Civic Recognition for work of Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross during Coronavirus Pandemic

The Lord Mayor of Cork, Councillor Deirdre Forde, recently hosted a reception in the Concert Hall at Cork City Hall ‘to recognise and build on the collective efforts of all Community Response Partners in supporting our most vulnerable people and communities over the past few years.’

Among those recognised for ‘outstanding service to the community’ during the years of the Coronavirus Pandemic to date was the Church of Ireland in Cork Cloyne and Ross. The Bishop, Dr Paul Colton, who is a member of the Community Response Forum in Cork City and Cork County was present to receive the certificate on behalf of everyone in the Diocese who served, volunteered and worked in so many ways to maintain and support community life during the pandemic, and especially those who are most vulnerable.

With Bishop Paul Colton, at Cork City Hall for the recent awards ceremony were (l-r) Valerie Kirby, Kate Durrant (Blarney Parish) and Councillor Dr John Sheehan.

Introducing an ecumenical and interfaith minute’s silence of remembrance and thanksgiving, Bishop Colton told the gathering that in his nearly 24 years as Bishop of Cork he had never seen such a diverse partnership of individuals and groups in both the City and County who mobilised across many boundaries and differences in order to do what needed to be done in recent years in response to the current needs of society. ‘Quite simply’ the Bishop said, ‘these have been among the most potent partnerships I have ever seen here. People who are very different in outlook and worldview have worked across their differences for the common good.’ This observation struck a chord with those present and was greeted with spontaneous applause.

Dr Paul Colton, Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross addressing the Community Response Partners at Cork City Hall recently.

The Lord Mayor called the evening ‘Glance Back – Look Forward’. It is planned to build on these community partnerships which have also been to the fore in responding to the needs of Ukrainians fleeing the war in Ukraine. More recently the Community Response Forum in Cork City has broadened its brief to harness the collaboration, in support of all of the most vulnerable in the City.

Posted in Anglicanism, Award, Bishop, Church in Society, Church of Ireland, Community Involvement, Community Response Forum, Cork, Corona Virus, COVID-19, Diocese, Five Marks of Mission, Lord Mayor of Cork, People from Cork, People in Need, Voluntary Work | Comments Off on Civic Recognition for work of Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross during Coronavirus Pandemic

Civic Reception at Cork City Hall marks 150th Anniversary of Saint Luke’s Home

The Lord Mayor of Cork, Councillor Deirdre Forde, accorded Saint Luke’s Home Cork one of the highest honours the Lord Mayor of Cork may bestow on individuals or an organisation in the City: a Civic Reception.

Volunteers of the Charity, which marks its 150th anniversary this year, together with management, staff, fundraisers, board members, and the President of the Charity, the Bishop of Cork, Dr Paul Colton, were welcomed to the Council Chamber on Tuesday 6th December. In her speech, the Lord Mayor paid tribute to the work of the Charity, since its foundation in 1872 by Miss Frances Fitzgerald Gregg, in caring for older people, in daycare services, in education, and in specialist dementia and Alzheimer care.

To mark the occasion, on behalf of the City and its citizens, the Lord Mayor presented the Charity with Cork silver embossed with the arms of the City of Cork and especially engraved to mark the anniversary. Bishop Colton, thanked the Lord Mayor and City Council and said that he wished, in that civic context, to thank all the stakeholders and partners for all their work for the Charity throughout the years. The CEO of Saint Luke’s Charity and Home, Tony O’Brien, paid tribute to today’s residents and their families, as well as all the team at St Luke’s for their untiring and faithful work.

The Lord Mayor of Cork, Councillor Deirdre Forde, presented Bishop Paul Colton, President of Saint Luke’s Charity, Cork (accompanied by Mr Tony O’Brien, CEO) with Cork silver to mark the 150th anniversary of Saint Luke’s Home.
Posted in Award, Bishop, Care of the Older Person, Charities in the Diocese, Church in Society, Churches in Cork, Community Involvement, Cork, Dementia Care, Diocese, Five Marks of Mission, People from Cork, People from the Diocese, Saint Luke's Charity, Saint Luke's Home, Saint Luke's Home Education Centre | Comments Off on Civic Reception at Cork City Hall marks 150th Anniversary of Saint Luke’s Home

Bishop Paul receives Ashton School Hall of Fame Award during Prize Day Ceremony

Last Friday, 2nd December 2022, Ashton School held its annual Prize Day Ceremony, which recognises students for their academic and extra-curricular achievements. During the ceremony Principal Adrian Landen also reported on the highlights and activities of the school year. After the Prize Day Ceremony, Bishop Paul Colton was awarded with the Ashton School Hall of Fame Award in recognition of his achievements as Bishop, Scholar, and Citizen.

John Deane, Chairperson of the Board of Management, Bishop Paul Colton, and Ashton School Principal Adrian Landen. Photo: Siobhan Russell.

In his speech Bishop Paul said:

I want to thank everyone in the school community who nominated me for today’s award, and the Board of Management for granting me this immense honour. I am truly pleased by it. Looking at friends of my school year, some here today, who said nice things about this award on social media, reminded me of what a great group of people you all are, and of how so many of my Ashton contemporaries have done wonderful things and made a real difference to their communities and to people around them in countless ways; so I feel humbled.

