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Redemptorist Pilgrimage to Southern Italy, May 2016:
Redemptorist Pilgrimage to Southern Italy, May 21st-28th, 2016: to places associated with St. Alphonsus Liguori and with St. Gerard Majella: see details below:
Cemetery Sunday, Redemptorist Monastery, Esker: Sunday August 30th.
Our annual Cemetery Sunday will be held here in Esker Monastery, this coming Sunday, August 30th 2015, with Mass in the Church at 3pm, followed by our going in procession to the cemetery. All are welcome. For family members who wish to stay overnight, before or after, please contact Gearoid Mulrooney, Manager, on 091-850361 0r 086 2507512
Iraqi Redemptorist Archbishop discusses plight of Iraqi Christians.
The Chaldean Archbishop, Bashar Warda, a Redemptorist who did his Noviciate here in
Ireland in Dundalk, some years ago, speaks about the plight of Christians in Iraq today. He was recently addressing gathering in Philadelphia. Read about it on the National Catholic Reporter website. Click here.
Archbishop Bashar also speaks on YouTube about his ministry to his people. Click here.
Visiting the Shrine of St. John Neumann, C.Ss.R., Fourth Bishop of Philadelphia.
Fr. Seamus Devitt, from the Esker community, had some hours to spare while in transit through Philadelphia, in early August. He took the opportunity to visit the national shrine of St. John Neumann, a Redemptorist who was made the fourth Bishop of Philadelphia (1852-1860). Here are some photos of his visit, on August 6th, 2015:

Fr. Seamus Devitt at the shrine of St. John Neumann.The Shrine is undergoing renovation at the moment, and so the remains can only be viewed behind the temporary screen.
John was beatified 13 October 1963 by Pope Paul VI. He was canonised by him on 19 June 1977.
Fr. Seamus noted with surprise and joy that the young priest, John Nepomocene Neumann, had become a Redemptorist on January 16, 1842. This was almost a century to the day that Seamus was born, on January 10th 1942. A new bond between them!
Click here to read about this remarkable Redemptorist. Incidentally, John as a priest learned enough Irish to hear the confessions of the many Irish who were working on the building of canals such as the Erie Canal!
Pope Francis will be visit Philadelphia in late September, and it is hoped that the Shrine will be renovated and ready for the many thousands of visitors who will be in the city at that time. We wish them all well, at St. Peter’s, as they prepare for this special event!
For more information about different Redemptorist Saints and Blesseds, click here.
And for more about the Irish Redemptorists, click here.
Cemetery Sunday in Esker, August 30th.
Just a reminder, that the Cemetery Sunday in Esker will be August 30th, with Mass at 3pm. We remember all the Redemptorists who are buried here with us in our Community Cemetery, for over the past one hundred years.
Refreshments follow.
Blessed Gennaro Maria Sarnelli, Redemptorist: Feast June 30th.
Feast of Blessed Gennaro (‘Januarius’) Maria Sarnelli, Redemptorist. 1702- 1744.
GENNARO SARNELLI was a very close friend of young Alphonsus de Liguori,. They met in Naples, and both were lawyers, there. They came from fairly well-off families,- Alphonsus from Naples, and Gennaro was son of the Baron of Ciorani, some distance from Naples. As young men, they were both passionate about their faith, attending their confraternities, and caring for the sick. They worked together on the ‘Street Missions’, gathering people in groups on the streets and in the cafès, to explore faith together.
They visited the ‘Hospital for the Incurables,’ each week, to care for the dying,- a great
many of whom where sailors who had contracted syphilis in this and other port cities. There was no cure for them, and young Alphonsus and Gennaro, along with others of their friends, tended to them.
Both eventually chose the priesthood, in their twenties. Gennaro worked mostly in Naples, and his lifelong passion was for the care of prostitutes, and of girls who were at risk of becoming prostitutes. Gennaro worked hard to get the city authorities to care for them and to regulate the great amount of prostitution going on everywhere in this port city. These were the ‘poor’ to whose care Gennaro devoted so much energy. He was well known in the city for his work, and was held in great esteem. He also cared deeply for the young boys who were forced, by poverty, to work around the docklands.
Alphonsus worked in and around Naples for a number of years, and then, seeing the poverty and spiritual deprivation of so many people out in the countryside and in the mountains areas, decided to found a congregation of priests and brothers who would be devoted to giving Missions in these remotest areas.
