6th Sunday of Easter

Reflection

To be glad of life because it gives you a chance to love, to work, to play and to look up at the stars. To despise nothing in the world except what is false and mean. To fear nothing except what is cowardly. To be guided by what you admire and love, rather than by what you hate. To envy nothing that is your neighbour’s except his kindness of heart and gentleness of manor. To think seldom of your enemies, often of your friends and every day of Christ and to spend as much time as you can with body and spirit, in God’s out-of-doors. These are little signposts on the footpath of peace.

First Holy Communion

The following children will be making their First Communion this weekend: Ruby Goulding, Poppy Moss, Mason Fenlon, Ayemerie Novense Okuduwa, Isabell Bowden, Mylie Walsh, Jake Hilton, Joseph Hilton and Amanda Pasternak.

Please remember the children and their families in your prayers.

Feast of the Ascension

Thursday of this week, 26th May, is Ascension Thursday and a major feast in the Church’s calendar. Masses that day will be at 10am and 7pm.


Second collection

Next Sunday is World Communications Day, and a second collection will be taken up for the work of Communication in the Church. Another Mandatory collection.

5th Sunday of Easter

Reflection

It’s easy to love at a distance, but not so easy to love at close quarters. It’s easier to give a few pounds to relieve famine in Africa than to relive the loneliness of someone living next door. It’s easy to love people who are far away, but not always easy to love those who are close at hand. Yet, these are the people Christ asks us to love. We must begin by loving the people near us. That is where our love must start. But, of course, it doesn’t have to end there. And it shouldn’t.

First Holy Communion

The following children will be making their First Communion this weekend: Erin McQuillian, Kourtney Mae Stephens, Juan Carlos Mejias Zaccaria, Mya Albert-Stanley, Eleanor Pruden, Lydia Hughes and Bella Humphries. Please remember the children and their families in your prayers.

RCIA

An outdoor Mass of Thanksgiving will be celebrated at Our Lady’s, Lydiate, L31 4HH on Thursday 9 June 2022 at 7pm followed by a light buffet. All are welcome! RSVP by Friday 5 June for catering purposes. Full details are in the information pack sent to parishes. RSVP to rcia@rcaol.org.uk if you or your RCIA group wish to attend.

4th Sunday of Easter

Reflection

The deepest wound of all is that which affects the heart, the feeling that one has not been loved, that one is not precious to anyone. Many people today are wounded at heart. Each of us can do something to heal their wounds. We have hands that can make things and minds that can understand things. But above all we have hearts that can give life. We are not sterile people, we can give life to people who are inwardly broken. We can show them that they are important and so bring life to them. Today, Good Shepherd Sunday, is also vocations Sunday. But all vocations are vocations to love.

First Holy Communion

The children making their First Communion this weekend are: Owen Ovbiebo Harrison, Michelle Ovbiebo Harrison, Jay Kendrick, Connie Cousins, Patrick Bodziany, Chloe Carter, Ashley Irabor Stevens, and James Meadows.

Funerals

The funeral service for Margaret Dewsbury will take place here in St James’ on Tuesday 10th May at 10am.
Please pray for Margaret and her family.

The funeral Mass for Carol Benson will take place here in St James’ on Thursday 12th May at 11.15 am.
Please pray for the repose of Carol’s soul and the comfort of her family.

Second collection

The second collection this weekend is for the Priests’ Training Fund.

3rd Sunday of Easter

Reflection

It can happen that we lose interest in people and even become blind to their strengths when we discover their limitations. During his passion Jesus discovered the limitations of Peter, yet he didn’t write him off. He continued to believe in him and in time he came good. Like Peter, we are weak human beings who are inconstant in our beliefs. We need someone who understands our weaknesses, who realises that it may take time for us to overcome them and who doesn’t write us off because we don’t produce the goods at once.

First Holy Communion

For the next four Sundays, a number of Children will be making their First Holy Communion at the 10.30Mass. In the usual way, these children and their families will occupy the first few front benches on either side of Church.

The children making their Communion this Sunday are: Sophie Hanlon, Ruby Gerrard, Abbi Casson, Andrea Zsurzs and Jay Kendrick. Please remember them and their families in your prayers.

Diocesan COVID Update

In Church, the wearing of masks and sanitising are both optional. The Priest/Deacon will still sanitise and wear a mask while distributing Communion. Communion under both kinds is still not possible. Anyone who wants Communion on the tongue should come at the end of the queue.

Second collection

Next Sunday, 8th May, is Vocations Sunday, and there is a second collection for the Priests’ Training Fund. This is another mandatory collection.

Divine Mercy Sunday

Reflection

While Jesus was alive Thomas was strong as an oak.
But when Jesus was put to death, he became a reed shaking in the winds of doubt. The truth was, though he didn’t realise it at the time, that it was the Master who was the oak. He was a mere sapling growing in his shade. When the oak fell he was defenceless. All of us are shaken by the winds of doubt. We need to look at the Lord’s wounds, and hear his gentle voice saying to us: “Cease doubting and believe.” Then with Thomas we shall make bold to say: “My Lord and my God.”


