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Celebrating the Year of Consecrated Life

Pope Francis call religious in Ireland to Wake Up the World for the Year of Consecrated Life 2015Vocations ministry in Ireland is busy at the best of times, but it looks like 2015 is going to be exceptional! Pope Francis has continued to revolutionise and encourage the Church by designating November 30th 2014 until February 2nd 2016 the Year of Consecrated Life. He believes that, “Religious life ought to promote growth in the church by way of attraction. The church must be attractive. Wake up the world! Be witnesses of a different way of doing things, of acting, of living! . . . It is this witness that I expect of you. Religious should be men and women who are able to wake the world up.”

 

MSC Vocations at the Medjugorge Youth Festival

A Year for Getting Up and Going!

This year in Ireland we are going to continue and expand our vocations ministry. We will have opportunities to walk the road less traveled along pilgrim pathways to Lourdes, Medjugorge and Santiago de Compostella. We’re going to take part in festivals at home and abroad where you can celebrate what it really means to be a Catholic with thousands of others. We’ll have Samuel groups, discernment weekends and Road Trips for those of you who are perhaps looking to really listen to where God is calling you, whether it’s marriage, the single life, priesthood or a religious vocation. We’ll also have our third year of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Volunteering Project for people wanting to work in solidarity with the margnialised in South Africa. If the challenge is to wake up the world, then the question must be, ‘Why are you still lying around?!”

 

Over the coming week we are going to be advertising all of our programmes for 2015. Like our Facebook page or subscribe to our blog to make sure you get all the up to date information for the Year of Consecrated Life.

 

 

 

Summer of Love with MSC Vocations

MSC Vocations at Spirit in the City Festival

Spirit in the City Festival in London

It has been a summer of celebration for the MSC vocations team, filled with festivals, pilgrimages and volunteering. Most exciting of all we opened our new student community in Dublin on September 8th with two candidates, Kevin and Henry. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. In fact we’ll start at the very beginning of summer. It is, as the song goes, a very good place to start.

MSC Vocations on the Camino

Arriving after 111Km on the Camino

June opened with a young adult pilgrimage along the Camino de Santiago. For those of you who haven’t heard of The Way it’s an 800km walk across the north of Spain to the resting place of the Apostle James. It has been part of Catholic tradition for well over a millennium. Each year it inspires hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to leave hurry and noise of life behind, to walk or cycle or ride on horseback to Santiago in a spirit of reflection and prayer. Our group this year came from Scotland and Ireland and they were profoundly moved by the experience, in spite of the torrential rain once or twice. June was also a good time for festivals and we took part in Brightlights young adult weekend and the Spirit in the City evangelisation day in Leicester Square. They are at the forefront of engaging young adults and exploring what faith means today. (more…)

Day of Celebration for MSC Vocations

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Kevin, Clare, Fr. Alan and Henry

It’s a real day of celebration for the Chevalier Family. Today we have three young adults entering formation in Dublin, two with the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart (MSC) and one with our sister congregation, the Daughters of our Lady of the Sacred Heart (OLSH). It is an exciting new departure, as they take that courageous next step exploring where God is calling them in life.

Meet the Students (more…)

Walk the Camino this summer

Camino 2 (2)It’s about freedom. It’s about walking to the horizon and when you get there you keep on going. It’s about taking part in something that is at the same time enjoyable and profound. For those of you who are looking for something a bit different this summer why don’t you join us as we walk the Camino. We’ll be leading a group of young adults between the ages of 18 and 35 from Sarria to Santiago de Compostella. Between the 3rd and the 10th of June we’ll cover the last 100km of The Way and have a few days to relax in Santiago itself.

 

Camino 2The Camino of Santiago has been a site of pilgrimage for well over a thousand years. People have walked from all around Europe and more recently have journeyed from the four corners of the world to ‘abrazar’ or embrace the famous statue of St. James and pray at his tomb. But the Camino is about the journey as much as it is about the destination. The Camino meanders across the north of Spain through town, villages, fields and woodlands. It’s during this time that people on The Way take time to reflect on their lives and explore what’s possible. On top of all that it’s great fun as well. In all the years I’ve walked the Camino I have yet to meet a person who regretted coming.

 

Last Year's Camino Group

 

The landscape is as varied as the people you meet. You’ll find pilgrims coming from everywhere, of all faiths and none. However they are all searching, very much aware that they are on a spiritual journey. Each morning as the sun rises we will start with a simple reflection. Then shouldering our packs we set off for the horizon, meeting people along the way or perhaps walking in solitude, depending on what you feel like at the time. In the evening there’s an opportunity for Mass if you wish ( or if not that’s fine too ) and then a meal with a glass of wine as the sun sets. It’s heaven in hiking boots!

 

Camino 1The cost of the pilgrimage is fairly reasonable. People will arrange their own flights and transfers to Santiago and back home. Accommodation along the Camino is in Albergues or dedicated pilgrimage hostels. They cost around €10 / £8.50 a night. Then you need to account for food. The towns where we will stay offer pilgrim menus for around €10 /£8.50 for a simple three course meal. You can pick up other basics during the day in the many small stores along the route. Excluding flights and transfers about €35 / £30 a day should be more than adequate.

 

If you’d like some insight into the Camino check out the film The Way released in 2010, starring Martin Sheen. It gives a good flavour of what you can expect.

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If you’re considering it and are not sure feel free to email me or give me a call on (086) 7857955 (Irl) or (075) 26764236 (UK). People may be concerned about the level of fitness necessary. You don’t need to super fit, but a moderate level is desirable. Again if you have any doubts a quick email or phone call can put them to rest.

 

It promises to be an incredible experience. Find yourself on The Way.

Missionary Blog – Faith behind bars

Fr. John Missionary

Fr. John Jennings MSC working in a local school

What does it mean to be a Missionary of the Sacred Heart? Who are we and what do we do? How are we different from the diocesan priests and members of other religious congregations? It’s a difficult question to answer, but perhaps the best I can do is to show you. As part of our vocations blog we’ll follow four members of the Chevalier family, ministering in radically different parts of the world, but united in a common MSC mission: That the Sacred Heart of Jesus be everywhere known and loved.

Fr. John Jennings is an MSC missionary from Cork, Ireland working in one of the most marginalised barrios in Caracas, Venezuela. In addition to parish work John ministers as a part time chaplain in some of the country’s largest prisons. (more…)

Pope Francis wants a mess after WYD 2013

IMG_0506croppedWe all suspected something different was happening when the newly elected Pope first knelt down and asked for the people’s prayers before he gave his first blessing. It seems however that Pope Francis has exceeded those expectations and as his papacy continues he challenges the young people of the world at World Youth Day to be agents of the Holy Spirit. When asked about his hopes for World Youth Day Pope Francis replied:

What is it that I expect as a consequence of World Youth Day? I want a mess. We knew that in Rio there would be great disorder, but I want trouble in the dioceses! […] I want to see the church get closer to the people. I want to get rid of clericalism, the mundane, this closing ourselves off within ourselves, in our parishes, schools or structures. Because these need to get out!” (more…)