His first attempt at gathering people around him, at Scala near Amalfi, in November 1732, came to a sad end, when all but one of the group abandoned him. Only Brother Vitus Curtius, formerly a ne’er-do-well, stayed with him. Alphonsus became the laughing-stock of many clergy and former friends back in Naples. He and Bro. Vitus Curtius remained at their post in Scala, and continued to believe in the project of Missions and in a particular style of preaching to even the poorest.
Gennaro , newly ordained a priest, came to his rescue a few months later. Alphonsus planned a Mission in May 1733, in the nearby town of Ravello (-above Amalfi, and nowadays a favourite haunt of the glitterati!-), and Gennaro came from Naples to help him. The mission was a huge success, and Gennaro, went back to Naples and wrote a public letter about it, and about the method and vision of his friend, Fr. Alphonsus de Liguori. No longer was Liguori the butt of jokes in his native city.
Gennaro then went to his Dad, the Baron, back in Ciorani, and persuaded him to give a parcel of land to himself and his friend Alphonsus, and to their newly-arriving companions. These ‘Redemptorists’, as they later came to be known, built their first permanent home and church in Ciorani, and this is the ‘Mother House’ of the Redemptorists. Gennaro worked with Alphonsus and the others for a few years, then asked to return to Naples to the work he was doing in that city, among the prostitutes. His health gave way before long, from exhaustion. He wrote over thirty books, in his work for the Gospel. He died in his early forties.
Alphonsus mourned his death, and declared of Gennaro, in the face of critics who gave out that he had abandoned the project of the Missions, that ‘He was one of us!’
In many parts of the world today, there are Redemptorist projects called the Sarnelli projects, after Blessed Gennaro Sarnelli, who died on this day, June 30th, in 1744, aged 42. He was beatified by St. John Paul II on May 12, 1996.
Click here for information about Sarnelli House Project in Nong Khai, N. E. Thailand. Click here for information about the Blessed Sarnelli Community in downtown Philadelphia.
Collect of the Mass for his Feast, June 30th.
‘O God, you have chosen your priest, Blessed Gennaro Maria Sarnelli, to show forth your love for the suffering through preaching and good works. Grant that, animated by your love, we may follow his example in giving ourselves generously, taking to heart those in need. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.
Our prayer is that there will be many more ‘Sarnelli’s',- young people devoting themselves totally to the crazy following of Christ, in love with and serving the poor of today’s world.
Laudato Sii ! How to get a handle on the new encyclical of Pope Francis.
LAUDATO SII ! Praised be…! Click here to get an over view of what’s in this major document of church social teaching. Hope it helps. It’s from the Australian Redemptorists website.
Try this for ‘Top Ten Takeaways’ from the new Encyclical. http://americamagazine.org/iss…/top-ten-takeaways-laudato-si
Click here to watch this piece on Youtube: https://www.facebook.com/seamus.devitt.7/posts/968105033209844?pnref=story
LAUDATO SI’- Pope Francis’ Encyclical on the Environment.
Click here to watch Youtube about the new encyclical:
Click here for more ways to understand the encyclical:
The Pope’s appeal comes in his highly anticipated encyclical letter Laudato si’ on the care for our common home, which presents the climate as “a common good, belonging to all and meant for all.”
Towards a Conversation:
LAUDATO SII — POPE FRANCIS’S ECOLOGY ENCYCLICAL IS HERE!
Editor’s Note, Esker: It is good for us to be reminded that religion is not for the pew but for the all! ‘There are none so deaf as those who do not wish to hear.’ Already there is a huge reaction to the very idea of the Pope speaking about the environment and ecological issues. Many with vested interests in keeping things as they are, in protecting their own nests, are attacking the encyclical. Below is an invitation to a reasoned conversation with people, about the issues involved. There will still be people who will not wish to hear, and who will shout very loudly in certain media to drown the message and attack the messenger.
One commentator in the U.S., Rush Limbaugh, attacked the Pope as Marxist, and as calling for a vote for the Democrats! In a very gentle reply, on Fox News, Cardinal Donald Wuerl gave his response: (See the clip here) He said: ”One of the great blessings of America is that we’re all allowed to speak our mind even if we don’t have all the facts. Even if we don’t have a clear view of what the other person is saying.”
Even here, we can try to understand and engage, on the underlying issues. The article
below, from Jesuit Post, opens us to some key understandings and approaches, in our conversations. (S.Devitt C.Ss.R., Ed., this Esker website). P.S. Click here if you would like to read The Canticle of the Sun, by St. Francis of Assisi.