Ukrainian refugees in Sefton

Ukrainian refugees are now starting to arrive in Sefton with nothing but the clothes on their backs. A very generous couple, Alan and Sue Lewis, are working out of Mersey Road Methodist Church, Crosby L23 3AE collecting new and nearly new clothing and footwear, school uniform and soft toys.

As the refugees arrive in Sefton they can go and pick clothes and toys. Please help if you can. The official times the church is open for people to visit are Sundays 2 - 5 Mondays 10 - 2 and Tuesdays 12 - 5.

Funeral

The funeral service for Philip Patrick Courtney will take place here at St James’ on Tuesday 26th April at 10:30am. Interment to follow at Anfield Cemetery at 11:30am.

Please pray for the repose of Philip’s soul and the comfort of his family.

Easter Sunday

Reflection

On Easter Day we still feel pain, our own pain and the pain of others. But a new element has been introduced. It doesn’t remove the pain but gives it a meaning and lights it up with hope. All is different because Jesus is alive and speaks his words of peace to us. Therefore, there is a quiet joy among us and a deep sense of peace. Jesus has broken the power of death and given us the hope of eternal life. Lord, guard this hope with your grace and bring it to fulfilment in the kingdom of heaven.

Happy Easter!

Fr Brian, Fr Jim, and the Salesian community would like to wish all our Parishioners a very Happy Easter. May the Risen Lord bless your families and grant to the people of Ukraine peace and hope for the future.

A very big thank you

To all those who have worked to get the Church ready for Easter; to all who have read and taken part in our services; to our brilliant musicians and servers; and to the ladies who are still keeping us safe as we enter Church.

Easter Message from the Reverend Malcolm McMahon OP Archbishop of Liverpool

Easter Sunday, the day when we celebrate the resurrection of the Lord, is always a day of joy and of hope – a day when we celebrate the gift of life itself and the triumph of light over darkness, of good over evil, and of peace over war.

The great Easter proclamation, the Exsultet, which is sung at our Easter Vigil, the first service of Easter, says:

‘The sanctifying power of this night dispels wickedness, washes faults away, restores innocence to the fallen, and joy to mourners, drives out hatred, fosters concord and brings down the mighty’

The Easter Vigil is always celebrated in darkness to emphasise the light and glory of the Risen Lord, but it comes at the end of Holy Week, a time when we remember the passion and death of Jesus. It is a time of high drama and emotion, of suffering and of mystery. It begins in triumph as Jesus enters Jerusalem, a king riding on a donkey receiving the adulation of the crowds as they cheer and wave palm branches. The mood rapidly changes to one of darkness and betrayal, mental anguish, suffering and death on a cross. If we lay all before the Lord at the foot of that cross God will take us beyond the cross from darkness to light and from war to peace.

As Jesus died on the cross, he prayed, ‘Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do’. Violence and war are human failings by people who do not know what they are doing.

In these last months we have witnessed a time of darkness, unjust aggression, violence, war and the death of innocent people. We have been praying for peace for the people of Ukraine and our generosity has united us with them. In the Archdiocese of Liverpool, we have united with the people of Drohobych and their Auxiliary Bishop, Gregory Komar, who wrote to us: ‘We have witnessed that God is with us, that we are not alone in our anguish, that throughout the whole world there are many people of good will supporting us.’

Yes, God is with us all the time, even though we may not realise it. The Risen Lord comes to us as we reach out to those most in need.

Through the cross and resurrection of Jesus Easter gives us hope, Bishop Gregory ends his message to us by saying, ‘I am asking you, dear brothers and sisters, to be alongside us in this Way of the Cross, in these dramatic days, when the future of Europe and of the whole world is being decided. Share with us your material blessings and your support, and we in our turn will share with you our love, our gratitude, our faith and our hope.’

Let us accept the love, gratitude, faith and hope of the Ukrainian people as our Easter gift this year as we continue to support them, and may we be empowered by the presence of the Risen Lord today as he calls us beyond the fear of the unknown.

For the people of Ukraine, for those in our world who suffer conflict, hunger, injustice and deprivation, for our families and for ourselves may we make the greeting of the Risen Lord our prayer this Easter – ‘Peace be with you’.

Laetare Sunday

Reflection

The prodigal son came home empty handed, he had no trophies to show his father, no achievement with which to earn his praise, his welcome and his love. He was a failure. Worse—he was a sinner. He deserved to be punished and he knew it. Yet punishment was the last thing he needed. To punish him would be like pouring water on a dying fire. What happened? When the father saw his lost son coming towards him, his heart went out to him and next minute they were in each other’s arms. It is an extraordinary experience to be loved in one’s sinfulness. Such love is like a breeze to a dying fire, or rain falling on parched ground. Those who have experienced this kind of love, know something about the heart of God.

