RE News
The focus for the Gospel for last week, the 4th Sunday of Lent was Jesus heals the blind man. (John 9:1-41)
In the Gospel we read the story of Jesus’ healing of blind Bartimaeus. I have often wondered how his new visual senses might have overwhelmed him, allowing him to see the way the sunlight bounces and the colour of the sky and dusk. I am also reminded that Jesus is the one who forgives, who loves, who gives kindness, who sees our pain and turns the light of knowledge on for us. We are asked to follow Jesus – to be that one. Who needs healing in our lives today? How do we forgive, love, be kind, empathetic, compassionate and give sight to the blind, the ignorant, the deaf? St Thomas Aquinas tells us to shun ignorance. How do we confront ignorance and religious traditions that keep us imprisoned rather than liberated? How do we allow the hand of God to guide us in these uncertain times and trust that amidst all of this, He is with us? How do we be that one who reveals Jesus to others?
Our School Identity Statement for 2020 was selected well before this unexpected and uncertain time. Together we really have no option but to pull together as a community and support one another, together ‘courageous in our faith’. We have seen the many ways in which this community is being there for each other.
I have been overwhelmed by the amazing way in which our students have already adapted to the learning changes that have been implemented. They are a real credit to themselves and we are so impressed with how they have continued to focus on their learning and embraced each challenge set for them.
We are also very blessed to have such fantastic parents who are supportive of all of the measures which the staff are putting into place. You are all crucial to the way in which we navigate the changes in education and we would like to thank you most sincerely for this ongoing support to work together.
The staff have been united in their commitment and dedication to preparing for this transition. Focusing on supporting the children with their learning, maintaining a sense of routine and consistency and in caring for the student’s wellbeing, all of which have been paramount concerns for the staff. The collaborative efforts to consider all aspects of this transition have been immeasurable and as a community we are well placed to continue with the education and formation of our precious students.
Take care and keep safe.
God Bless,
Jacqui Collins
Religious Education Coordinator
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A PRAYER AT A TIME OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC (COVID 19)
ARCHBISHOP CHRISTOPHER PROWSE
CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP OF CANBERRA GOULBURN
Heavenly Father,
We praise and thank you for your loving presence, especially in the Lent/Easter season.
We offer heartfelt thanks, dear Lord, particularly for our recent rains.
Once again, we come to you in our need. As your children we are in need of your healing and
protection.
Just as we have been recovering from our dangerous bushfire summer, we have now been thrown
into a fearful coronavirus (COVID-19) autumn.
We are tired and frightened. We feel a sense of panic and future uncertainty on a global scale.
Be with us now, Loving Master. Without you all is nothing – only empty hearts and a total reliance
on our own feeble resources.
But with you “there is mercy and fullness of Redemption” (Psalm 130/7). With you there is “the
loving mercy of the heart of our God (who) will give light to those who sit in darkness, those who
dwell in the shadow of death, and guide our feet into the way of peace” (Luke 1/79).
It seems that so many public gatherings are now postponed or cancelled. There is virus death, the
sick, and the anxious. We are spending more time on our own, or with family or friends.
We pray for the sick and those looking after them. Help us to offer practical help to those who
struggle.
Let us use these times, O Lord, for your greater glory, especially during Lent and Easter. Let us pray
more, and truly listen to you more in loving silence, stillness and simplicity.
Almighty Father, you always journey with us in life’s challenges. Help us to meet you often in the
scriptures and our sacraments. Increase in us faith, hope and trust.
Protect us from this coronavirus. Remove it from our common home. Heal those who are sick and
dying.
Mary, Help of Christians, as always we fly to you in our need. Be close to us and point out your Son,
Jesus, to us in this pandemic. St Therese of Lisieux and her parents, Saints Louis and Zelie Martin,
pray for us.
We make this and all our prayers through Jesus, Our Lord and Saviour, who lives and reigns with you
in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever, AMEN
The Archbishop has passed on the following links to sites that may assist in keeping people connected in these challenging times.
- Mass Online provides us with the opportunity to pray the Mass on a daily basis.
- Living Word provides a reflection on the readings of the day.
- Daily Voice provides a daily snapshot of what is happening locally, in the Archdiocese and across the world.
Optional:
Morning Meditation
Have patience with everything
unresolved in your heart,
and try to love the questions
themselves
as if they were locked rooms
or books written in a very foreign language.
Do not search for the answers, which
could not be given to you now,
because you would not be able to live
them.
And the point is to live everything.
Live the questions now.
Perhaps then, someday far in the
future,
you will gradually,
without even noticing it, live your way
into the answer.
~ Rainer Maria Rilke
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