The author gives us 6 suggestions, below, that may help us in our conversations about all of this: 1. Remember it’s not only about climate change. 2. Climate change “propaganda” – According to whom? 3. The Church is not walking into another “Galileo Affair”. 4. Regardless of our preferences, the encyclical has something to say to everyone. 5. Collective action on the environment is inherently Catholic. 6. Read it, absorb it, and talk about it!
Reflection by HENRY LONGBOTTOM, SJ, on June 9, 2015. From: The Jesuit Post- thejesuitpost.org. This article was found in a tweet from same.
Laudato Sii — Pope Francis’s Ecology Encyclical Is Almost Here!
‘A thinly veiled piece of climate alarmist propaganda.’ ’A groundbreaking exposition of Catholic ecological thinking.’ ’Well intentioned but economically naïve.’ ‘A slippery slope towards extremist environmentalist positions.’
Such are the reactions to Pope Francis’s ecology encyclical — and it hasn’t even been published yet. Nevertheless Vatican sources have confirmed that the encyclical will appear sometime this month. It is reported that it will bear the title “Laudato Sii” (Praised Be), a quotation from a St. Francis’s prayer praising God for creation.
The media storm created in the run-up to the forthcoming document is both unparalleled and exciting. The optimist in me hopes that the encyclical will demonstrate the way the Church is responding to a critical “sign of the times” confronting our age. I hope it is yet another opportunity to champion the rights of today’s poor, with an eye towards the well-
being of future generations as well. But, I also have a nagging suspicion that the encyclical’s detractors may blunt the evangelical potential of a document showcasing Catholic theology of creation stewardship. The mainstream media have given platform to critical voices. With characteristic hyperbolic aplomb, a Fox News report has claimed that if Francis goes through with the encyclical, he “will be aligning himself with some Church enemies … which will test the faith of some Catholics.”
So we have a task on our hands. Building on the legacy of Popes St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI, the encyclical will further provide a footing and a framework for Catholic environmental initiatives. But when it is (finally) published, we need to be equipped to answer the critics. More importantly, we must be in a position to frame the debate on common ground, and emphasize the positive elements of this encyclical. How can we do this?
Here are six suggestions for the task:
1. Remember it’s not only about climate change.
Now the encyclical is almost certainly going to deal with the moral obligations of responding to the challenges of climate change in terms of prevention and mitigation. But
it will put climate change in the context of the bigger picture of the increasing disconnect between humans and their natural environment. We often speak of humans having “dominion” over the earth. Some frame this as a human response to a divine injunction in Genesis. Others (perhaps of the non-biblical persuasion) appeal to the scientific progress of modernity. Far more than ever before, we can understand, harness, and even re-direct nature to our own determined ends. In either case, when dominion becomes self-interested domination, we are seeing (clearly, if sadly, in the rearview mirror) that this model of custody is simply not sustainable.
Climate change is just one symptom of an unsustainable consumption and wasteful use of resources, compromising present and future flourishing of human and non-human species alike. Other symptoms include the alarming rate of species extinction, destruction of forests, and desertification. To paraphrase the Catholic broadcaster Mary Colwell, climate change is not the only “environmental” game in town.
The poor are first to suffer when it comes to any and all forms of environmental degradation. This is the case with rising sea levels, and increased typhoon risk due to

Sheltering in the Redemptorist Church after Typhoon Haiyan; known in the Philippines as Typhoon Yolanda, it was one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded,
climate change. But it’s also the case when it comes to social and political instability, caused by issues like water scarcity. Consider: when a country experiences resource shortage or instability, who has easiest access to water, the well-to-do or the poor? Who has the ease of mobility to find (and procure) clean resources? Impacts on human health — e.g., from air pollution or rubbish accumulation — disproportionately affect the economically disadvantaged. We might also consider the plight of indigenous people who are functionally evicted from their land and forests to make way for mining activities or logging. The encyclical will likely talk about care for the environment through the lens of solidarity with the poor. In doing so, it will critique the shadow side of our consumerist economic models.
Such a critique is nothing new in Catholic thinking. It simply picks up and develops Benedict’s notion of the disjuncture between human ecology and the natural order outlined in Caritas in Veritate. Christiana Peppard puts it nicely in her article for the Jesuit magazine America: whilst Pope Francis has a “special charism for poverty and the environment, he is not inventing it ex nihilo, he is amplifying the unified message of his papal predecessors.”
