‘Who wants a thousand dollars?’ ~ Christian Aid gets Cork Confirmation group thinking

‘Who wants a thousand dollars?’ That is the question Andrew Coleman, Church and Community Officer in Cork for Christian Aid Ireland, asked the members of the Douglas Union of Parishes Confirmation Group at a special Lent Lunch they hosted in the parish on Sunday 7 April. What is more, he was so impressed with their fundraising efforts that he gave each of them a thousand-dollar bill!

Earlier at the morning service in St Luke’s Church, Andrew, who is also a diocesan lay reader assisting in the parish, spoke about the current crisis in southern Africa in the wake of Cyclone Idai.

Holding up a bottle full of rich red soil from Malawi which he collected while on a visit there several years ago, he reflected on the link between the dry soil and the flooded land.

As I watched the reports coming over last week of the huge devastation and destruction by Cyclone Idai in Southern Africa, one poignant image stood out for me.

It was a group of stranded defenceless people (men, women and children) cowering for safety on top of a bus, as a South African helicopter hovered to rescue them, in a new wilderness of a newly created lake that had previously being a road and a countryside of red rich soil now covered by water.

That red southern African soil, as exemplified in the empty Malawian water bottle, is a rich Iron enriched soil, suitable for farming, however due to the cyclone, thousands of hectares of farmlands are under water which means no harvest this year for millions of people. Where droughts and the lack of rainfall are an annual feature of the struggle for many communities in Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, now because of the tropical storm and rainfall of Cyclone Idai, over 2 million people have being affected. Some have lost their lives, others have lost their homes and communities have seen the complete destruction of their crops.

Three generations of one family enjoying the Lent Lunch in Douglas

Every year as part of the confirmation preparation process, the young people host a simple ‘Lent Lunch’ of soup and rolls for parishioners, who are asked to donate what they would regularly pay for their Sunday lunch to a charity of the young people’s choosing. This year they, along with their parents, raised €580 for relief work in southern Africa being supported by Christian Aid and for other development work in Zambia.

Parents on hand to help out.

At the lunch Andrew Coleman, as a gesture of his appreciation gave each of the eighteen young people in the Confirmation Group, a thousand-dollar bill. However, he also showed them a million, billion and trillion-dollar bills, all from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe.  He went on to explain that due to hyperinflation in that country in recent years, their currency became worthless and so millions of dollars were required just to buy a loaf of bread. Andrew reminded them that while some disasters are natural and just happen, others are man made and still bring suffering to many people. Hopefully, as the candidates look forward to their confirmation after Easter, their thousand-dollar bill will remind them of the fact that as Christians, we are all called to respond positively to human need where ever it occurs.

Andrew Coleman of Christian Aid in Cork with some of the Douglas Union of Parishes Confirmation group 2019.

Posted in Charity Work, Christian Aid, Church in Society, Confirmation, Diocese, Emergency Response, Five Marks of Mission, Lent, People from the Diocese, Youth Work | Comments Off on ‘Who wants a thousand dollars?’ ~ Christian Aid gets Cork Confirmation group thinking

Cork Healthcare Chaplain contributes to a National Review of Design and Dignity Programme of Irish Bereavement Care Facilities

The Design and Dignity programme of the Health Service Executive (HSE) and the Irish Hospice Foundation (IHF) was established in 2010 to support the Hospice Friendly Hospitals initiative to improve the facilities and experiences of end-of-life-care in hospitals for patients and their loved ones. As 43% of deaths in Ireland occur in hospital the importance of this initiative can not be overstated. The Design and Dignity programme has led to the support of over forty projects to improve facilities across the Irish public health service since 2010.

A research team from University College Cork was successful in the bid to formally review the Design and dignity programme. The review team led by Dr Nicola Cornally and Dr Serena Fitzgerald from the School of Nursing and Midwifery at UCC involved many professionals involved in end-of-life-care and education. Among them was the Rev’d Dr Daniel Nuzum who contributed from a pastoral care perspective.

The evaluation process had two objectives:

  1. to assess the impact of evidence-based design from the perspectives of patients, families and staff specifically focussing on a) the impact on culture of care, b) the impact on the organisation of care, c) the design features of the new facilities and d) knock-on and unforeseen benefits/ challenges emerging from the projects and
  2. to determine likely factors contributing to the successful completion and maintenance of design and dignity spaces.

Eighteen of the completed forty projects were evaluated as part of the review process. The formal report was published and launched on Tuesday 26 March at the Royal Institute of Architects of Ireland.

Speaking about the project Dr Nuzum said:

The environment and overall culture surrounding end-of-life-care is hugely important for patients and their loved ones approaching their final days. The opportunity to be involved in this national research and review project with a multidisciplinary team was a tangible expression of the place of pastoral care as an integrated part of sensitive and respectful care in an increasingly spiritually and culturally diverse Ireland.

