiman, with two fine men, Shane, Evan. After 4pm Session, Day 3.

Some photos: and this is at the 4pm Session of the Novena, on Day 1, Tuesday 3rd June:

4pm Session of Novena to Mother of Perpetual Help: Day 1, June 3rd 2014:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4pm Session, Day 1: from porch of Esker Church.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4pm Session: part of the overflow, in the Monastery Community Room: Day 1.

SOLEMN NOVENA IN HONOUR OF OUR MOTHER OF PERPETUAL HELP  in Esker, Athenry & Ballinasloe , this Tuesday June 3rd to Wednesday June 11th 2014 

Times Daily:  Esker:   8am, 10am, 4pm, 6pm, 8pm, 10pm

Athenry:    10am   

Ballinasloe:  7.30am, 10am & 8pm.

On  Saturday  7th June,  Special Mass & Anointing of Sick 12 noon in Esker.

Sunday June 8th in Esker Mass & Blessing of babies & small children at all sessions,- 8am, 10am, 12noon, 4.30pm, 6pm, 8pm. 

The great annual Festival of Faith, the Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help, in Esker, Athenry and Ballinasloe, is beginning on Tuesday June 3rd and will run until Wednesday June 11th. For more than thirty years the Solemn Novena has been an outstanding witness to the faith of the people of this area, and to the fact that, despite the trials and tribulations of our Church, faith is still living and vibrant among us.

The theme this year is “ Good news for the Church out on the streets”.

Kindly spread the word to your friends and your community, your parish.

Contact Number: Secretary, Esker, 091 844007

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CAATCH- A local Community Health Resource.

Community Health Initiative

 

It is hoped to have a safeTALK in Esker on Monday November 10th 2014, from 6.30pm to 930pm. See Carousel for more information.  

CAATCH

Corofin, Athenry, Abbeyknockmoy & Turloughmore Community Health

Working with our communities to promote physical and mental wellbeing.

CAATCH is a regional voluntary initiative that has been set up in order to address the difficult challenge of suicide and its impact in these local areas. The group meets on a monthly basis and plans to provide information, support and training locally with the aim of building community resilience and strength. If you would like to get involved in this initiative and/or have any queries please come to one of our information evenings, or contact us below:

  • Information evening Raheen Woods Hotel 7.30pm Thurs. Sept. 18th.
  • Community Wellbeing Week, October 6-12
  • ‘SAFE TALK’ (suicide alertness programme) Corofin 6.30pm-9.30pm, Tues.7th October, and Monivea Thurs.9th Oct.-   Learn four basic steps to recognise persons with thoughts of suicide and connect them to appropriate support services. Suitable for everyone who wants to help prevent suicide- citizens, parents, teachers, volunteers, clergy, front-line workers…Contact Mary O’Sullivan on 091 560182 or mary.osullivan@hse.ie
  • Look out for our WELLBEING APP during Community Well being Week.

We invite you to let others know about this initiative and these events in our local area.

Seamus Devitt C.Ss.R., Esker.

 

 

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Prayer to the Mother of God, from the pen of Pope Francis.

At the end of his Apostolic Exhortation ‘The Joy of the Gospel’ or ‘Evangelii Gaudium’, in

'Ego sum Lux'- 'I am the Light',- Christ the Light of the World, in the arms of his Mother: from Chapel of St. Zeno, in Basilica of St. Praxedes, in Rome. Photos: S. Devitt.

November 2013, Pope Francis concludes with this prayer to Mary, the Mother of God: it is a prayer of the Church and by the Church, God’s People, that the joy of the Gospel of Jesus Christ would reach every human being, through each one of us. It is a prayer for this month of May. If you like it, pass it on to others.

Mary, Virgin and Mother,
you who, moved by the Holy Spirit,
welcomed the word of life
in the depths of your humble faith:
as you gave yourself completely to the Eternal One,
help us to say our own “yes”
to the urgent call, as pressing as ever,
to proclaim the good news of Jesus.

Filled with Christ’s presence,
you brought joy to John the Baptist,
making him exult in the womb of his mother.
Brimming over with joy,
you sang of the great things done by God.
Standing at the foot of the cross
with unyielding faith,
you received the joyful comfort of the resurrection,

and joined the disciples in awaiting the Spirit
so that the evangelizing Church might be born.

Obtain for us now a new ardour born of the resurrection,
that we may bring to all the Gospel of life
which triumphs over death.
Give us a holy courage to seek new paths,
that the gift of unfading beauty
may reach every man and woman.

Virgin of listening and contemplation,
Mother of love, Bride of the eternal wedding feast,
pray for the Church, whose pure icon you are,

that she may never be closed in on herself

or lose her passion for establishing God’s kingdom.

Star of the new evangelisation,
help us to bear radiant witness to communion,
service, ardent and generous faith,
justice and love of the poor,
that the joy of the Gospel
may reach to the ends of the earth,
illuminating even the fringes of our world.

Mother of the living Gospel,
wellspring of happiness for God’s little ones,

pray for us.

Amen. Alleluia!

Given in Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on 24 November, the solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, and the conclusion of the Year of Faith, in the year 2013, the first of my Pontificate.

FRANCISCUS

Icon of Mary, Mother of Tenderness

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Good Shepherd Sunday- Vocations Sunday, May 11, 2014

“Wake up the world! Be witnesses of a different way of doing things, of acting, of living! It is possible to live differently in this world,” Pope Francis said, about living the consecrated life, today. 

Good Shepherd Sunday- Vocations Sunday, May 11, 2014

Embraced by Pope Francis: Vinicio Riva, plagued with neuerofibromatosis: 'He didn't have any fear of my illness', Vinicio said, 'He embraced me without speaking…I quivered. I felt a great warmth'. It was an embrace that melted hearts worldwide.

From this Sunday’s Gospel, John 10:1-10 (Fourth Sunday of Easter, Year A) ‘One by one he calls his own sheep…he goes ahead of them, and they follow because they know his voice.’ (John 10:3)

‘Each one of you has been called by name, by Jesus’ (St. John Paul 11, to youth.)   “Let yourselves be captivated by Christ; heed his invitation and follow him!”

‘If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I have given you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you” (John 13:13-15).

When the time comes for the Eucharistic Banquet, Christ again stresses the need to serve. “For the Son of Man also came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10,45).

“To choose a life as a priest or religious in contemporary Ireland is a radical option, although a hugely fulfilling one.” – Bishop McKeown. Click here for more:  http://www.catholicireland.net/bishop-mckeown-vocations/

Q. What is Jesus saying to you in your life, at this time? Where is he leading you out?

Click here for Pope Francis’ Message for World Day of Prayer for Vocations 2014, and other information: http://www.catholicbishops.ie/2014/05/01/vocations-sunday-2014/

For information about the Redemptorist Vocation and Charism within the Church, click here http://www.redsvocations.ie.

«WAKE UP THE WORLD!»   Conversation with Pope Francis about the Religious Life: Click here for text of his conversation with religious superiors in Rome, January 2014.

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