Counting down to 2025, an old child’s riddle came to mind: “What time is it when the clock strikes thirteen?” The answer is obvious: “Time to buy a new clock!” Though frankly, if it had been reported on RTE that the clock in Times Square had struck thirteen, as 2024 expired, would any of us…
Month: January 2025
Forget old hurts and forgive – bishop says for 2025 Jubilee Year
The Jubilee Year of Hope is a chance for a fresh start and time a return to the heart of Jesus, Bishop Alan McGuckian declared after officially opening the Holy Door in St Peter’s Cathedral, Belfast. The Bishop of Down and Connor told a packed congregation on Sunday that everyone has the ability to begin…
Where hope and history rhyme
The Magi’s path invites all pilgrims of hope to look beyond earthly appearances, writes Fr Barry White We have entered the Holy Year of Jubilee 2025, inaugurated by Pope Francis on Christmas Eve with the opening of the Holy Door. The theme, Pilgrims of Hope, invites reflection on hope’s transformative power in our lives. Hope…
Priest hails canonisation of ‘iconic’ French nun martyrs
The canonisation of 16 Catholic women, martyred during the French Revolution, has been described as “wonderful” by an Irish priest, who added that “of all of the martyrs of the French Revolution, the 16 sisters of the Carmel of Compiègne are iconic”. Fr John Hogan, a priest of the Diocese of Meath and Postulator for the…
Parishes should follow Vatican advice on ‘LGBTQIA+’ topics
Following an event in a Dublin parish where a speaker who identified as transgender addressed the congregation during an ‘LGBTQIA+ Christmas Carol Service’, a leading academic on Catholic sexual ethics has said the issue is “complicated” and that parishes should refer to the Church’s recently published document on human dignity if unsure how to approach…
A special year to mark the Irish Franciscan’s foray into Rome
I didn’t know what subjects to study when I started at UCG in 1988. I tried out different classes in first year and settled on English and French for the degree. I had a nagging regret through in my second year that I hadn’t taken Gaeilge. But there were other ways to improve at Irish,…
Irish delegation reflects on recent solidarity trip to Ethiopia
Tigray, in the north of Ethiopia, is going through a recovery time from a war that lasted two years, from 2020 to 2022. The ‘Tigray War’ has resulted in one million deaths and several food shortages. Last November, six Irish bishops accompanied representatives for Trócaire in a one-week visit to the country. This was…
Better laws are possible in 2025
Respect for human dignity is why I am in politics. I was early out of the blocks to oppose the Government’s attempt to dilute respect for ‘mothers’ in the Irish Constitution and to equate ‘marriage’ with ‘other durable relationships’. This Bill had passed through the Dáil with the minimum of scrutiny. Not so in…
Jimmy Carter was first president to host a Pope
Former President Jimmy Carter died December 29 at his home in Plains, Georgia. At 100, Carter, who had been in hospice care since February 2023, was the longest-living US president. Carter, who served from 1977-1981 as the 39th US president, was a devout Baptist, and faith played a large role in his life. He even…
Syrian Catholics can source hope in their pope
It has come to my attention – that’s to say, I admit of my former ignorance – that the Church has had a Syrian Pope. He was Gregory III and he came to the seat of Peter in 731, ruling for ten years. He sounds like a good egg: he was an “able and eloquent…

Martina Purdy

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Senator Ronan Mullen
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