First Communion sign up

After Mass today, first communicants will be signing up to the Sunday of their choice for making their First Holy Communion.


Diocesan Ukraine Appeal

A message from the diocesan office has come to us asking that no more goods be donated. They can only accept money or medical supplies.

Funeral

The Funeral Service for James Powell will take place here in St James’ on Monday 28th March at 11.45am. Please remember James and his family in your prayers.


Mother’s Day

Happy mother’s day to all mums and grandmas! Enjoy your special day!

3rd Sunday of Lent

Reflection

Days pass and the years vanish, and we walk sightless among miracles. Lord, fill our eyes with seeing, and our minds with knowing. Let there be moments when the radiance of your presence illuminates the darkness in which we walk. Help us to see, wherever we gaze, that the bush burns, unconsumed. And we, clay touched by your hand, will reach out for holiness and exclaim in wonder, “How filled with awe is this place, and we did not know it.”

Novena and Rosary

Novena and Rosary are starting again each Wednesday at 9.30am, just before the morning Mass. All are welcome!


Diocesan Ukraine Appeal

Contact details for making donations of goods or money can be found at the link below. A reminder that we are no longer accepting donations of clothes, but we are still welcoming donations of medical supplies, baby products (such as nappies and formula), toiletries, bedding/sleeping bags and rucksacks, as well as financial donations (all details are on the link).

Funeral

The funeral service for Albert Roby will take place here in St James’ on Friday 25th March at 11.30am. Please remember Albert and his family in your prayers.


Second Collection

This week’s Second collection is for Lenten alms. Next week’s Second Collection is for NUGENT, another mandatory one. Sorry! CAFOD returns still welcome.

2nd Sunday of Lent

Reflection

All of us can experience moments of great joy because, in his goodness, God allows us to taste on earth the joys of the world to come. However, moments of joy, no matter how wonderful, will never satisfy the human heart. What we long for is a permanent state of happiness but that is unattainable here. So what must we do? Like desert travellers, we must go forward from one oasis to another, with the conviction that God has a homeland prepared for us at the end of our journey. This conviction will make it possible for us to travel onwards with an ache in our heart and an unquenchable longing in our soul.

Emergency Appeal For Ukraine

The people of Ukraine are suffering untold privations at this time and Salesians are working on the ground in Ukraine, hosting refugees and looking after vulnerable young people. If you would like to contribute to this work please either send a cheque to Mrs. N. Howell at the Provincial Office, Sharples Park, Bolton, Lancashire, BL1 6PQ clearly marked UKRAINE. All cheques should be made out to SDB Trustees, or access the Salesian Just Giving page from the link below to make a donation. If you are a UK taxpayer, the donation can be gift aided.

Funeral

The funeral service for Fred Lowe will take place here in St James’ on Thursday 17th March at 11.30am. Please pray for the repose of Fred’s soul and the comfort of his family.


Second Collection

Next weekend, 19/20 March there will be a second collection for Lenten Alms. This is a mandatory Diocesan collection. Meanwhile, envelopes for CAFOD are still available at the back of Church and can be brought back any time during Lent.

1st Sunday of Lent

Reflection

Repentance of itself is not enough—grace must be available.
But if grace is offered and not accepted,
then nothing comes of that either.
There is no point putting up a sail if there is no wind.
There is no point in planting a seed if the ground is frozen.
There is no point in pruning the tree if spring does not come.
It is not enough to cut into people’s hearts
in order to save them—they must be touched by grace.
Lord, touch our hearts with your grace,
so that we may produce the fruits of repentance.

CAFOD Family Fast Day

Next Friday 11th March is Family Fast Day. There are envelopes at the back of Church today for the CAFOD collection. Please take one, put in your donation and bring it back any Sunday during Lent. Another collection for Lenten Alms will be taken up in a few week’ time. This is a mandatory Diocesan Collection.

Emergency Appeal For Ukraine

The people of Ukraine are suffering untold privations at this time and Salesians are working on the ground in Ukraine, hosting refugees and looking after vulnerable young people. If you would like to contribute to this work please either send a cheque to Mrs. N. Howell at the Provincial Office, Sharples Park, Bolton, Lancashire, BL1 6PQ clearly marked UKRAINE. All cheques should be made out to SDB Trustees, or access the Salesian Just Giving page from the link below to make a donation. If you are a UK taxpayer, the donation can be gift aided.

Quiz and Bingo Night

Jack Lyon and Youth Active are organising a Quiz and Bingo Night to help raise money for VIDES UK and its upcoming projects. The event will take place on the 25th March 7pm to 10pm in Brunswick Youth and Community Centre. £4 per person for entry, and a small additional fee to play the quiz and bingo. Bring your own drinks and snacks and come down for a great night raising money for a great cause.

VIDES UK is the charity of the Salesian Sisters who provide many opportunities for young people to get involved in lots of different ways! VIDES worked in our parish, running a summer camp for 5 years between 2007 & 2012. If you are able to, please try to go along and support!