Sunday, 12 June 2022

Campfire Bread Twists - Happy Feast Day

 


As a boy, when I was a scout, we enjoyed a very simple bread by making a dough from flour and water which we twisted around a stick and baked over the embers of our campfire. The important thing about bread, any bread, is not that you spend hours contemplating it, analysing it, trying to understand it, but that we eat it. It's a comfort food that relieves our hunger pangs and nourishes us, giving us strength to carry on our day or enjoy a night's sleep. This experience is always made so much more enjoyable when we eat as a family or group of friends.

Just as our camp fare has three elements, wheat, water and fire, together making one bread, so the Blessed Trinity has three Persons, together making one God; but the important thing about our God is not that we spend hours analysing and contemplating how the Blessed Trinity is constituted, but that we be nourished by the empowering love of our Father and the Christ-Son poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit.

On this Feast of the Most Holy Trinity may we all be so nourished among our families and friends.

Terry

Friday, 27 May 2022

Launching our North of 60 Project

Our Newmarket Conference is excited to tell you that we are launching a new project that will provide assistance to our neighbours in need in Sanirajak, Nunavut. To find out more, please watch this seven minute video.

Monday, 9 May 2022

The Feast of Feasts

 


Spiritual Reading selected by Deacon Steve

The Feast of Feasts!

“Easter – the resurrection of Christ! The feast of feasts! The final proof of Christ’s divinity! Easter – the first feast of the early Church, around which all the other feasts grew like stars around the sun.

We celebrate Christ’s Resurrection as something absolutely, fantastically beautiful that has happened, and is still happening. The fact that there is an Easter is something to be grateful for. It is such a happy feast. What can be more beautiful than this passage from death to life, real life? Now death has become a passage. A passage to what, to where, to whom? It is the passage of you to God and me to God. You walk into it and there at the end is Christ and Our Lady, the life that lasts forever and that is lived with God and his blessed Mother. Christ’s resurrection is the most joyous feast in the calendar of the Church, the one in which everything comes together. It is the greatest feast…

Christ’s Resurrection is the earth in which the seed of faith can grow. His Resurrection, when we look at it, opens the tombs of our hearts. Can you hear the stone of doubts, of fears, of expectation, of loneliness, roll away from his tomb? You and I are transfigured and resurrected, too, in an inner resurrection that is like a fire, like an exploding sunrise.”

“Season of Mercy: Lent and Easter – Meditations and Traditions from Catherine Doherty”, Marian Heilberger, ed., Madonna House Publications, Combermere, p 92 & 99