2. Climate change “propaganda” – According to whom?
Much of the rhetoric leveled against the forthcoming encyclical emanates from pressure groups that deny anthropogenic climate change. Take for example the US based Heartland Institute, which is urging its supporters to “tell Pope Francis global warming is not a crisis!” They are highly critical of the Pontiff’s frequent calls for action over climate change and were especially dismayed by his personal involvement in the Lima Climate Change talks in December 2014.
The Heartland Institute is keen to spread its message. On April 27 it held a gathering in Rome to persuade the Pope that he has got it all wrong about climate change. The meeting was deliberately timed to coincide with a Vatican-hosted conference on the moral dimensions of climate change that took place on the following day.
Now I couldn’t possibly comment on the underlying agenda of these lobby groups (their sources of funding, for example) but it’s worth noting the short shrift Church leaders have given them: “The ideology surrounding environmental issues is too tied to a capitalism that doesn’t want to stop ruining the environment because they [certain movements in the United States] don’t want to give up their profits,” quipped Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, who is a member of Francis’s so-called C9, a kind of ‘papal cabinet’ of nine cardinals from around the world.
Pope Francis has taken a keen interest in those with first-hand experiences of the effects of climate change. During his visit to the Philippines in January 2015, he made a special point of visiting victims of typhoon Haiyan. The significance here is that he is more interested in the voices of those who have everything to lose from continued ecological destruction, and is less concerned with those who have something to gain in promoting a “business as usual” approach.
3. The Church is not walking into another “Galileo Affair”
One strategy for undermining the encyclical is to overemphasize the unsettled aspects of the science of climate change and give stage to a minority group of scientists who question anthropogenic climate change. The reasoning given is a fear that the encyclical will commit the Church to an unsettled hypothesis of science, and thus irrevocably fetter the Church to the wrong side of history. Climate change skeptics (it is argued) pick up the heroic mantle of Galileo, whose heliocentrism eventually was proven correct to the shame of credulous Church officials. Thus the Church should cautiously refrain from landing — once again — on the wrong side of history.
The problem with this view is that it portrays climate change as an either/or issue between “self-interested alarmists” and “truth-speaking skeptics.” The reality is more complex. Social encyclicals (like the sciences themselves) seek to present the best thinking of the Church at the time. It is reasonable for Francis — whose own academic background is in chemistry — to side with the scientific consensus (including his own Pontifical Academy of Sciences) on the link between climate change and human activity.
And let’s face it, the stakes are pretty high. Withholding action (on the specious grounds of awaiting unanimous scientific agreement) is a risky strategy. There’s a justice issue here. As Cardinal Turkson says, whilst the Church is not an expert on science, it is “an expert on humanity – on the true calling of the human person to act with justice and charity.” The just and charitable person errs on the side of caution — especially when the well-being of the poor and vulnerable may be at stake.
4. Regardless of our preferences, the encyclical has something to say to everyone.
A more nuanced strategy taken by critics is to relativize — and thus minimize — the encyclical’s potential application. For example, the eminent Princeton law professor Robert George highlights the distinction between papal pronouncements concerning moral norms (binding on Catholics) and statements about disputed empirical fact (not binding). The argument is that since climate change is a question of empirical fact, the faithful are not bound by those parts of the encyclical relating to climate change.
But we make prudential judgments on how to interpret empirical facts — and derive from them moral norms — all the time. The “theory” of anthropogenic climate change rests on the established fact of our reliance on non-renewable resources. Our current dependence on carbon-intensive forms of energy raises a whole host of underlying moral issues: Not just questions like “Who should profit from their extraction?” or “Whose resources are they to keep, share, exhaust, etc.?” But more deeply, “To what shared first principles do we appeal when we disagree in our judgments of how to use finite resources?” The environmental and social impacts of e.g., mineral extraction, necessarily raise questions of prudential judgment about competing interests; and how we come to render prudential judgments requires us to reflect on our underpinning (if unspoken) moral norms. For people of religious belief, moral norms draw from the well of faith claims, in order to reflect on empirical facts and make prudential judgments. For Catholics in particular (like Pope Francis or Professor George), environmental issues deeply involve the non-negotiable moral norms of care of the human person (because of our inalienable dignity, having been made in the image and likeness of God).
So in the end, we cannot realistically draw a solid black line between (1) what the Pope says about climate change, and (2) what can be regarded as “real” moral issues. Though we may be tempted to do so, we cannot nuance our way out of the moral demands presented in the encyclical, because they bear on the well-being of the human person
5. Collective action on the environment is inherently Catholic.
A major bugbear of libertarian critics of the environmentalism is that a response requires international collectivist action. As Michael Winters has pointed out, they were are highly suspicious of Francis’ COP-20 address when he said that the challenges of climate change can only be confronted through “collective action” which overcomes mistrust and fosters “a culture of solidarity, of encounter and of dialogue”. Surely, they ask, there is an anti-business and socialist agenda at play here?
