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MP Gallagher on ‘Newman for today’

newman_01xJohn Henry Newman is one of the ten people selected for exploration by Michael Paul Gallagher SJ in his latest book, Faith Maps, and on Wed 1 Sept, 7.30pm, the well-known author will give a lecture entitled ‘Translating Newman for Today’, in St Francis Xavier Church, Gardiner St, Dublin 1. Newman crossed the Irish sea many times, and while he was living in Dorset Street he attended Mass in the Gardiner St church and ate with the Jesuit Community there. According to Michael Paul, Newman was an intellectual and spiritual giant and his obituaries in liberal and even atheist papers showed the esteem in which he was held, with one paper claiming he was ‘the true leader of England’. Listen here to his interview with Pat Coyle of the Jesuit Communication Centre on his upcoming lecture (all welcome, admission free).

Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::

Beginnings

jtr_01As AMDG Express returns to production after the summer break, it makes a fresh start in more ways than one. The JCC’s beautiful room in Leeson Street is piled with boxes ready for the move to offices in Milltown Park. This will be a new beginning, rubbing shoulders with the Provincial’s team. Dermot Roantree, the coeditor of AMDG Express, has made a new beginning of his own. Jacob, the first child of Dermot and his wife Liz Mullins (formerly assistant archivist of the Irish Province, now a college lecturer in UCD), was born on 18 July. He is a gorgeous boy, alert, energetic, hungry, ignoring all timetables as he demands to be fed or changed. As Dermot staggers baggy-eyed in to work, he resonates with Ralph Emerson: “There was  never a child so lovely but his mother was glad to get him to sleep” – and his father too.

Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::

Hurray for Hopkins

gmhopkins_02On the first day of the 23rd Gerard Manley Hopkins Festival, Paul Andrews SJ stood on the grave of GMH (Fergus O’Donoghue marked the spot in the Jesuit plot in Glasnevin), and invoked the Lord’s blessing on the international gathering. The 7-day event unfolded as the biggest and best yet, thanks to the dynamic trio who organise it, Desmond and Viv Egan and Elaine Murphy; thanks also to the Newbridge Dominicans who hosted many of the sessions. Next year’s event will include a visit to Clongowes, where Hopkins spent more time outside Dublin than anywhere else, and where he wrote some important poems.

Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::

JESUITICA: A man of vision

scheiner_01One of the treasures in Dublin’s Marsh’s Library is an early edition of  Oculus, hoc est, by Christoph Scheiner (1575-1650), a German Jesuit who showed for the first time a diagram of the optic nerve entering the eyeball at one side. He constructed a model which represented the eye by a camera obscura with a spherical glass retina, a lens and cornea and aqueous and vitreous humours. He described the principle of accommodation (by which the focal length of the eye changes) in a way that has remained fundamentally unchanged since his time. Even before this pioneering work on the eye, Scheiner was famous as the inventor of the Pantograph (an early duplicating machine), and as a meteorologist who wrote the standard work on sunspots.

Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::

Forthcoming Events

  • 17 August: Conall O’Cuinn is guest speaker at Knock Novena
  • 16-25 August: Eight-day retreat will be held in Manresa House, Clontarf Road, Dollymount.  For details, contact 01 8331352
  • 24-28 August: Social week in Brussels – attending are Gerry O’Hanlon SJ, Eoin Carroll and Brendan McPartlin SJ
  • 1 September: Public lecture by Michael Paul Gallagher SJ in St Francis Xavier Church, Gardiner Street at 7:30pm: ‘Translating Newman for today’
  • 11 September: Oliver Rafferty SJ speaking at the Catholic Historical Society of Ireland annual conference: ‘Catholic chaplains to the British Forces in the First World War’
  • 15 September: ‘Studies’ conference, entitled ‘Healing a broken Church? Catholicism after the Reports’, will be held in Milltown Park, Sandford Road at 6pm
  • 16 September: ‘Soul Journey’, guided meditation and prayer, continues each Monday at 6pm at Gardiner St. Church. For further information, contact the parish office at 01 8363477
Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::

Short Notices

  • tattersall_01Eyes on Olympics: Sam Watson and Barry McStay, who both left Clongowes in 2004, are training hard for the 3-Day Event in the  London Olympics of 2012. Sam rides Hoyo, a horse co-owned by Barry. Sam (left) and Barry are pictured here at the recent Tattersall International 3-Day Event, where Sam came fourth in an international field.
  • Riding the waves: Colaiste Iognaid, Galway, is proud of its past pupil, Ray Carroll, who has just rowed West to East across the Atlantic, cutting eleven days off the record. He learned his rowing in the Jes, starting as an 11-year-old.
  • Marathon Pioneers: This year, for the first time, the Pioneer Association will enter a designated race team in the Dublin City Marathon. They are hoping that other people associated with Jesuit apostolates will sign up for or support the Association’s entry for the 2010 Dublin City Marathon. 2010 Registration for the marathon is now open. The closing date for entries is Monday, 4 October.
  • Suffering: In Tokyo Bill Johnston SJ has been in bed for two years, paralysed, fed through a tube, unable to speak, read or write. Mostly he is sleeping. Heinz, his friend in the same house, writes: “My only hope is that he will not go to purgatory, but, on the contrary, will get a beautiful reward for saving so many souls thru his suffering. Sad not to be able to give you good news.”
  • Parish Listening Nights: Together with Nuala O’Loan, Alan McGuckian visits Belfast parishes where Nuala presents the bones of the Murphy Report (on clerical abuse in Dublin Archdiocese), and Alan presents the Pope’s Letter to the Irish Church. That is enough to trigger a lively conversation among the people gathered, while Alan and Nuala listen.
  • Exposure: Brian Grogan’s voice and face have been aired a lot this month. He spoke about renewal in the Irish Church, on RTE’s programme Would You Believe? The following day he felt famous when a friendly lady recognised and greeted him on the street. He talked about the Irish Church on The World Tonight, a BBC Radio 4 programme. Vatican Radio interviewed him on the relevance of Ignatius Loyola for today: this was broadcast on 31 July.
Added Tuesday 17 August 2010 :: Category: General ::