The full report can be accessed HERE.

The launch of the review of the Design and Dignity Programme

 

 

Posted in Chaplaincies, Church in Society, Clergy, Community Involvement, Contemporary Issues, Healthcare Ministry, People from the Diocese | Comments Off on Cork Healthcare Chaplain contributes to a National Review of Design and Dignity Programme of Irish Bereavement Care Facilities

Cork Bishops take part in reopening of Saint Patrick’s Bridge in Cork

On Saturday 16th March last, the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Mick Finn, put the last piece of masonry in place to mark the completion of the restoration of Saint Patrick’s Bridge in Cork City.  The two Bishops of Cork, Dr John Buckley and Dr Paul Colton, said prayers and gave a blessing, after which the Lord Mayor officially re-opened the bridge and unveiled a plaque.

Cllr. Mick Finn, Lord Mayor of Cork, laying the final piece of stonework on St Patrick’s Bridge with the silver trowel that was given to the Lord Mayor of Cork, John Arnott, to mark the laying of the foundations of the bridge in 1859.
Included are Bishop John Buckley and Bishop Paul Colton who performed a blessing at the ceremony to mark the historic occasion.
Pic: Brian Lougheed

Cllr. Mick Finn, Lord Mayor of Cork, who performed the laying the final piece of stonework on St Patrick’s Bridge with a silver trowel that was given to the Lord Mayor of Cork, John Arnott, to mark the laying of the foundations of the bridge in 1859.
Also included are, from left: Michael Nolan, CEO of Transport Infrastructure Ireland; Bishops John Buckley and Paul Colton; Juia Gebel, Master Stonemason and Gerry O’Beirne, Director of Services of the Roads and Transportation Directorate, Cork City Council.
Pic: Brian Lougheed

Today’s bridge is not the first bridge built at that point over the River Lee.   When the ancient city of Cork, centred on North Main and South Main Streets, expanded in the 18th century, including the development of St Patrick’s Street, the first St Patrick’s Bridge was built.  A foundation stone was laid on 25th July 1788, but six months later on 17th January 1789 a flood washed away the partially completed bridge. It was rebuilt, and was opened on 29th September 1789. That bridge was destroyed, again by a severe weather event in 1853 and was replaced by a temporary timber bridge.

Bishop John Buckley and Bishop Paul Colton perform the blessing ceremony at the reopening of St. Patrick’s Bridge. Included is Cllr. Mick Finn, Lord Mayor of Cork .
Pic: Brian Lougheed

It, in turn,  was replaced by today’s bridge.  The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the Earl of Carlisle, laid the foundation stone for the new bridge on 10 November 1859 using a level provided by the Freemasons of Cork.  The Mayor of Cork, Sir John Arnott, opened the new Saint Patrick’s Bridge on 12 December 1861. The bridge, 18.5 metres wide, spans a waterway of 51 metres.  Both the level and trowel used in 1859 were brought to the re-opening on 16th March 2019.

The bridge’s elegant design remains one of the best-known landmarks in Cork. 

Bishop Paul Colton and Bishop John Buckley with the trowel which was used in laying the foundation stone of the bridge in 1859. Pic. Brian Lougheed

Posted in Bishops of Cork, Church in Society, Community Involvement, Dedication, Special Events | Comments Off on Cork Bishops take part in reopening of Saint Patrick’s Bridge in Cork

Statement of Dr Paul Colton, Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork – New Bishop of Cork and Ross

Church of Ireland

Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross

Statement

Statement of Welcome and Good Wishes by

The Right Rev Dr Paul Colton,

Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross

in response to the announcement of the appointment

of the Reverend Fintan Gavin as Bishop of Cork and Ross

The Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork has made the following statement in response to the news of the appointment of the Reverend  Fintan Gavin as the next Bishop of Cork and Ross.

Statement:

‘I am truly delighted to hear the news this morning that the Reverend Fintan Gavin is to be the next Bishop of Cork and Ross. The Bishop-elect was ordained to the diaconate in Dublin shortly after I arrived to serve in a Church of Ireland parish in Dublin early in 1990, and, already in the 1990s, our paths crossed.  Then and since we have worked together in a number of pastoral contexts. We share a background in Canon Law. In recent times we have travelled to meetings, home and abroad, of the Colloquium of Anglican and Roman Catholic Canon Lawyers. As it happens, in the official photograph of the 2017 meeting in Rome we can be seen standing next to one another on the right of the picture.’