Posted in Ashton School, Awards and Prizes, Bishop, Schools in the Diocese, Special Events | Comments Off on Bishop Paul receives Ashton School Hall of Fame Award during Prize Day Ceremony

Carrigrohane Union Christmas Festival

Next week, Thursday 8th to Sunday 11th December, Carrigrohane Union of Parishes are inviting everyone to take part in their very exciting Christmas Festival weekend.

Christmas Trees, decorated by local groups, schools and businesses, are on display in St Peter’s Church, Carrigrohane, The West Wing of The Carraig Centre, Ballincollig, and in The Church of the Resurrection, Blarney. They will all be open for everyone to enjoy on:

  • Friday 9th December: 10am – 8pm
  • Saturday 10th December: 10am – 3pm
  • Sunday 11th December: 1pm – 5pm

Other events in the Festival are: 

  • Thursday 8 December 8pm – 9 pm – Musical launch with festive treats in The Carraig Centre with the first chance to see some of the Christmas Trees and a Sheep Hunt among the trees.
  • Friday 9 December 3.15pm – 4.15pm– All-age Christmas Craft session in The Church of the Resurrection, Blarney.
  • Friday 9 December 7.30pm – 9.30pm – Teenage Glow Max event in The Carraig Centre          
  • Saturday 10 December 10am – 2pm – Christmas Craft Market in The West Wing of The Carraig Centre
  • Saturday 10 December 3pm & 4pm – Nativity Sheep Hunt in St Peter’s Field, Carrigrohane
  • Sunday 18 December 7.30pm – Community Carol Service in St Senan’s, Inniscarra leading into Christmas services. 

All events are free to attend – there will be donation buckets for anyone to contribute to the on-going work and mission of the parish.  Each location will also have an opportunity to donate non-perishable foodstuffs for those in need.

Find the event on Facebook or www.christmasfestivalcork.ie

For more information email or telephone 021-4877260.

Posted in Community Involvement, Festivals, Parish News, Social Events, Special Events | Comments Off on Carrigrohane Union Christmas Festival

25th Anniversary of Mothers’ Union Quiet Day in Ballydehob

Mothers’ Union members at the 25th Quiet Day in Ballydehob

Hilary Dring, President of the Mothers’ Union in the Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, writes:

For more than 25 years members in Ballydehob/Aughadown Mothers’ Union branch have organised an Annual Quiet Day open to everyone from across the diocese. Each year the message about the date would arrive, branches were informed, and members and friends invited. Faithfulness is a wonderful attribute; it is indeed one of the fruit of the Spirit mentioned in Galatians 5:22. We take this opportunity to thank all those who have been involved over the years; many of them are no longer with us. Their legacy lives on.

Each year the gathering in St. Matthew’s Hall near Church Cross offers a wonderful opportunity to take some time out of our busy lives to recalibrate at the beginning of the year. The Quiet Day has always been in January but, as with so many other events in recent times, COVID got in the way. So, on Wednesday 5 th October almost 30 members and friends met for a wonderful day of renewal and fellowship. Our speaker was former Diocesan President, Patsy Devoy, well known and much loved by our members. Patsy was the speaker at the very first Quiet Day on 15th January 1996 and so it was very appropriate that she should be invited to facilitate this special occasion. She chose gratitude as her theme and shaped the day around Psalm 139, especially focussing on the words “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.”

Each of us has a very personal and special story to tell, a story unique to us. Patsy shared some of her special story, relating memories from her own life, as she reflected on who and what has shaped her into the person she has become. We each then had time to think about our own special story and to reflect on the things for which we are especially grateful. She said that this remembering “…might sometimes make us think of people we need to forgive…or are in the process of forgiving! Or sometimes we may think of someone of whom we need to ask forgiveness.”

Patsy then shared some stories from a book called ‘Fearfully and Wonderfully Made’ by Philip Yancey and Paul Brand. We were encouraged to think about our faith journeys and who/what has helped us along the way so far. She remembered former Bishop Roy Warke coming to Carrigrohane to share some of his faith journey; she described how Bishop Roy spoke his experience of a gradual process of coming to faith rather than a ‘light-bulb’ moment. This was very encouraging to hear. A reminder yet again that every person’s story is unique to them, and no journey is better or less important than another.

We finished the day using Psalm 139 as the framework for our prayers and then joined the Archbishop of Canterbury as we listened to him reading the prayers for the 28 th of September on the Lectio365 App which also used some words from Psalm 139. LECTIO365 is a wonderful App which has prayers for morning and evening each day; the morning prayers end with this prayer –

Father, enable me to live this day to the full, being true to you in every way.
Jesus, enable me to give myself away to others, being kind to everyone I meet.
Spirit, enable me to love the lost, proclaiming Christ in all I do and say. Amen

Our thanks go to the local members who organised the day with tea and coffee, soup for lunch and a beautiful 25 th anniversary cake for the special occasion. Everyone who came was delighted to share in fellowship and friendship on the day, catching up with people we hadn’t been able to see for quite some time; a reminder again that Mothers’ Union is about reaching out into our communities and parishes and about being friends to and supporting one another.

Hilary Dring, Diocesan President of the Mothers’ Union, Patsy Devoy, and Maria Swanton
Patsy Devoy, Maria Swanton and Essie Shannon
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