Saint Catherine & Saint James with Saint Audoen Canon Mark

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Saint Catherine & Saint James with Saint Audoen
Canon Mark Gardner (Editor) Tel: 01 454 2274 Mobile 087 266 0228
The Revd Martha Waller (Curate-Assistant) Tel: 01 868 1655
Email: markgardner300@gmail.com
Review Distribution: Doris Brooks Tel: 01 453 0887
Website: cja.dublin.anglican.org
Service times every Sunday
10.00 Eucharist, St Audoen, Cornmarket (without variation).
(Parking in Francis Street is free on Sundays).
11.30 Eucharist (and Sunday School in term time), St Catherine & St James, Donore Avenue.
(Service of the Word, Second and Fourth Sundays. Family Service, Second Sundays, from time to
time).
Easter flowers
Many thanks to a kind donor who paid for the Easter flowers at St Catherine & St James in
memory of her Mother.
Wedding anniversary
All good wishes to Charlie and Irene Webb of St Catherine & St James on their fiftieth wedding
anniversary, celebrated on the weekend of Palm Sunday, marked with some small gifts and a
card signed by the congregation at Family Service, followed by Church coffee and the Easter
Egg hunt in the Rectory Garden. Many thanks to the many willing volunteers who got everything
ready for all these special events!
On placement
We look forward very much to Suzanne Cousin’s time with us, and we hope that she will preach
on Sunday 11 May. This is part of her training as a candidate for the ordained ministry, and we
wish her every blessing for the future within the life of the Church.
Emmaus, the Way of Faith
On Ash Wednesday 5 March 2014 an Emmaus Course began at St Catherine & St James, an
initiative of the recent Parish consultation. A small group met each Wednesday evening during
Lent. This course is designed for people wanting to explore their faith in Christ and the Church’s
life. As we have only one Confirmation candidate this year, we invited him with his parents to
follow this course as he prepares to publicly make his commitment at Christ Church Cathedral
on Pentecost afternoon.
We followed Part 1 of the nurture section of the course, with the overall theme ‘What Christians
believe.’ We took a couple of verses each week from St. Luke’s account of the Walk to Emmaus,
and explored these in the light of the course materials provided. The course was greatly enhanced
by those who led two evenings each, Valerie Thomas, Stephen Winder-Baggott and the Revd
Martha Waller.
In the Emmaus story Cleopas and his companion were slow to recognize Jesus but their eyes
were opened in the breaking of the bread. On Wednesday evening in Holy Week the course
group met to celebrate the Eucharist. We opted for the Eucharistic Prayer for use when children
are present, which contains questions asked by a child and answered by someone senior, echoing
the tradition of teaching, within a family, celebrating the Passover. The questions were asked by
Prev Ogbata, our youngest member and a Confirmation candidate, and were answered by the
Revd Martha Waller.
Why do we give our thanks and praise?
Because God is love, and God does wonderful things.
Why do we share this bread and wine?
Because they show the love of Jesus for us.
How do we follow Jesus Christ?
By loving God and our neighbour.
Martha Waller
Culture in Church
Once again, St. Audoen`s hosted a beautiful concert of classical and contemporary classical
music, that brought amazing voices to a large audience. It was hard to find a spare seat and
people flocked outside the main doors long before they opened. Musical enjoyment is greatly
contributed by the acoustics of this medieval church and there was no additional sound
equipment or microphones used this time. Candlelight provided atmosphere exactly right for the
occasion.
It was an acoustic concert for soprano, cello and zither performing works of Arvo Pärt and
others. Cellist Aare Tammesalu operates mainly as soloist and chamber musician, performing
classical and contemporary music. The leading Estonian professional zither-player Kristi
Mühling has dedicated herself to introducing it as a versatile musical instrument. As one of the
founder members of ensemble Resonabilis and Una Corda, she has performed at different
festivals all around the world. Both Aare and Kristi have performed in Dublin and Ireland several
times before and they are currently cooperating with several Irish conductors writing music
especially for their trio so there might be a chance to hear them in Dublin again!
The lovely concert was a nice treat for lovers of classical music and the audience included
Ambassador of Estonia, Mr. Martinson and above mentioned conductors from Ireland and some
musicians from Dublin. All performers, Estonians in Dublin and Estonian Embassy in Dublin
would like to thank Church of Ireland and Canon Mark Gardner for the opportunity of having
such an event in such a beautiful church. Special thanks to OPW museum!
Hopefully in the future, we have more of such a great cultural treats to offer to the parishioners
of The Church of Ireland and people of Dublin.
AJ Ragastik Estonians in Dublin / Estonian Lutheran Church in Ireland
Unexpected references to the Book of Common Prayer
Church Times: Junior champ: Omkaar Divekar (Rochester), the winner of this year’s Prayer
Book Society’s Cranmer Award for juniors. Omkaar, in Year 9 at the Judd School in Tonbridge,
Kent, won his section of the competition by reciting from memory sections of the Book of
Common Prayer.
Irish Times: Books that define Ireland: Cré na Cille. Irish drama is filled with corpses that sit up
and talk again in a style of sudden truculence and with characters intent on addressing their dead.
All of this may be a centuries-long infraction of the Book of Common Prayer, whose funeral
service insists that the dead can no longer be talked to – they can only be talked about, since they
must be presumed to be beyond human contact. But Cré na Cille is the grand climactic statement
of the fact that in Ireland the dead have not just voices but votes, not just unresolved grudges but
unfulfilled loves. Declan Kiberd.
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