And yet this is not what business leaders are saying themselves. A recent Vatican-sponsored conference for business executives, academics and civil society leaders underlined support for just the sort of collective action on climate change the Pope is calling for. Ecological meltdown can only be prevented through a framework of global governance that will stimulate enterprise and develop innovative solutions. A ‘green economy’ incentivizes initiatives like the development of the Solar Impulse plane, which made its maiden voyage earlier this week.
The Church, as the world’s oldest and largest international organization, is uniquely placed to shepherd a collective response to environmental challenges. The Church can help forge what Benedict’s Caritas in Veritate described as more “fraternal” ways of doing economic development. The agenda here is strictly Catholic, geared towards universal human flourishing rather than narrow political ends.
6. Read it, absorb it, and talk about it!
Now I know we all lead busy lives and the general principle of “why read it first-hand when you can rely on another’s summary?” works pretty well more often than not. But this encyclical is different. Given the partisan nature of the reporting in the lead up to the document, the summaries that will be doing the rounds when it is finally released will be particularly agenda-driven. So go to the source — read the encyclical itself. And before reacting, meditate on the text with the same spirit of magnanimity with which we would hope our secular counterparts would receive other Church pronouncements.
Underlying the fears of many intra-ecclesial critics of Pope Francis is a lurking suspicion that he is yielding too much to secular peers. His fans, on the other hand, argue that Francis is seizing an opportunity to make bridges with those outside the Church on a challenge confronting the whole of humanity. But Francis’ fans and detractors alike recognize that the whole ecology debate is characterized by divergence and line-in-sand drawing. As in other politicized issues, the various “actors” are prone to simply talking past each other, relying on settled political allegiances and truisms. And there is a real danger that this polarization is being brought into the Church in the interest of expediency. So tolle, lege: pick it up and read it yourself, as a responsible citizen and Catholic!
* * *
In our reactions to Pope Francis’s ecology encyclical, let us aim to be conduits for dialogue and see it as our mission to “reconcile the estranged.” Reconciling the estranged is, after all, one of the founding goals of the Society of Jesus. The world may very well depend on it.
———
‘Meitheal’ in Esker, June 2015.
A group of young people, Transition Year students, came to Esker, June 9th to 11th, for a school leadership training course. This course is called ‘Meitheal’ and has been run by the Redmptorists in Cork for the past 22 years. The word ‘Meitheal’ was in very common usage in rural Ireland in previous generations, when neighbours would come together to help one another, in saving the hay or cutting the corn. It means a ‘Gathering’, or nowadays it could be called by the fancy name of ‘synergy’!
‘Meitheal’ offers Fourth year students a training in leadership skills so that they have the
confidence and competence to be leaders in their schools and to be pro-active in promoting Anti- Bullying, Justice and mental health initiatives. The inspiration for the course comes from the Prophet Micah who said to ‘Act Justly, love Tenderly and walk humbly with your God‘ . In the course the students focus on how the values of justice, compassion and humility can inform each activity they plan in their school. The students are introduced to Paulo Friere’s method of Planning where they See, Judge and Act. The course was piloted recently here in Esker by 14 students from Gort Community school, Holy Rosary College in Mountbelllew and Presentation Secondary School in Galway. Pictured are Aoife Horkan, Sarah Gavin, Siobhan Callander, Natalia Hyde( Scala, Cork), Pauline Harris, Clara Doran, Niamh Burke, Leah Fitzgerald, Joanne O’Halloran, Connor Cleary, Pa Cotter ( Scala, Cork), Emily Aherne, Nicola Conneely, Lizzie Harrison (Esker), Laura Hegarty, Laura Ryan, Sindel Da Silva. Missing from picture Ruth Ann Kelly.
We in Esker would really appreciate it if you would include this as a possible TY project in the coming year, as the young people involved gave up their holidays to do something important for their school. In our society we cannot underestimate the confidence it gives young people to be involved in serving others. In Esker we hope to develop other programmes which build young people’s resilience and confidence by equipping them with skills to become leaders in their schools, parishes and communities.
Thanks! Warmest Regards. Lizzie Harrison, ( Youth Co-ordinator, Esker)
























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