Participants at the meeting of the Colloquium of Anglican and Roman Catholic Canon Lawyers in Rome in 2017 – on the right, Bishop Paul Colton and the Bishop-elect of Cork and Ross, the Reverend Fintan Gavin.

‘The announcement of the appointment by His Excellency the Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland brought, therefore, a broad smile of genuine warmth and joy to my face.  I look forward to working with the new Bishop in the years ahead and to supporting him in his induction to “all things Cork”’.

‘With the greatest of delight I send Fintan my own warmest personal good wishes, together with those of the members of the Church of Ireland in Cork, on the occasion of his appointment as Bishop of Cork and Ross.  On behalf of us all in the United Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross I congratulate him and assure him of our ecumenical partnership and discipleship, as well as of our prayers as he prepares for his episcopal ordination and consecration.  He will receive a very warm welcome from all of us to Cork.’

‘I wish also to take this opportunity to wish my good friend Bishop John Buckley every joy, contentment and blessing now that he is Bishop Emeritus.   I have seen at first hand, in our work alongside one another over the past 20 years, his untiring work as Bishop, as well as the empathy and warmth of his pastoral work in our community.  I have found it deeply enriching to work and pray with him, and to have his friendship. I know that the Church of Ireland people of Cork will join me in these good wishes to him also.’

– Ends –

Further information from:

Sam Wynn Church of Ireland Diocesan Communications Officer

Telephone:   +353 (0)86 813 7659

E mail media@corkchurchofireland.com

Posted in Announcements, Appointments, Bishop, Bishops of Cork, Community Involvement, Cork, Cork and Ross, Ecumenism, Statement by the Bishop | Comments Off on Statement of Dr Paul Colton, Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork – New Bishop of Cork and Ross

Warm Welcome for New Rector of Fermoy, County Cork

On Sunday afternoon, 7th April 2019, a very warm welcome was given to the new rector of the Fermoy Union of Parishes, the Reverend Gary Paulsen. The landmark church, Christ Church Fermoy, not far from the banks of the River Blackwater, was full.

A full Christ Church, Fermoy for the Institution of the Reverend Gary Paulsen. (Photo: Sam Wynn)

Parishioners from Fermoy Union were joined by guests from Gary’s former parish in Killaloe, as well as clergy and readers from Limerick and Killaloe, Cork, Cloyne and Ross,  and William Montgomery representing the local Presbyterian Church. Representing the Roman Catholic Church were Canon Michael Leamy (Rathcormack), Fr Emaon Kelleher (Kildorrery), Canon Donal Leahy (Kilworth), Canon Michael Fitzgerald (Mitchelstown), and Father Donal Cotter (Glenville and Watergrasshill).

Among the guests were Kevin O’Keeffe, T.D., Councillor Kay Dawson, Councillor Deirdre O’Brien,  Councillor Frank O’Flynn, Inspector Tony O’Sullivan (An Garda Síochána), four representatives from the Irish UN Veteran Association, Mrs Hilary Dring (new Diocesan President of the Mothers’ Union), and Mr Billy Skuse (Diocesan Secretary).

Clergy gathered with the Bishop after the Service for some informal words of welcome to the Reverend Gary Paulsen. (Photo: Sam Wynn)

The Sermon was preached by the Very Reverend Niall Sloane, Dean of Limerick.  The organist for the occasion was Mr Colin Nicholls.  Many parishioners, young and old, took part in the Service during which the Bishop, the Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, formally instituted Gary to the Incumbency, and commissioned him for his ministry.  Afterwards everyone adjourned to the Adair Hall next door for a reception.

The Very Reverend Niall Sloane, Dean of Limerick (right) who preached the sermon, with the Reverend Gary Paulsen and the Bishop. (Photo: Sam Wynn)

Gary Paulsen was born in Cape Town South Africa and lived in the Western Cape most of his life until coming to Ireland in 2011.  Gary said:

I come to Fermoy with the experience of life and of church in different contexts and I hope to have a positive impact on people’s lives and their experience of God within the church and wider community.

Following the Institution of the Reverend Gary Paulsen as Rector were the following from Cork, Cloyne and Ross (l-r) the Very Reverend Susan Green (Dean of Cloyne), the Reverend Paul Arbuthnot (Rector of Cobh and Glanmire, who served as Deacon at the Service), the Reverend Gary Paulsen, the Reverend Sarah Marry (Bishop’s Chaplain), the Bishop, the Reverend Elaine Murray (Bishop’s Chaplain), Mr John Jermyn (Diocesan Registrar), and the Venerable Adrian Wilkinson (Archdeacon). (Photo: Sam Wynn)

Posted in Church Services, Clergy, Cork, Institutions and Commissionings, Special Events | Comments Off on Warm Welcome for New Rector of Fermoy, County Cork